Is a Hybrid Wood and Gas Pizza Oven Worth It?
A hybrid wood and gas pizza oven gives you live-fire flavor with modern control. Learn where it excels, what it costs, and who it suits best.
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This blog is dedicated to helping you learn everything about brick wood-fired pizza ovens.
A hybrid wood and gas pizza oven gives you live-fire flavor with modern control. Learn where it excels, what it costs, and who it suits best.
Find the best pizza oven for outdoor kitchen spaces with expert advice on fuel, size, materials, heat retention, and luxury design fit.
Can you cook a frozen pizza in a wood fired pizza oven? Yes - but temperature, timing, and technique matter if you want crisp, even results.
Wood fired pizza vs oven cooking changes crust, flavor, heat, and experience. See which option delivers better pizza for your home or business.
Are wood fired pizza ovens worth it? Learn when the investment pays off in flavor, heat retention, design value, and outdoor entertaining.
Learn how wood fired pizza oven dimensions affect cooking space, heat retention, and fit so you can choose the right size for your home.
See why a custom built firebrick oven delivers lasting heat, authentic performance, and architectural beauty for luxury homes and venues.
Design a luxury outdoor pizza kitchen with real brick performance, premium finishes, and custom layout choices built for cooking and entertaining.
See what sets a custom wood fired pizza oven apart, from real firebrick performance and design options to installation, fuel, and value.
Things to Consider when Buying a Brick Oven These are our top 10 things to consider when buying a brick oven: 1. What’s your style? 2. How large is your family or business? 3. Do you want it inside or outside? 4. Do you...
Logistical Considerations When Buying a Wood-Fired Brick Oven Logistical considerations have to be top of mind when you are considering buying a real authentic wood-fired brick oven. 1. Do you have the right machinery to unload it from the delivery truck?2. Do you have adequate...
This is a list of Recommended Products These recommended products are ones we have used successfully in our own home. Preferred: GI Metal – Azzura Line (blue in color) Recommended: Updated International for wooden pizza peels Lodge for Seasoned Cast Iron Pans Crestware for an...
Welcome to Our Pizza Oven Blog This blog is dedicated to helping you learn everything about pizza ovens and cooking in them. How do you make the best Pizza with a real brick oven? It starts with the dough. We have been making real brick...
We have been making real brick oven pizzas for over ten years. That’s how long we have also been making real brick pizza ovens! And we have tried everything from store bought dough to making our own. And the best is? You guessed it. There is nothing better than making your own dough.
So, today we are going to share with you our recipe to make 4 Napoli style pizzas.
705 grams of Antimo Caputo flour
435 grams warm water 105-115 degrees
7 grams yeast
5 grams sugar
15 grams sea salt
A digital thermometer for the water temperature
A stand mixer
2 proofing trays with lids
A food scale
Olive oil
the water, sugar and yeast and let froth for 10 minutes in the mixing bowl.
the flour and mix on low for 2 minutes, med-high for 5 minutes, and low again for 2 minutes.
the olive oil to coat your hands so the dough doesn’t stick to you. The dough should be a little tacky.
let it double in size and punch down in the proofing trays. Then divide it into 4-285 gram dough balls placing two in each tray. Then punch them down again before you are ready to make your pizzas.
then leave it in the refrigerator in the proofing tray and take it out the morning you use it. The dough will keep for 7 days or so. You want the dough to be room temperature so you can work it into a pizza pie.
GI Metal – Azzura Line (blue in color) https://gimetalusa.com/gimetal-our-products
Updated International for wooden pizza peels
Lodge for Seasoned Cast Iron Pans
Crestware for an oven brush
American Metal Craft for metal peels
Etekcity Lasergrip 1080 for a non-contact digital laser infrared thermometer
Mulino Caputo pizza flour type “00”
Welcome to Our Pizza Oven Blog This blog is dedicated to helping you learn everything about pizza ovens and cooking in them. How do you make the best Pizza with a real brick oven? It starts with the dough. We have been making real brick......
This is a list of Recommended Products These recommended products are ones we have used successfully in our own home. Preferred: GI Metal – Azzura Line (blue in color) Recommended: Updated International for wooden pizza peels Lodge for Seasoned Cast Iron Pans Crestware for an......
Logistical Considerations When Buying a Wood-Fired Brick Oven Logistical considerations have to be top of mind when you are considering buying a real authentic wood-fired brick oven. 1. Do you have the right machinery to unload it from the delivery truck?2. Do you have adequate......
Things to Consider when Buying a Brick Oven These are our top 10 things to consider when buying a brick oven: 1. What’s your style? 2. How large is your family or business? 3. Do you want it inside or outside? 4. Do you......
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Important Note: While it is difficult to maintain consistent low-temperature fires, it is critical for proper curing that you do not go above these temperatures, especially the first two days.
It is important that you cure your pizza oven slowly over a 7-day period. You will build a series of five increasingly larger fires. The first fire should be no more than kindling or thin strips of wood. AND THE FIRE SHOULD BE IN THE CENTER OF THE OVEN.
Day 1: 200 degrees F up to 2 Hours (longer is better)
Start and maintain the fire in the CENTER of the interior dome, no on either side or the back of the oven. You do not want the fire to get too high. It should not touch the top of the dome, as direct contact with the fire will spike temperatures.
Do NOT use the door while a fire is in the oven. It should be off.
For an accurate temperature reading of the brick oven’s surfaces, you can use a Digital Infrared Thermometer. Make sure it reads up to at least 1200 degrees F.
Important Note: You want to measure the temperature at the dome & walls of the oven, not the side wall or floor.
TO BE CONTINUED
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