Yes, I know, in the sticky thread at the top of this section the post says:
"The only rule on wood is to not burn pine, fir or cedar."
Yet in some of my reading on historical baking techniques in WFO's I've repeatedly run into references about the use of "baker's pine". Does anyone know what type of pine this is?
Digger pine is quite common in my area:
Pinus sabiniana
I've been experimenting with it in my Casa 110 and have been quite pleased. When seasoned for a year it starts easily, burns hot, generates little smoke, and leaves an amazingly small amount of ash. I really don't see any obvious downsides to using it.
Could it be that the blanket restriction on pine as fuel is a bit extreme?
"The only rule on wood is to not burn pine, fir or cedar."
Yet in some of my reading on historical baking techniques in WFO's I've repeatedly run into references about the use of "baker's pine". Does anyone know what type of pine this is?
Digger pine is quite common in my area:
Pinus sabiniana
I've been experimenting with it in my Casa 110 and have been quite pleased. When seasoned for a year it starts easily, burns hot, generates little smoke, and leaves an amazingly small amount of ash. I really don't see any obvious downsides to using it.
Could it be that the blanket restriction on pine as fuel is a bit extreme?
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