Re: Driving heat across the cooking floor
washing firebricks with a wet mop certainly may cool it down, but if you have really heated the hearth bricks they should still do their job (so get it good and hot). To be cautious, I would not use a 'wet' mop, but perhaps a 'slightly damp' mop instead. I prefer just the brass brush - it does the job of diminishing the ash without any cooling effect on the hearth bricks.
As a rule, I think most here have learned that even with a poorly insulated oven, the first step to making good use of the oven is to really saturate the bricks. Even with a well insulated oven it takes some learning to figure out the oven character of your oven. Once you've used the oven for a while and feel comfortable that it is fully cured (6-10 good bakes) then make a point of overdoing it with heat up time and wood amount to find out what the oven is like when those bricks are really saturated - you'll probably need to let it cool a bit with a smaller fire before you can cook. That can be your frame of reference in the future. My dad has a poorly insulated oven (no under oven insulation, and he mixed perlite with refractory mortar for the dome insulation) but even his oven (when we use about twice as much wood as mine uses for heat up) makes a nice pizza when it has been saturated.
washing firebricks with a wet mop certainly may cool it down, but if you have really heated the hearth bricks they should still do their job (so get it good and hot). To be cautious, I would not use a 'wet' mop, but perhaps a 'slightly damp' mop instead. I prefer just the brass brush - it does the job of diminishing the ash without any cooling effect on the hearth bricks.
As a rule, I think most here have learned that even with a poorly insulated oven, the first step to making good use of the oven is to really saturate the bricks. Even with a well insulated oven it takes some learning to figure out the oven character of your oven. Once you've used the oven for a while and feel comfortable that it is fully cured (6-10 good bakes) then make a point of overdoing it with heat up time and wood amount to find out what the oven is like when those bricks are really saturated - you'll probably need to let it cool a bit with a smaller fire before you can cook. That can be your frame of reference in the future. My dad has a poorly insulated oven (no under oven insulation, and he mixed perlite with refractory mortar for the dome insulation) but even his oven (when we use about twice as much wood as mine uses for heat up) makes a nice pizza when it has been saturated.
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