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ovens-msg - 9/24/13

 

Medieval ovens and SCA camp ovens.

 

NOTE: See also the files: utensils-msg, bread-msg, breadmaking-msg, brd-mk-sour-msg, iron-pot-care-msg, no-fire-cook-msg, p-kitchens-msg, camp-ovens-msg.

 

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NOTICE -

 

This file is a collection of various messages having a common theme that I have collected from my reading of the various computer networks. Some messages date back to 1989, some may be as recent as yesterday.

 

This file is part of a collection of files called Stefan's Florilegium. These files are available on the Internet at: http://www.florilegium.org

 

I have done a limited amount of editing. Messages having to do with separate topics were sometimes split into different files and sometimes extraneous information was removed. For instance, the message IDs were removed to save space and remove clutter.

 

The comments made in these messages are not necessarily my viewpoints. I make no claims as to the accuracy of the information given by the individual authors.

 

Please respect the time and efforts of those who have written these messages. The copyright status of these messages is unclear at this time. If information is published from these messages, please give credit to the originator(s).

 

Thank you,

   Mark S. Harris                  AKA:  THLord Stefan li Rous

                                         Stefan at florilegium.org

************************************************************************

 

From: haslock at fiacha.zso.dec.com (Nigel Haslock)

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

Subject: Re: Brick Oven Design

Date: 21 Sep 1994 20:39:46 GMT

Organization: Digital Equipment Corporation

 

Greetings from Fiacha,

 

All of the brick ovens that I am acquainted with have a single chamber.

 

Since the goal is to get the bricks hot enough to cook by and since

bricks are a really poor conductor of heat, it seems grossly inefficient

to use a separate fire box and wait for the heat to percolate through

the walls of the fire box. Trying to use the hot air and smoke generated by

the fire might be possible but it would not work the same as a brick oven

such as I have used.

 

In discussing improvements to the brick oven we have, we have considered

redesigning the inside to make better use of the flames, and cause the

smoke to go up the chimney instead of out of the door.

 

I believe that a separate firebox would make sense when iron walls are

practical. I would be interested in pointers to plans for period ovens

and indications of when ovens with separate fireboxes came into use.

 

        Fiacha

 

 

From: alisounf at aol.com (AlisounF)

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

Subject: Re: Brick Oven Design

Date: 21 Sep 1994 17:15:03 -0400

 

(Neil Perkins(980-9892" <jackalope!neil at zazen.attmail.com>, writes:

>I would have assumed that there would be two cavities - one to bake in,

>and one for the baking.  Not so?  The design requires quite rudimentary

>brick-laying skills.

 

I don't know when the idea of a separate firebox and bake area was

invented, but even in the 19th. century in rural Massachusetts bread might

still be baked in a beehive oven with only one chamber.

 

Alisoun Fortescue of Maplehurst

who is known to say that you cannot light a candle in the wind.

 

 

From: Suze.Hammond at f56.n105.z1.fidonet.org (Suze Hammond)

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

Subject: Re: Brick Oven Design

Date: Sat, 24 Sep 1994 21:37:00 -0800

 

Al> From: alisounf at aol.com (AlisounF)

Al> Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

 

Al> In article <9409211855.AA00503 at jackalope.toontown>,  at mc.lcs.mit.EDU

Al> (Neil Perkins(980-9892" <jackalope!neil at zazen.attmail.com>, writes:

>I would have assumed that there would be two cavities - one to bake in,

>and one for the baking.  Not so?  The design requires quite rudimentary

>brick-laying skills.

 

Al> I don't know when the idea of a separate firebox and bake area was

Al> invented, but even in the 19th. century in rural Massachusetts bread

Al> might still be baked in a beehive oven with only one chamber.

 

True.

 

Near here, we have a reconstructed 19thc Hudson's Bay trading post, Fort

Vancouver.

 

Among the things they have rebuilt so far is the bakery. It has two ovens,

both single-chamber, so far as baking goes. (There -is- a chamber under

it, but that's just used to pre-season firewood...)

 

A fire is built in the upper chamber, raked out, and the bread put in.

Just as has been done for practically ever...

 

From: haslock at fiacha.zso.dec.com (Nigel Haslock)

Newsgroups: rec.food.historic,rec.org.sca

Subject: Re: Request:medieval feast

Date: 21 Sep 1994 00:30:05 GMT

Organization: Digital Equipment Corporation

 

Greetings from Fiacha,

 

Stephen Bloch raises some interesting points about trenchers that caused me

to stop and think/speculate for a moment.

 

Giving every feaster a trencher is a lot of bread. Doing it every day is one

hell of a lot of bread.

 

Bread tins are not a medieval artifact as far as I know (but I could have

missed them). Without bread tins, bread comes out of the oven in a slump

shape. You can't make rectangular bread because it will change shape in the

oven. Thus I would expect round or oval loaves.

 

Really tall loaves aren't going to work very well. The further the middle is

from the heat, the longer it is going to take to bake. Efficient use of the

oven is going to require vaguely flat bread for trenchers. This means that

really efficient use of the oven should have been to bake pita bread on

steroids. A thick crust would be much more effective at trapping juices and

sauces.

 

Experience with a brick oven is relevant here. I have turned out breads upto

two inches thick. However, they only worked when the oven was relatively cool.

Trying it with the oven hot resulted in burnt crusts or uncooked middles. Thin

breads can be cooked in the hot oven. The point to remember is that with a

brick oven there is no thermostat and you cannot use the oven while you are

reheating it. Thus, as the temperature goes down, the cooking time increases.

If you need to cook a lot of something, you want to cook it in a hot oven so

you can cycle lots of items through before reheating. This means that flat

bread for trenchers makes a lot of sense.

 

        Fiacha

 

 

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

From: ddfr at quads.uchicago.edu (david director friedman)

Subject: Re: Looking for oven sources

Organization: University of Chicago

Date: Thu, 29 Sep 1994 05:22:34 GMT

 

Tandoori cooking is, I believe, traditionally done in a clay oven,

and I believe it is similar to the Tanur used in medieval Arabic

cooking. A possibility I have considered but not followed up is to

find out where Indian restaurants get their Tanurs from. If you have

the space, you then bring your tanur with you, bury it part way (I

think), build a fire inside, rake out the coals, put in the bread,

... .

 

David/Cariadoc

 

 

From: caradoc at enet.net (John Groseclose)

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

Subject: Re: Looking for oven sources

Date: 29 Sep 1994 21:02:59 GMT

 

sward02 at bigcat.missouri.EDU (Shannon R. Ward) wrote:

> In amongst the talk of making period ovens, etc.  did anyone ever list

> sources we can look at if we are interested in making one.  I don't think

> I can survive another Lilies War without hot, fresh bread!

>

> Tatiana Dieugarde

> Shire of Standing Stones

> Kingdom of Calontir

 

In the excavations at Pompeii, they dug up a stove/oven/heating device

remarkably similar to the "shepherd's box stove" I've seen at a lot of Boy

Scout camps... It's essentially a longish metal box with a stovepipe at

one end, two doors (one to put wood in, and one above that for baking.

 

The top surface of the box (behind the top of the "oven" box) is used as a

griddle surface. The one excavated at Pompeii also had a partitioned area

with a spigot, apparently used for heating liquids.

 

                         ---------

                         !       !

Front View:               !       !

                         !       !

--------------------------------------

!                                    !

!   ------------------------------   !

!   !                            !   !

!   !       Oven door            !   !

!   !                            !   !

!   !                            !   !

!   ------------------------------   !

!                                    !

