CountryPlans Forum

Off Topic => Off Topic - Ideas, humor, inspiration => Topic started by: sjdehner on May 06, 2009, 06:48:48 AM

Title: Outdoor Wood-fired Baking Oven Plan?
Post by: sjdehner on May 06, 2009, 06:48:48 AM
Hello!

We're wondering if anyone's built an outdoor wood-fired bake oven - or has plans for one. If you've got any pictures that would be great!

Thanks,

Shawn & Jamie
Title: Re: Outdoor Wood-fired Baking Oven Plan?
Post by: Homegrown Tomatoes on May 06, 2009, 07:38:47 AM
Mother Earth News magazine ran a plan for one a few years back.  Go to their website and use the search engine to go through their archives.  You might also try Backwoods Home.
Title: Re: Outdoor Wood-fired Baking Oven Plan?
Post by: pagan on May 06, 2009, 08:08:16 AM
Kiko Denzer has a great book on this.

http://www.southtownsounds.com/kikodenzer.html
Title: Re: Outdoor Wood-fired Baking Oven Plan?
Post by: NM_Shooter on May 06, 2009, 08:29:15 AM
Here's another link.  I've never tried one, but I think it would be fun...

http://www.ca-missions.org/mccummins.html

Title: Re: Outdoor Wood-fired Baking Oven Plan?
Post by: Homegrown Tomatoes on May 06, 2009, 10:50:14 AM
This is one of those things on my list of things I'd like to do one of these days, of course that being after it finally quits raining and dries up and we can finish the chicken house and so forth.
Title: Re: Outdoor Wood-fired Baking Oven Plan?
Post by: pagan on May 06, 2009, 12:40:19 PM
Dig a well, plumb the house, build a bathroom, build a barn, fix the driveway....right there with you Homegrown.
Title: Re: Outdoor Wood-fired Baking Oven Plan?
Post by: Ernest T. Bass on May 06, 2009, 01:55:05 PM
Here's some alternative ideas: http://weblife.org/capturing_heat/

Mom wants the rocket bread oven...
Title: Re: Outdoor Wood-fired Baking Oven Plan?
Post by: Redoverfarm on May 06, 2009, 03:29:04 PM
Someone post either a site or the picture of one on CP.  Might try a search.
Title: Re: Outdoor Wood-fired Baking Oven Plan?
Post by: Redoverfarm on May 06, 2009, 06:38:53 PM
Here is a couple sites mentioned on CP

http://heatkit.com/html/bakeoven.htm

http://www.orchardovens.co.uk/gallery.html
Title: Re: Outdoor Wood-fired Baking Oven Plan?
Post by: glenn kangiser on May 06, 2009, 10:05:46 PM
(https://i35.photobucket.com/albums/d184/glennkangiser/Underground%20update%202005-01-30/8ac1___69b1.jpg)

Make mud. :)
Title: Re: Outdoor Wood-fired Baking Oven Plan?
Post by: Ernest T. Bass on May 06, 2009, 10:45:34 PM
That's an awesome oven Glenn (if you like cats, that is... :P). Does that also have the concrete sealer on it?
Title: Re: Outdoor Wood-fired Baking Oven Plan?
Post by: glenn kangiser on May 06, 2009, 10:56:24 PM
Yes - it has a coat of Concrete cure and seal to make it shiny.  Clay ovens should be protected by a roof.

30%clay 70% sand and aggregate including any in the clay.  Straw to have it well mixed throughout the clay (actually cob)

The cat simply was the shape that emerged from the mud-- you'd be surprised what you find in a good batch of mud. d* :)

It was patterned after a very cool cat named Bandit - a Siamese mix.  The cat who loves me now is a pretty poor excuse for a cat but very loyal.... [waiting]
Title: Re: Outdoor Wood-fired Baking Oven Plan?
Post by: Homegrown Tomatoes on May 07, 2009, 09:48:02 AM
It looks like fun to build, and goodness knows that we have enough clay around here to build one.  However, I have a three page list of stuff that we have to do to the house before we can do extras like that (ok, so I might have actually knocked one or two of the things off the list by now, but there are other priorities before I can get to it.)  The cat looks like he should be wearing shades.  But from the pic, I'm not sure where the smoke escapes, etc... assuming that the opening in the front is the "oven", do you build the fire directly in the oven?
Title: Re: Outdoor Wood-fired Baking Oven Plan?
Post by: glenn kangiser on May 07, 2009, 10:35:29 AM
Since this one was to cover a rock in the front porch area I couldn't leave it like a true clay oven with no or little vent so the smoke goes out a buried stovepipe behind the back of its head.