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Re: Great video of 2 Italian sisters baking in WFO
No idea. But your timing is nice. I was bsking a dozen loaves (Dan Leader's Genzano) and as I was loading the oven, quickly so as to not lose heat, I was reminded of that video and a comment someone made about how those two sisters were in no such hurry. They loaded their oven and seemed to take their time about it.
Wow....Either one of those women could have been my Bisnonna or Nonna. It brought back a flood of memories of watching her work in the kitchen...which always had a pot of sauce and glasses of wine or espresso ready for us. The pizza in the video is similar too...though one of our family favorites back then was the Marinara, always super simple. Thank you for posting that link!
Strange shape too... Not much of a dome... there is a bit of a curve there...
but the roof almost looks flat...
It's hard to tell how it all fits together from the limited amount of shots there are.
Chimney looks like an after thought. lol.
To me the oven appears to have a very high dome, based on the curvature of the walls that are visible in most of the oven shots. Additionally, the size of the oven opening is very tall, yet it still does not reveal the top of the dome.
There is no vent and chimney, true...but this is how most early ovens were built. It doesn't appear to be a problem for them that's for sure!
Although... it just looks like there is one HELL of a soldier course... 6 bricks high maybe?
I think you are counting the courses on the oven opening...if you look at the interior, the dome is springing off the first course ( @2:24 you can pause the vid and see) as per usual. The oven does not appear to have been tuck pointed on the interior either, and lots of open, expanded joints suggest little or poor insulation...a mass based oven..again, very typical of how it has been done for household ovens over the centuries.
As can be clearly seen, while the oven itself would not be considered to be built with best practice in mind, but it is quite functional and useful to the household...simplicity and utility being the objective of it's construction.
I personally feel that an oven like this embodies the true spirit of WFO usage.
Last edited by stonecutter; 11-20-2013, 02:49 PM.
Reason: detail
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