!   ------------------------------   !

!   !       Firebox door         !   !

!   ------------------------------   !

--------------------------------------

 

Side View: (stovepipe omitted):

 

                  Griddle here

----         ----------------------------------------------------------

! !         !                     !                                  !

!                                  !                                  !

!                                  !                                  !

!                                  !     Baking "oven"                !

!                                  !                                  !

!        Coals shoved back here    !                                  !

!                                  !                                  !

!                                  ! ---------------------------------!

!                                                                     !

!                                  Wood (or charcoal) here            !

!                                                                     !

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

 

In the Pompeii artifact, the right side of the "oven" area was partitioned

off with a spigot hanging out the side. The entire object had brackets at

the corners, apparently for legs for the stove.

 

Now, if I could just find the damn book I read about this in... Maybe it

was a National Geographic.

--

John D. Groseclose <caradoc at enet.net>

 

 

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

Subject: Re: Ice at Pennsic (How much?  I used none.)

From: una at bregeuf.stonemarche.org (Honour Horne-Jaruk)

Date: Fri, 01 Sep 95 12:22:06 EDT

 

glenn at access1.digex.net (D. Glenn Arthur Jr.) writes:

> Right now I'm more interested in period (or at least low-tech,

> DIY) ovens I can build at -- or _easily_ transport to -- Pennsic.

> This has to have been covered in a _Compleat_Anachronist_ or

> something, no?  But whether period/perioid or modern, being able

> to oven-cook at Pennsic can only add to my culinary repertoire.

>       D. Glenn Arthur Jr., glenn at access.digex.com

 

        Respected friend:

        The premier issue of _Recreating History_ magazine contains an

article describing construction and use of five different outdoor ovens.

(I wrote it.)

        Contact Polsons at sirius.com for info.

        If you get it, do tell me what you did- I _love_ that part!

 

                               Yours in service to the Society-

                               (Friend) Honour Horne-Jaruk R.S.F.

                               Alizaunde, Demoiselle de Bregeuf C.O.L. SCA

                               Una Wicca (That Pict)

 

 

From: brettwi at ix.netcom.com(Brett Williams)

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

Subject: Re: Period Bread Ovens When Camping

Date: 1 May 1996 17:13:52 GMT

 

parkerd at mcmail.cis.McMaster.CA (Diana Parker) writes:

>Elizabeth Estep <CXYB76A at prodigy.com> wrote:

>>If anyone would like to share any experiences, resources, etc. on

>>period style ovens or bread making, please post them here, or e-mail

to the address below. I'll try and share anything I learn with any

>>other interested parties.

>Oh Yes Please.

>Tabitha

>----------------------------------------------

>Diana Parker              parkerd at mcmaster.ca

>Security Services  CUC - 201    

>McMaster University       (905) 525-9140 (x24282)

 

 

The Regia Anglorum web site has an article on building one's own

kiln-type oven in its copious pages. The address is:

 

http://www.ftech.net/~regia/

 

On the other hand, since I somehow surmise from all the reading I've

done on going to Pennsic that the Coopers might frown on folk building

a permanent oven on their land, why not try burying one of those

Romertopf type clay pans (with a lid) with bread in the coals and ashes

of a fire? Supposedly one can make bread with a good crust in one of

those, though I've never tried it. The King Arthur's Flour Baker's

Catalog carries 'em, as does most higher end baked goods/cookery shops.

 

ciorstan

 

 

From: jlee at puc.edu (Thrystan Wickliegh)

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

Subject: Re: Period Bread Ovens When Camping

Date: Thu, 02 May 96 05:37:03 GMT

Organization: Pacific Union College

 

At the West Kingdom Collegium a couple of weeks ago there was a demonstration

of a bread oven. It was made by taking red clay bricks, about 90 of them if I

recall correctly, and forming them into an oven shape using normal mud as a

mortar. You first make a base of bricks layed on their long thin edge,

unfortunately I don't remember how many were in the base. Then you build up a

wall around three sides of the base and dome it over towards the top. the

structure will resemble a cylinder cut in half lengthwise and lain on the cut

side. An important part of building it was that when you get the walls

starting to dome over you need to place two bricks perpindicular to the walls

at the front of the oven, i.e. the open side. These bricks can then have

weights, extra bricks for instance, placed on them to ballance the wieght of

the bricks being domed over. Once you get to the point were a brick turned

sideways will cover the opening at the top then place the last layer of bricks

perpendicular to the side walls. Note the bricks should be placed so that they

have their length going the same direction as the wall and their breadth, i.e.

the next larget dimension, going away from the oven chamber. The idea is to

get as much thermal mass as possible.

 

I realize that this may not be very clear, if you would like I could try to

draw a picture of it and mail it to you, though I am not a very good artist.

The best way to do it would be to get some bricks and try it at home and then

tweak it till it works.

 

To fire the oven remove a brick from the roof at the back of the oven, at the

collegium we made a sort of chimney out of a couple of extra bricks. And then

place your wood inside and build your fire. If you built the oven so that the

door was facing the prevailing direction of wind you will get a nice draw

through the oven even without a chimney. Once the fire in the oven is going

you will get some good flames coming out of the chimney due to the excess

gases burning in the now abundant oxygen. If you build the oven right it

should be possible to cook over the chimney while firing the oven. After the

oven has fired for about an hour it should be ready to bake in. Though you

should probably experiment with it at home. Rake the fire out of the oven and

cover the hole in the roof. Then slide the bread in the oven and place the

bricks you saved for the door, you did remember to do this right:), in front

of the door. The bread should bake in about the same amount of time as in an

oven at home, though you should check it about half way through and then again

towards the end. I was told that you get a feel for how long it should take to

cook. Once it's done pull it out and cut off the bottom layer, since it has

lots of ash and mud on it, and eat.

 

I hope this helps.

Thrystan Wickliegh

 

P.S. I wonder if anyone knows how "period" it would be to cook on the chimney

of such an oven. I would think that it would be great to fire it up in the

morning, cook breakfast over the chimney and then when breakfast is done slide

the bread in for lunch.

 

 

From: Gartner Michael <ges95kll at studserv.uni-leipzig.de>

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

Subject: Re: Period Bread Ovens When Camping

Date: Fri, 3 May 1996 11:26:35 +0200

Organization: Uni Leipzig

 

On 30 Apr 1996, Elizabeth Estep wrote:

> I know that a number of people have done period bread baking at Pennsic

> and other camping events. I haven't, but would like to try it some year.

> However, I'd also love to pick the minds of those of you who have already

> done it, and learn from your mistakes, so that I can make my own new ones.

>

> ELIZABETH ESTEP  CXYB76A at prodigy.com

> ska Angharad ferch Tangwystl

 

apropo,

 

I have never baked bread at war, but I have seen something here in

Germany that is very interesting.  

 

At this time of the year there are many Market days, most of them being

medieval in theme.  There is no one organization in charge, rather the

majority are hosted by individual cities, especially those with very old

Market privelidges.  For instance, here in Leipzig they just celebrated

their 500 anniversary of Trade fair privledge, granted by Max.I, and had

a large Market at the original Marktplatz(Marketplace).  There were many

handworkers there, including food sellers.  One person had brought with

him a small stone oven and was baking flat bread and rolls the whole

day. Other people would come and use the oven from time to time.  I

asked him about this and he said that his was the village oven open to

public use, a very common practice.  In fact since this time I have seen

many small villages where the old water mills also have community ovens.  

 

I thought it would be interesting to see at an event, a public oven for

all to bake their bread fresh daily, Nicht wahr?

