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  • #16
    Re: Winter

    We user our oven year round. Fired it up Christmas Eve and cooked the turkey Christmas morning, it was -27C overnight. I've cooked turkeys in the oven before but this one was 27 lbs and the oven was very hot in the morning. Cooked the bird in 2 1/2 hours. It was not as moist as it usually is when cooked for longer periods at lower temps, but was still more moist than if cooked in a regular oven.

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    • #17
      Re: Winter

      Hi Spunky,

      If you really want a moist tender breast(turkey's), cook it breast down and turn it over to crisp the skin after its done, in the kitchen oven.

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      • #18
        Re: Winter

        -24 C here going down to -32C tonight ..not including windchill . Will be firing up tomorrow roast coffee, bake bread and roast a chicken .. make beef jerky the next day .. Last week after just firing it up for 3 hrs in the evening the next morning my oven was still 600F .. I had to bleed off heat ! ..The ovens don't care what it's like outside .. but you do have to do a slow warmup from cold to avoid thermal shock . . And handfuls of snow are great for introducing steam when you are making free form loaves . You know it's cold when you have to keep your beer in your pocket so's it won't freeze! Ain't winter grand !.. not a blackfly in sight!

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        • #19
          Re: Winter

          On a well insulated closed oven, thermal shock is rubbish. If I can fire my oven up to 1000 degrees and the outside is not higher than ambient temperature, wouldn't the same insulating materials keep the minimum oven temperature from going below that, regardless of the ambient temperature? If you prep your oven after using it, you open it, lite the fire just like any other day of the year. Science is science, BS is cow paddies.

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          • #20
            Re: Winter

            I have been working with ceramics for 40 + years and I always warm up and fire slow . I go to 2,350f and in 40 years everything that can go wrong has .
            If my oven interior is sub 300f I do a warm up fire . While in moderate climes the oven retains heat for a week I find after a week in the winter my oven interior is at freezing or below temps , and the door arch especially so .
            I have friends who scoff , but they have blown up bricks .
            tim

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            • #21
              Re: Winter

              Hi Tim,

              When you say "ceramic", you are speaking of a kiln and not an oven in which ceramic is a reference to fiber boards and blanket insulation. I have no knowledge of kiln building or firing. I do know that last week we had a sub zero snow blizzard and that my oven hadn't been fired up in ove 10 days and it was about 12 degrees.

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              • #22
                Re: Winter

                I generally start the fire slow especially on a cold winter day. No rush, let it warm the oven a bit and take the frost out first.

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                • #23
                  Re: Winter

                  I've cooked in temps as low as -27, maybe a bit cooler. I tend to start the fire slow then build it pretty hot. Usually burn a combination of pine, fir, and poplar. Lots of radiant heat comes out the door which is nice when you are working near the front of the oven.

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                  • #24
                    Re: Winter

                    Originally posted by Mr.Buckles View Post
                    Picture of the temperature probe inserted in the cooking floor !
                    Do you recall where you sourced that thermometer/thermocouple?

                    b

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