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I kind of agree with your theory about curing with the blanket on, then repairing as necessary. I don't think all the moisture really comes out till you get the oven blazing hot and hold the heat in there for awhile. The insulation blanket early on makes more sense for that reason alone.
George
GJBingham
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Everyone makes mistakes. The trick is to make mistakes when nobody is looking.
finally got to cook some Pizza on the oven. This Saturday night I fired up the oven and got the back area white hot. I didnt have a infared thermometer but it was pretty hot. I roasted some bell peppers for the pizza and they blackened up real good so I could get the skin off. I have the clay chimney "just sitting" in place. I had not modified the metal transition plate to accept. However, it was fairly level so I just put the thing there to keep the smoke down.
Hey Steve,
Did you ever pull your blanket off and inspect the dome for cracks?
I see your chicken wire in place. Once you get your vermiculite/perlite insulation on, what kind of finish do you have planned for your oven?
Great looking pizza, BTW. Someday I'm going to cook in mine!
George
i was thinking of doing that, but even with cracks...whats the worst that can happen. After covering with Vermiculite, there will be no place for smoke to go but out the front. Plus, I think the cracks just do their thing and then stop anyway.
I plan on building an enclosure with the metal studs and the concrete board.
the pizza tasted differently than when I cook in the oven. the dough was moist as compared and the cheese seemed to carmelize differently. Perhaps this is all psychosimatic (sp?). either way, its cool with me
Yep! don't matter. If you think it tasted better, then it was better! Kinda like a placibo. If you feel better, it's not a sugar pill, it's a wonder drug.
dusty
For the record, that pizza looked more like a wonder drug.
I am new at this and learning from you guys. Why is it a good idea the cure it under the blanket? Does it prevent it from curing to fast and prevent making the cracks bigger? Is it bad for the blanket to have moisture? Will the blanket always have moisture in it?
help me out.
fb66
Why is it a good idea the cure it under the blanket?
We aren't exactly sure if it is or isn't. I'm curing with blankets on. Some cure with them off. There is a debate going on about which will cause less cracking.
Is it bad for the blanket to have moisture? Will the blanket always have moisture in it?
The idea of curing is to drive out the moisture. As the oven heats up, moisture will be forced out of the bricks, through the blankets and into the atmosphere. Wet blankets will dry out (they insulate much better when dry).
My blankets were really wet from dew, frost and rain (my tarp leaked). A few curing fires have made a big difference. I'm hustling to get the walls and roof on to help keep them dry.
FB, if you are to apply matrilite 18 outside the insulation blanket, you might mist the blanket well to create bonding, matting of the blanket. As Ken stated, all moisture is eventually being worked out of the oven for maximum functuality.
An excellent pizza is shared with the ones you love!
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