 

Duncan Brock, O.L.

Michael H. Gartner

Universitaet Leipzig, Deutschland

 

 

From: jlee at puc.edu (Joe Lee)

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

Subject: Re: Period Bread Ovens When Camping

Date: Mon, 06 May 96 16:41:04 GMT

Organization: Pacific Union College

 

kimiv at ix.netcom.com(Kimberly A. Ingram) wrote:

>I saw one of the conical brick ovens being built in a camp at Pennsic

>once but when i suggested a similar enterprize to my household, several

>people insisted fire brick must be used as opposed to red clay bricks

>or run the risk of exploding bricks and this would be cost prohibitive.

>Is this the case?  

>Yours, Aralyn Thorgrimsdottir

>m.k.a. Kim Ingram-Veillette at kimiv at ix.netcom.com

>Hoping to be savoring some of Tabby's breads this Pennsic!

 

Well the oven I saw was made out of the red clay bricks and it didn't explode.

While there may be a worry about the bricks exploding if they got too hot, the

oven I saw still had a couple of places in it where there was slightly damp,

i.e. still dark, mud between the bricks when we broke it apart the next day.

And this was after four firings. I also heard someone, I unfortunately do not

remember who, mention that they were at an event similar to a ren faire where

there was a large oven built on site. The method used to fire it was that when

the soot on the ceiling of the oven turned white it was hot enough, then the

fire was cleaned out and the floor was mopped lightly to remove the ashes and

hte door was closed. When the outside of the oven became too hot to

comfortably touch, sometime later as I understood it, the oven was ready for

baking. At any rate the bricks do not ever become hot enough to explode.

 

Thrystan Wickliegh

 

 

From: Pat McGregor <patriciaX_O_McGregor at ccm.fm.intel.com>

From: priest at vassar.edu (Carolyn Priest-Dorman)

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

Subject: Re: Period Bread Ovens When Camping

Date: 7 May 1996 11:27:55 GMT

Organization: Vassar College

 

Greeting from Thora Sharptooth!

 

Tabitha (parkerd at mcmail.cis.McMaster.CA) wrote:

>        I'm the one who insisted that fire brick be used.  Five years

>later I'm _still_ picking brick pieces out of my yard from when the

>tenants tried to line their firepit with building bricks.  Since the

>pieces are up to 5-6 feet away from the fire pit site, (and in some cases

>buried 2-3") - I'm worried about what kind of explosive force could

>develop. (perhaps from wet regular bricks heating to steam? - I don't

>know why it would explode - merely that I've got empirical evidence that

>they did)

 

Last year we made a hemispherical, Viking-style unvented brick and mud oven

in our Pennsic camp.  We considered using fire brick for the entire

production but, save for the floor of the oven, went with regular on the

recommendation of the brick merchant in town.  We used the oven for a week

and a half, regularly, and didn't have any problem with exploding or broken

bricks--not even on the last day, when we had the thing fired to well over

700 degrees for several hours.  

*************************************************************************

Carolyn Priest-Dorman                     Thora Sharptooth

priest at vassar.edu                      Frostahlid, Austrrik

         Gules, three square weaver's tablets in bend Or

*************************************************************************

 

 

From: priest at vassar.edu (Carolyn Priest-Dorman)

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

Subject: Re: Period Bread Ovens When Camping

Date: 10 May 1996 11:41:22 GMT

Organization: Vassar College

 

Greeting from Thora Sharptooth!

 

Tabitha (parkerd at mcmail.cis.McMaster.CA) asked:

 

>>Last year we made a hemispherical, Viking-style unvented brick and mud

oven

>>in our Pennsic camp.  We considered using fire brick for the entire

>>production but, save for the floor of the oven, went with regular on the

>>recommendation of the brick merchant in town.  We used the oven for a week

>>and a half, regularly, and didn't have any problem with exploding or

broken

>>bricks--not even on the last day, when we had the thing fired to well over

>>700 degrees for several hours.  

>How many bricks?  

 

About 50, plus the fire bricks.

 

>How long did it take to build?

 

Most of a day for 2.5 people, counting acquisitions.  We kept all the

ingredients (except the mud), and it will probably take less than half a day

in future.  

 

>Any difficuty getting permissions from the Coopers/Pennsic Building

>Inspection?

 

We closely consulted the fire safety advocate, Durr ish Jabal, and Dave

Cooper about several issues such as location, proper acquisition of mud, and

keeping the oven up above the ground (to keep the local root system from

possible ignition).  They were both very cooperative and supportive--but

then again we have a history of paying close mind to fire and safety

regulations in our encampment.

 

>Are you planning on making one again this year?

>Will you rent space? :)

 

No, I'm planning to have our first child on or about August 1.  Needless to

say, we will not be at Pennsic this year! ;>  However, a lady from our shire

wants to set up the oven in the shire encampment (Frosted Hills), so we hope

the oven will make an appearance this year.

***************************************************************************

Carolyn Priest-Dorman                     Thora Sharptooth

priest at vassar.edu                      Frostahlid, Austrrik

         Gules, three square weaver's tablets in bend Or

***************************************************************************

 

 

From: IVANOR at delphi.com

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

Subject: Period Bread Ovens When Camping

Date: 8 May 1996 00:19:08 GMT

 

Quoting parkerd from a message in rec.org.sca

   >     I'm the one who insisted that fire brick be used.  Five years

   >later I'm _still_ picking brick pieces out of my yard from when the

   >tenants tried to line their firepit with building bricks.  Since the

 

This sounds as if the bricks were so placed that they could not lose heat on

the side away from the fire, and as if the fire was not a temporary thing

until the oven was hot enough, but was cooked over, and kept burning within

the fire pit. In such a situation the bricks would become much hotter than a

bread oven ever would, much closer to a kiln (which had BETTER be made of

fire bricks). I think this is why that firepit exploded.

 

Any comment from physics majors?

 

Carolyn Boselli   ivanor at delphi.com   Host of CF35..SCAdians on Delphi

ivanor at localnet.com                                                  

 

 

From: keiths at CyberGate.COM (Keith Smith)

Newsgroups: rec.food.historic,rec.org.sca

Date: 26 Jun 1996 14:13:17 GMT

 

Pat McGregor (patriciaX_O_McGregor at ccm.fm.intel.com) wrote:

: Kris Dow wrote:

: > question is: Does anyone have any information/know of good sources for

: > information on building a small (hopefully not overly permanent :) bread

: > oven outdoors? I've just recently discovered the fun of bread-baking,

 

   Check out Bernard Clayton's new and enlarged edition of his "The

Complete Book of Breads."  His original book (1973) mentioned a temporary

outdoor oven based on a Sunset magazine design; his latest book shows how

to build it.

   The Sunset magazine original is found in an article published August

1971. I also picked up a Sunset softcover book at a library sale

published about 20 years ago that had all kinds of outdoor ovens (most of

them 50-ish looking), but which did include a circular (alas, permanent)

Chinese-style brick oven suitable for indirect cooking of duck and pork.

   Wish I had room to build and outdoor oven.  Good luck.

Cheers,

kds

 

 

From: Vandy Simpson <vsimpson at headwaters.com>

Newsgroups: rec.food.historic,rec.org.sca

Subject: Re: Brick bread oven?

Date: 7 Jul 1996 13:54:36 GMT

Organization: Bell Global Solutions

 

May I also suggest the book "The Forgotten Art of Building and Using a

Brick Bake Oven" by Richard M.Bacon, published by Yankee, Inc. ISBN

0-911658-76-9.

