Originally posted by david s
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Thanks David--I appreciate the appropriate phrase for the oven situation I had! My neighbor retired as a city fireman and from his point of view I was describing and experiencing a back-draft in the oven. I'm sure for kilns and WFOs, it's more properly termed a reducing atmosphere situation as you noted. Physically/chemically, I suspect they are probably pretty similar situations...probably, just the difference in scale as much as anything. Thanks again for the more relevant phrase.





) and the more time it spends on the peel, the more likely the pizza skin will stick with wheat flours. That's why corn meal, semolina, & rice flour work better...the meal & semolina are larger grained and less absorbent while the rice flour is fine grained and (IMHO) not absorbent. I use the rice flour for all my bread work as well...dusting baker's couche cloth, bannetons, and basket liner cloth. Even using very wet doughs, I count on the rice flour to release the dough cleanly from the proofing form...and so far (and over 3,000 loaves and over 6 years) no problems.
. As you have already seen, it takes a fair amount of wood and time (like everyone else has noted--a couple of hours is realistic to bring the entire oven mass up to carbon burning/pizza cooking temps)...and you seldom see that much wood in the restaurant to maintain high temps for the hours they're open.
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