And from personal experience I recommend a stone and turf oven.It

requires a lot less by way of materials and engineering skills, and

seems to work quite nicely.I have one in my back yard, and we built

another up at an annual campsite near North Bay.

We tried a stone and clay oven, but found we hadn't fired the structure

hot enough to fuse the clay to survive the depredations of an Ontario

winter.The turf version doesn't mind rain and snow.

 

Vandy Simpson, Hamlet of Wareham, Ontario, Canada

 

 

From: dpeters at panix.com (D. Peters)

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

Subject: Re: Camp Bread, In period

Date: 2 Oct 1996 21:52:46 -0400

Organization: Panix

 

TJorDan001 <tjordan001 at aol.com> wrote:

>Later in the book (during the description of Edward

>III's Autumn Expedition of 1359) he states "You may like to know that on

>this campaign the great English lords and men of substance took with them

>tents of various sizes, mills for grinding corn, *ovens for baking*,

>forges for shoeing the horses and all other necessities."  He goes on to

>say that these were carried in eight thousand wagons (each drawn by four

>rounceys)

 

> Again, this is probably noteworthy for its' novelty, but I'd like to

>know what kind of ovens they had in period that could be loaded on a cart.

 

Manuscript illustrations and woodcuts show people using "beehive" ovens

(like the clay ovens that some Scadians use at Pennsic) mounted on

two-wheeled carts.

 

The only citation that I have at hand right now is a fifteenth-century

woodcut on page 24 of _Medieval Life Illustrations_ (Carol Belanger

Grafton, ed.), the latest in the Dover Pictorial Archive Series.

 

Bon appetit,

D.Peters

 

 

From: Pat McGregor <patmcg at innercite.com>

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

Subject: Re: Camp Bread, In period

Date: Thu, 3 Oct 1996 12:30:30 -0700

Organization: Lloyd Internetworking

 

Greetings from siobhan medbh!

 

On 2 Oct 1996, Ruffina  wrote:

> Manuscript illustrations and woodcuts show people using "beehive" ovens

> (like the clay ovens that some Scadians use at Pennsic) mounted on

> two-wheeled carts.

>

> The only citation that I have at hand right now is a fifteenth-century

> woodcut on page 24 of _Medieval Life Illustrations_ (Carol Belanger

> Grafton, ed.), the latest in the Dover Pictorial Archive Series.

>

And, as a point of experience, Edward le Carveur (edwoodguy at aol.com)

and Wulfric of Creghill (not sure of spelling, but it is madbaker at netcom.com)

have several times in the last year taken bricks in their carts to

events, created ovens on site, baked in them sucessfully, and then removed

bricks (and mud to hold them together) away again in their vehicles.

 

We were even prepared to use these at 30 year but the ground conditions

were unsuitable, alas.

 

siobhan

======================================================

Siobhan Medhbh O'Roarke / Pat McGregor/ siobhan at lloyd.com

House Northmark, Mountain's Gate, Cynagua, The West

   http://www.lloyd.com/~patmcg/sca.index.html

 

 

From: Mark Schuldenfrei <schuldy at abel.MATH.HARVARD.EDU>

Date: Thu, 3 Jul 1997 11:52:11 -0400 (EDT)

Subject: Re: SC - Building ovens

 

Is there anyone out there who has built an oven at something like

Pennsic?  My husband and our friends would like to build one in the

first week so that we can experiment with some baking.

 

Years ago, The Sated Tyger Inn used to build a brick and clay oven, and cook

all their food in it.  The last time that I know of when they did so was

Pennsic 14....  One of the owners was Old Marian, who may be reached at

marian at world.std.com

 

Last year, my friend Mistress Caterina built a small oven (using a very

large inverted flower pot coated with mud, and with a small door cut in it)

quite successfully to bake at the war.  The line for ruttzige cake was long,

at times.  She even taught a class in her encampment.

 

You might reach her at akatlas at cs.bu.edu

 

        Tibor

 

 

From: "Martin G. Diehl" <mdiehl at nac.net>

Date: Thu, 03 Jul 1997 14:59:07 -0400

Subject: Re: SC - Building ovens

 

Erin Kenny wrote:

> Is there anyone out there who has built an oven at something like

> Pennsic?  My husband and our friends would like to build one in the

> first week so that we can experiment with some baking.

>

> Claricia Nyetgale

 

I have thought about this, but not yet tested the design.  My

thoughts go as follows.

 

1. Size: What is the size of the largest item to be cooked?  Round

   up to the next larger 4" in both the side to side and front to

   back dimensions.

 

2. Materials:

   A. 2 pieces of flagstone whose dimensions are at least 1 foot

     larger than both of the dimensions determined by step 1

   B. Fire brick -- this is a refractory material used to line

     boilers and fireplaces.  In order to determine the number to

     buy, you need, first get the sum of the sides of the

     rectangle needed by step 1.  Divide that length by 8" and

     round up to the next integer.  That is the number of bricks

     per course (1 layer of bricks).  Multiply that number by the

     height of the oven and divide by 2.  You will also need

     enough bricks to cover the base of the oven; to get that

     count, use the outside dimensions of the oven to compute

     the area (side to side width times front to back depth)

     divide by 32 and round up to the next integer.

   C. Heavy insulated gloves

   D. Fireplace shovel

 

3. Construction:

   A. Clear and level and area larger than the larger piece of

     flagstone.  The outside of the oven should get very hot.  

     Think of fire safety and children when planning your

     campsite, cooking area and oven.

   B. Lay out one layer of bricks with the 4" by 8" face showing

     (not on edge) in an ashlar pattern on one of the pieces of

     flagstone.  (An ashlar pattern is what you usually see on

     the face of a brickwork wall.  Do not leave any gaps.

   C. Build up the three of the sides in another ashlar pattern to

     the height needed.  Arrange the pattern so that at the corners,

     the overlap changes at each course.  This improves stability.  

     The open side is to provide access to the cooking area.  It

     is possible to create a place to hang a cooking grille by

     laying some bricks at right angles to the wall.  A more

     detailed explanation will have to wait until I can test this

     and draw some diagrams.  This might also increase the interior

     size and, correspondingly, the brick count.  Aside from the

     open face, do not leave any gaps.

 

4. Heating: Load the cooking area with firewood or charcoal.  Light

   fuel and stack the remaining bricks to close the opening.  In

   order to allow air to enter, you must omit one brick from the

   first course.  Finally, cover the top with the second piece of

   flagstone, but leave an opening to vent the smoke.  Allow enough

   time for the fire to burn down.

 

5. Cooking:

   A. While the oven is heating, prepare the food to be cooked

   B. Use the gloves to remove the last wall you built.

   C. Clear the ashes.  The fire pit is a good place for them and

     could be used for other cooking.

   D. Food into oven

   E. Close up the open face and cap so that there is no airflow.

   F. Cooking time.  That's a tough question -- experiment is my

     advice.

 

Some additional thoughts:

   1. making it larger will allow more fuel and therefore longer

     cooking time

   2. at first, use it items that are not time critical -- bread

     for example

   3. it could also be used as a barbecue pit if the grille and

     oven dimensions are compatible

   4. try it some weekend before an event

   5. the materials are heavy

   6. you might be able to close the top with bricks by

     cantilevering or creating an arch, but it's less stable and

     beyond the scope of this note.  

   7. you might want to use double thick walls to retain additional

     heat and lengthen cooking time

   8. structural stability is a concern

   9. meats like pork should not be used until you are sure that

     it retains enough heat to finish the cooking.

10. could use common (red clay) brick in place of fire brick

11. common brick are 2" by 4" by 8"; firebrick are slightly larger:

     2.5" by 4" by 9" -- this difference might affect the size of

     the pieces of flagstone

12. remember that the ability to effectively cook depends on how

     hot the oven is and how long it stays hot -- using it in

     winter or a rainstorm will give different results from using

     it in summer

13. once you start to use it, you cannot "add" heat except by

     starting another fire in it

 

As I said, I've been thinking about this.  I'm going to have to

follow my own advice and build a test oven.  But not until after

PENNSIC XXVI.

 

Please let me know what you think.

 

I am,

Vinchenzio Martinus di Mazza,

In Service to the Dream

- --

Martin G. Diehl

 

 

From: Stephen Bloch <sbloch at adl15.adelphi.edu>

Date: Mon, 7 Jul 1997 12:15:36 -0400 (EDT)

Subject: Re: SC - Building ovens

 

> Erin Kenny wrote:

>

> I have thought about this, but not yet tested the design.  My

> thoughts go as follows.

> ... [detailed construction discussion omitted]

 

Thom Leonard's _The Bread Book_ includes a 17-page chapter on

constructing and using a brick oven.  He says, among other things,

"An oven built of a single thickness of brick will work well, but the

extra mass and strength gained by a simply applied 2-inch layer of

concrete makes all the difference."  Concrete, of course, puts it way

OOP, but a layer of clay on the outside of the bricks should serve the

same purpose, adding heat-retaining mass.  I've wanted to build such a

thing for several years now... in fact, I was considering building a

mobile one, either on a wheelbarrow (as appears in at least one late

medieval woodcut) or on a car trailer.

 

If you're curious about the book, which also discusses baking bread from

levain (semisolid sourdough starter), grinding your own flour, and even

growing your own wheat, ask your local natural-foods store; it's

published by East-West Health Books, copyright 1990, ISBN 0-936184-09-4.

 

                                      mar-Joshua ibn-Eleazar ha-Shalib

                                                Stephen Bloch

                                          sbloch at panther.adelphi.edu

 

 

Date: Thu, 17 Jul 1997 20:35:07 -0600 (MDT)

From: Roy Wessel <rwessel at ada-solutions.com>

Subject: Re: SC - Building ovens

 

A local Italian restaurant (Laudisio's, Willow Creek Shopping Center,

Boulder, CO 80304) has a portable pizza/bread oven on a flat bed trailer

that they take to wedding receptions, Farmers Market, etc.  It is about five

feet in diameter, two and a half feet tall, with a base of fire brick and a

dome of ordinary brick.  They build a fire inside, and after the oven is

hot, rake out the coals and put bread dough or uncooked pizza inside.  It is

quite Period except for using a van to pull it around.

 

Robin Vinehall,

__________________________________________________________________

W. Roy Wessel                      | rwessel at abwam.com            |

W. Roy Wessel & Associates         |                              |

3545 Arthur Court, #3              |  Voice: (303) 444-5004       |

Boulder, CO 80304-2031             |                              |

 

 

Date: Mon, 18 Aug 1997 16:40:20 -0600

From: "Paul Shore" <shore at dcainc.com>

Subject: Re: SC - Smoking Questions

 

On 18 Aug 97 at 16:57, Philip & Susan Troy wrote:

> Kea ErisDottir wrote:

> > I am a blacksmith and technology researcher whose preferred medium is

> > fire(surprise) and am the perpetrator of the ongoing Iron furnace research

> > at Pennsic.  Recently, I have become very interested in how cooking related

> > fire works.  In the last 3 years, I have built two beehive style ovens at

> > the Pennsic War and have also undertaken building one in the back yard, as

> > a means to study both their use and maintenance.

> >

> > Anyone who could send/direct me to good resources for recipes and related

> > information(in modern english, please) would be very appreciated.

>

> Suggest you take a look at "Elinor Fettiplace's Receipt Book", dated

> 1604. Hilary Spurling, ed., copyright Hilary Spurling, 1986, Viking

> Penguin, Inc., New York ISBN 0-670-81592-6. This has several recipes for

> baked goods which are described in a relative sequence indicating which

> items are put into the [hot] oven first, which ones are then baked at a

> moderate heat, and which ones as the oven becomes cool again. Of course,

> we don't really know that much about how hot the oven needs to get, with

> how big a fire and for how long it is heated. I suppose if you follow a

> bread recipe and tinker with the process until the bread is fully cooked

> but not burned, then you'd have a pretty good idea.

 

Another good book on the use of beehive ovens for baking is "English Bread and

Yeast Cookery" by Elizabeth David, New American Edition, 1995, ISBN

0-964-36000-4. (I recently found the soft cover version remaindered for $6,

Amazon.com has the hard cover version for $17.50 + shipping).  She provides

redacted recipes, discusses how hot the oven should be, etc.

 

HL Aeddan ap Trahaearn           | Email: shore at dcainc.com

Shire of Mooneschadowe

Kingdom of Ansteorra

 

 

Date: Wed, 20 Aug 1997 09:54:15 +0200

From: Janine  De Villiers <JDeVilliers at juta.co.za>

Subject: SC - Re: Smoking Questions

 

Greetings, all, from Meriel

 

Fursa Hand-Seinn wrote:

<snip> In the last 3 years, I have built two beehive style ovens at

>the Pennsic War and have also undertaken building one in the backyard, as

>a means to study both their use and maintenance.

 

There is a fascinating web site for the Regia Anglorum, a living history

society in the UK, which has, amongst other wondrous things, an article

on building an oven. The URL address is:

http://www.ftech.net/~regia/

 

Meriel of the Marsh

Shire Incipient of Adamastor, Cape Town

 

 

Date: Wed, 5 Nov 1997 23:25:45 -0500 (EST)

From: Carol Thomas <scbooks at neca.com>

To: sca-arts at raven.cc.ukans.edu

Subject: Re: Period Ovens.

 

>Has anyone seen pictures of village ovens?

 

English Bread and Yeast Cookery by Elizabeth David has pictures of ovens at

Pompeii that are similar.  Also, a 15th c. woodcut of an oven that looks

like what you describe.

 

It also has some clay ovens - does Master Hroar need a new project?

 

Lady Carllein

 

 

Date: Wed, 5 Nov 1997 23:58:07 +0000

From: Karen at agent.infodata.com (Harris, Karen)

To: sca-arts at raven.cc.ukans.edu

Subject: Re: Period Ovens.

 

Sarah in An Tir wrote:

> Has anyone seen pictures of village ovens? The way that they have been

> disscribed to me is about 6-7ft tall and slightly conical. They have an

> place forthe fire in the lower half and the oven section above. The smoke

> goes around the oven section and out a chimney. Some frineds of mine and

> I are thinking about making one.

 

You may want to check out http://www.ftech.net/~regia/ovens.htm --

it's a webpage at Regia Anglorum with information on a large oven

they had built.

 

Karen Larsdatter

Barony of Ponte Alto, Atlantia

 

 

Date: Thu, 06 Nov 1997 09:16:41

From: Sheron Buchele/Curtis Rowland <foxryde at verinet.com>

To: sca-arts at raven.cc.ukans.edu

Subject: Re: Period Ovens.

 

This fall I participated in a class at a local CSA where we built a wood

fired bread oven.  It was very interesting and the whole time I kept

thinking about the plotting that Mistress Meriel and Master Brendan of

Calontir did about making a bread oven on the Lilies site.  The teacher,

Alan Scott, built Laurel (of Laurel's Kitchen and Bread cookbooks) her

first oven.  

 

He has a web site where he talks about wood fired ovens.  Alan views bread

ovens as folk art, so the process was very primative and felt very

medieval!   I can't find the address of the web site, but search on "Alan

Scott" and "Ovencrafters", I think that is the name of the group.

 

If anybody wants to get wild and crazy and build an oven at the Lilies

site, I'd be happy to help!  

 

Baroness Leonora

 

 

Date: Sat, 29 Nov 1997 07:21:16 -0500

From: margali <margali at 99main.com>

Subject: Re: Unit alert! (was: SC - Long-Period food, bread, etc.)

 

> Wait a minute? Do I understand that you do *puff pastry* at camping

> events?

> I can do it with my eyes closed with a frig, but how in heaven's name do

> you make puff pastry outside, in the summer, with nothing more, I assume,

> than an ice chest????? And how do you bake it without a hot, fast

> electric or gas oven?????

> Julleran, mind-boggled over the picture of making puff pastry at Pennsic

> (say that three times fast!)

 

why, yes i have. you work it at night when it is relatively cool, you

put the slab of marble in the ice chest for the day wrapped in plastic

to keep it dry. the resting period works just as well in the ice chest

as long as you keep the dough dry. as for baking it, i have a mondo

stainless steel bowl about 30" diameter, and a dutch oven. bury the

dutch oven in the coals, put the lid on, heap coals on top to preheat.

dig it out, put in the tin can ring to make a support for a pie tin,

place the pastry tidbit in the pie tin, place on ring, put the oven lid

back on, rebury and cover the area with the stainless steel bowl. it

helps if you practice with the pie tin and an oven thermometer to get a

ballpark on the temp a few times to help out with the timing.

This summer I hope to have a brick beehive oven heated from below with

the floor of the oven being boiler plate, have dogrobbing lord working

on it right now.

 

margali

 

and ny favorite breakfast at a camping event is crepes benedict- instead

of on a muffin, wrap scrambled eggs, bacon crumbles in a crepe, top with

hollandaise and more crumbled bacon. yummy.

 

 

Date: Mon, 05 Jan 1998 10:27:57 -0500

From: margali <margali at 99main.com>

Subject: Re: SC - Pucks Glen, off topic

 

the mennonite community on north carolina has a wonderful hearth in

their main kitchen you shoul see-

a giant hood over about a 12-14 foot wide by 6 foot deep area, along the

back wall is a basic hearth, along the left is a 2 hole kettle rest, and

along the right is a 5' dia beehive baking/roasting oven, i have been

trying to get my  lord to put one in the back yard for years!

next time i have the time, and the wherewithall to visit the

winston-salem area, i want to go back, take pictures and blueprint it. i

know it dates to the early 1700s, but it cant be that different as i

have a photo from el moro in PR that has a similar hearth arrangement of

hood over hearth, but not the kettle rests that dates to the 1500s.

 

you could make a pole shed with the mennonite hearth at one end, a

regular hearth at the other and half walls along the long sides as sort

of a  freeform outdoor small feast hall for 50, 60 people using timber

cut during clearing the land as a modular start for an enchanted ground

sort of area.

 

margali

 

 

Date: Mon, 5 Jan 1998 20:06:08 EST

From: Bronwynmgn <Bronwynmgn at aol.com>

Subject: Re: SC - camp ovens

 

I bookmarked this site a while ago but haven't gotten around to checking it

out yet.  If I recall correctly, the site belongs to one of the more

authenticity minded English living history groups (Regia Anglorum) and is

based on experience with building and using period ovens.

 

http://www.ftech.net/~regia/

 

Brangwayna

 

 

Date: Tue, 6 Jan 1998 12:00:53 -0500

From: David Friedman <ddfr at best.com>

Subject: Re: SC - camp ovens

 

I know of at least two types of period ovens, and (when I get back home)

can probably find pictures for one of them.

 

1. Islamic. The Tanur (same word from which we get modern Indian

"Tandoori"). Think of a large clay vessel, perhaps partly buried in the

ground. Heat with a fire inside, then replace fire with food.

 

2. Standard medieval oven. Roughly speaking a clay beehive, possibly with

bricks as the underlying structure. Again, you heat it by making a fire

inside, sweep out the fire, put in the food.  A number of people I know

have made versions of this for SCA purposes--Marion of Edwinstowe, in the

long gone days, ran a medieval cookshop (the Sated Tyger) at Pennsic, using

two such ovens as well as fires. Her only modern equipment consisted of

(concealed) refrigerators.

 

David/Cariadoc

http://www.best.com/~ddfr/

 

 

Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 14:00:44 -0500 (EST)

From: Stephen Bloch <sbloch at adl15.adelphi.edu>

Subject: Re: SC - camp ovens

 

Phlip gave directions for building a brick oven.  This is something I've

been fantasizing about for several years.  I still haven't done it, but

here are two books with detailed directions:

 

Tom Jaine, _Building a Wood-Fired Oven for bread and pizza_, Prospect

Books 1996, ISBN 090732570X

 

Thom Leonard, _The Bread Book: a natural, whole-grain seed-to-loaf

approach to real bread_, East-West Health Books 1990, ISBN 0-936184-09-4

 

The latter book, BTW, also discusses how to grind your own flour and

grow your own grain in the back yard.

 

                                       mar-Joshua ibn-Eleazar ha-Shalib

                                                Stephen Bloch

                                          sbloch at panther.adelphi.edu

 

 

Date: Tue, 12 May 1998 15:03:56 -0500

From: "Decker, Terry D." <TerryD at Health.State.OK.US>

Subject: RE: SC - Bread

 

If you have the towing capacity, why not build your oven on a trailer?  That

way you don't have to worry about setting it up and tearing it down every

event. Mobile baking ovens were in use in Europe in the late medieval

period and probably in use earlier.

 

If you want to see a painting of one, browse the following URL.

 

http://www.opennet.de/brotmuseum-ulm/english.html

 

Bear

 

 

Date: Wed, 26 Aug 1998 16:43:47 -0700

From: Librarian <betpulib at ptd.net>

Subject: SC - Beehive Oven

 

Hallo folks! as promised, the pics of the beehive are up and online,

along with a description.

 

Find them through my home page at:

http://members.tripod.com/~AoifeFinn/index.html

 

or go straight to the oven atricle at

http://members.tripod.com/~AoifeFinn/oven.html

 

Enjoy! These pics, by the way, were taken on a digital camera. I have

more for later addition on regular 35 mm film, which show the end of the

process.

 

Aoife

 

 

Date: Sun, 30 Aug 1998 13:36:27 EDT

From: LrdRas at aol.com

Subject: SC - Baking temp

 

vjarmstrong at aristotle.net writes:

<< The practice of starting out with a high temp and then reducing it is a

modern one I learned from my mother, but I thought it might simulate baking

in a wood fired oven where the temp would decrease a bit over the cooking

time. >>

 

I wonder how your observation that starting a baking project at a higher temp

and lowering it is a modern one?  Especially since you mention in the next

sentence that it simulates a 'wood' fired oven?

 

What you have described is a "modern' adaptation of a very ancient cooking'

'technique. When ovens were heated with wood, peat, charcoal, coal or dung to

the correct temperature during the MA they were extremely hot at the beginning

of the baking process and lost their heat as the baking progressed.  Adjusting

the oven temp from high to lower is a perfect example of a 'holdover' practice

of the MA. being preserved and adapted to the kitchens of the Current Middle

Ages. :-).

 

Ras

 

 

Date: Sun, 30 Aug 1998 14:47:09 -0400

From: Phil & Susan Troy <troy at asan.com>

Subject: Re: SC - Baking temp

 

LrdRas at aol.com wrote:

> What you have described is a "modern' adaptation of a very ancient cooking'

> 'technique.  When ovens were heated with wood, peat, charcoal, coal or dung to

> the correct temperature during the MA they were extremely hot at the beginning

> of the baking process and lost their heat as the baking progressed.  Adjusting

> the oven temp from high to lower is a perfect example of a 'holdover' practice

> of the MA. being preserved and adapted to the kitchens of the Current Middle

> Ages. :-).

 

I'll go with that. As a bit of additional evidence, take a look at some of the

Elizabethan sources that include baking receipts: Elinor Fettiplace comes to

mind. Almost all of her baking receipts instruct the baker to put the pies in

after the manchets have been drawn, and the biskets after the pies, etc.

Taking all the receipts together it's possible to determine a sort of pecking

order for different baked goods, based on a slowly decreasing oven

temperature. For long-cooking items, like large pies, the oven temperature

would decrease over the sometimes several hours the pie is in the oven, while

a modern baker might well start in at a high temperature to get a good brown

crust and then reduce the temperature for the balance of the cooking.

 

Adamantius

 

 

Date: Wed, 16 Sep 1998 10:28:41 -0700

From: "Balldrich BallBarian BoulderBain" <msca at c2i2.com>

Subject: Re: SC - Aoife's Homepgae-OT-OOP

 

> Where do you get the stones for the oven?  I live in South Florida in the

> USA (the tropics) and we have loose fieldstone.  Also can it be broken down

> for moving?

>

> Andy

 

In south Florida use that lime shell stone that is all over the place,

just start your fire low and let the stone heat and dry slowly.  That goes

for almost any stone that is in damp conditions . . . once dry you can

crank up the heat and get a slow hot oven with even heat and no exploding

rocks (from steam).

       Another idea that I have tried here is to find a flagstone construction

outfit and ask for all the loose bits that are not good for making

walkways, sandstone and shale are both good for ovens.  Just pile into a

larger than you think you need oven shape and cover the outside with sod,

dirt, whatever to seal in and keep in the heat.  No need to cement the

stones together so when its time to remove ( after it cools off) it just

knock it down.  Enjoy

       Balldrich

 

 

Date: Thu, 24 Sep 1998 09:31:47 -0500

From: "Decker, Terry D." <TerryD at Health.State.OK.US>

Subject: RE: SC - Outdoor Ovens

 

> Check out the last link on my website

> (http://members.tripod.com/~AoifeFinn/index.html), for the Beehive Oven

 

I certainly will.  I have a trailer body on which I am planning to build a

field oven, creating a more modern version of a field oven I have seen

depicted in a 15th Century painting.  I'm thinking of plastering the

exterior (like a horno) to produce a relatively waterproof oven.  With a

couple cords of aged pecan in the back yard, I should have a fun time.

 

> This weekend I will be testing the "baking in a huge kettle" theory (you

> know---the modern medieval myth of ancestors laying a board across the

> bottom and then using the kettle as an oven). That's if I can get someone

> to construct a wooden lid for my huge pot. We'll see. I'd appreciate any

> sources of descriptions of this method, should anyone happen to come across

> them. Frankly, I expect it will work just as well as any other method.

 

Check out Elizabeth David's English Bread and Yeast Cookery.  It has a

photograph and some comments about the Welsh using kettles supported on a

metal stand for baking in between oven days.  The more modern version looks

like a dutch oven on stilts, but I bet you can bake bread in a round bottom

kettle just as easily.  I'll also bet you don't need the board to bake a 2

to 4 pound cottage loaf.

 

       Bear

 

 

Date: Thu, 24 Sep 1998 13:06:31 -0500

From: "Decker, Terry D." <TerryD at Health.State.OK.US>

Subject: RE: SC - OVENS...OVENS...OVENS...OVENS...

 

> It certainly sounds like you will have a good time. Could you by any

> chance direct me to that 15th c. painting?

 

Actually it is a painted woodcut with a GIF on the opening web page for the

Ulm Bread Museum, at:

 

http://www.opennet.de/brotmuseum-ulm/english.html

 

> And the you said...

> Check out Elizabeth David's English Bread and Yeast Cookery.

 

David's book is currently in print.  ISBN 0964360004.  IIRC, it is $25 list,

available from Amazon.com at $14.98.  I don't think this one has Karen Hess'

commentary. I have an earlier edition, now out-of-print, which has the Hess

commentary. This is not connected to Cariadoc's work.

 

Take a look at the commercial bakery oven in Pompeii, at:

http://www.eliki.com/ancient/civilizations/pompeii/commercial/

 

This is not the best photograph of it.  David's book has information about

ovens and some other views of the Pompeiian bakery.  And, Pompeii, A.D. 79,

a museum catalog of the Pompeii exhibit has some other information.  Maggie

Black's The Medieval Cookbook has some nice illustrations.

 

Everything I've seen suggests that Medieval commercial or manor house ovens

were stone or brick and followed either the Roman or beehive designs.

Baking in kettles or cloche (clay baking stone covered by a clay dome) ovens

would be for the small household.

 

Bear

 

 

Date: Sun, 4 Oct 1998 12:37:55 -0400

From: "Philippa Alderton" <phlip at bright.net>

Subject: SC - Beehive ovens

 

I've just gotten access to a copy of "The Best from New Mexico Kitchens",

and in it, there's a very detailed picture with instructions of a

beehive-style oven called an "horno". Would anybody be interested if I were

to scan it and send it? Anybody know of a website which might be willing to

house it?

 

Phlip

Caer Frig

Barony of the Middle Marches

Middle Kingdom

 

 

Date: Mon, 5 Oct 1998 15:00:57 -0500

From: "Decker, Terry D." <TerryD at Health.State.OK.US>

Subject: SC - Oven Sites

 

For anyone looking for more information about ovens, here are a couple of

sites to try.

 

http://mha-net.org/msb/html/bakeov02.htm

http://mha-net.clever.net/msb/html/bakeoven.htm

 

Bear

 

 

Date: Mon, 23 Nov 1998 14:06:07 -0600

From: "Decker, Terry D." <TerryD at Health.State.OK.US>

Subject: SC - Journal of Primative Technology

 

While running a search I came across this interesting journal.  While not

specifically in our area of study, it has articles on Syrian ovens,

fire-laying, and other odd things.  You may wish to take a look.

 

http://www.hollowtop.com/spt_html/backissues.htm

 

Bear

 

 

Date: Wed, 24 Feb 1999 15:41:22 -0800 (PST)

From: Donna Hrynkiw <donna at kwantlen.bc.ca>

Subject: SC - 13th C image of baker

 

Greetings from Elizabeth Braidwood,

 

Just stumbled across a late 13th century manuscript page depicting

a baker at his oven, and another being dragged on a sled with a loaf

tied around his neck.

 

Corporation of London Records Office Postcards

http://www.lib.uci.edu/largo/clr/clr_imag/clr_cards.html

 

Page also includes images of a couple Opus Anglicanum seal bags, a charter

of William I (1067), and Statutes of Richard III (late 15th C, which I

remember making into my desktop wallpaper at one point).

 

E.B.

 

 

Date: Thu, 13 May 1999 07:19:45 -0400

From: capriest at cs.vassar.edu (Carolyn Priest-Dorman)

To: sca-arts at raven.cc.ukans.edu

Subject: Re: Bread oven

 

Melanie asked:

>>The oven is also written up (and dated more precisely) very briefly by Hall

>>in Penelope Walton Rogers, _Textile Production at 16-22 Coppergate_. The

>>Archaeology of York, Volume 17, Fascicule 11 (York: York Archaeological

>>Trust and the Council for British Archaeology, 1997).

>Couldn't find anything in this, do you recall where abouts at all ?

 

In the section on stratigraphy at the very beginning, the part by R.A. Hall.

Like I said, it's very brief.

 

Carolyn Priest-Dorman              =DE=F3ra Sharptooth

capriest at  cs. vassar. edu         Frostahlid, Austmork

     http://www.cs.vassar.edu/~capriest/thora.html

 

 

Date: Tue, 13 Jul 1999 12:18:34 PDT

From: "Bonne of Traquair" <oftraquair at hotmail.com>

Subject: SC - Fwd: Ovens

 

This was forwarded to me by a dear man, and is reposted here with permission

of the original author.  At Lillies War, someone made and used a beehive

type bread oven, here's the story.

 

Bonne

 

From: Potters at onelist.com

To: Potters at onelist.com

Subject: [Potters] Digest Number 13

Date: 13 Jul 1999 10:32:03 -0000

 

Date: Mon, 12 Jul 1999 12:10:10 CDT

   From: "Eagle Claw" <badhare at hotmail.com>

Subject: Bread Ovens Essay

 

Okay, people have asked for this so here it is.  My essay on bread ovens and

Lilies "mud".

 

The original research that Master Mikhail and I found on bread ovens is that

they were typically single chamber ovens.  Double chamber ovens were used,

but mostly for industrial pursuits rather than for food preparation. With

this in mind, we looked at a lot of pictures from illuminations and from

re-creationist groups that had already worked with ovens previously.  The

general concensus is that the most efficient shape is a round dome with a

small door in the side at the bottom of the dome and a hole in the "back" of

the oven towards the top for the flue.

 

Since Mikhail wasn't comfortable with relying on his skills as a brick

layer, he constructed a metal "skeleton" for the oven.  This was

transported to Lilies with a load of bricks.  (Talk about not  traveling

light!) At the site, we cut away the sod where the oven would set.  Patio

bricks were placed for the floor of the oven and then the skeleton was

placed. A trench was dug in front of the door and across the front of the

oven for embers.

 

Next, a skin of chicken wire was put on the metal skeleton (another

example of Mikhail's need to over engineer....).  We then laid small patio

type bricks against the outside of the structure, using mud/clay from the

lake shore.  (This particular batch of mud/clay came from the Period

Encampment area.  It had a lot of debris and sand in it, but had a good

amount of tackiness to it).  We mortared the bricks in with the mud/clay,

leaving a hole in the top near the back.  This hole would be plugged with a

brick during the baking phase, but left open during the firing phase.  To

finish the oven, we covered the entirety in mud (except for flue hole and

door). We let it dry for several hours.

 

Unfortunately, we couldn't let it dry all the way through before firing it

as rain threatened to fall and wash away our efforts.  So we put a small

fire in the oven to try to quicken the drying process.  The fire was

probably too big too soon and the mud/clay mixture cracked a lot.  We filled

in cracks as it fired and though it didn't look pretty, it became quite

functional for thermal mass.  It took about 2 hours to get the oven looking

dry. We went ahead and pulled out the fire and embers (fire into the

cooking pit nearby and embers into the trench in front of the oven door),

and decided to try baking some bread.  The bread was put in on the floor (we

used some freezer  bread dough that had been thawed) and plugged the flue

and the door (used pieces of limestone for the door).  It took about 20

minutes for the bread to bake through.

 

The bread, of course, had soot and such on the bottom crust, which would be

perfectly okay for period, but modern sensibilities made our dinner guests a

little concerned about it.  We determined that putting a piece of aluminum

foil down after pulling out the fire was a good way to maintain a clean

baking surface. {note, I recommended to her a brushy damp broom, such as the

one of cornhusks I've seen at Old Salem, NC, for cleaning out the soot. -

Bonne)

 

Over the course of the week, we found the mud/clay mortar cracking

periodically from the heating and cooling of the oven (we fired it once or

twice every day).  We kept a bucket of mud/clay available nearby to patch it

periodically. This seemed to work fine.  We did put a tarp over the oven

during rainy weather to reduce the chances of the mud/clay loosening itself

from the bricks.

 

We determined that it took about an hour to get the oven up to

temperature (about 500 degrees Fahrenheit). Then by the time you pulled out

the fire/embers, loaded in the bread (this oven held about 8 loaves of bread

comfortably), and blocked the door and flue, the oven was about 350 degrees

Fahrenheit. It took about 20 minutes to bake the bread.  We used the

freezer dough instead of making our own since this was an experiment this

year. We tried loaves, half loaves and buns.  There didn't seem to be much

variation in timing between the different sizes of dough.  We also had

cinnamon rolls one morning!

 

Changes for next year include a smaller, multiple ovens.  We're also

planning on making clay ovens to transport to the site, rather than

making a brick form while there.  This will make the technology much more

portable. We're discussing the pros and cons of the double chamber versus

the single chamber ovens.  Also, I will be making my own dough on site to

add to the variety of available bread choices.

 

The tools that seemed to be the best for the firing and baking were a

long-handled scoopy type "spoon" for scraping out the embers, bbq tongs, and

a pair of heavy gloves (for removing the stones in front of the door when

it's time to take the bread out.

 

- -Vasilla

 

Vasilla Anastasiia Krasnaia

Barony of Mag Mor

 

 

Date: Sun, 18 Jul 1999 22:15:05 -0500

From: "Decker, Terry D." <TerryD at Health.State.OK.US>

Subject: RE: SC - Fwd: Ovens

 

> oftraquair at hotmail.com writes:

> << The bread, of course, had soot and such on the bottom crust, which

> would be perfectly okay for period, >>

> The bottoms of the ovens would have been cleaned out with a brush used for

> that purpose, most likely. I doubt that soot and embers all over the bread

> would have been any more 'perfectly okay for period' than it would be OK

> for the Current middle ages. What lead you to that conclusion?

> Ras

 

Single chamber ovens are often swabbed just before loading the bread.  It

cleans out a lot of the large particles of ash and moistens the oven to

improve the crust.

 

Modernly, it is common to use coarse corn meal to keep the dough from

sticking to the peel or the oven.  I suspect coarse meal of barley or millet

was used in period for the same purpose

 

Bear

 

 

Date: Tue, 20 Jul 1999 22:56:08 -0500

From: "Decker, Terry D." <TerryD at Health.State.OK.US>

Subject: RE: SC - Fwd: Ovens

 

> << Modernly, it is common to use coarse corn meal to keep the dough from

> sticking to the peel or the oven.  I suspect coarse meal of barley or

> millet was used in period for the same purpose

> Bear >>

> I once used cracked wheat for the same purpose and it worked very well.

> Margherita the Weaver

 

As a guess, any coarse meal can be used.  Wheat would not have been used in

period because of the expense.  Barley was about the cheapest grain readily

available to bakers and would likely have been used in this manner.  Millet

was readily available and while not commonly used in baking, it might have

been used as a cheap meal to dust the oven.

 

Bear

 

 

Date: Wed, 21 Jul 1999 19:08:22 PDT

From: "Bonne of Traquair" <oftraquair at hotmail.com>

Subject: Re: SC - Fwd: Ovens

 

><< The bread, of course, had soot and such on the bottom crust, which would

>be perfectly okay for period, >>

>The bottoms of the ovens would have been cleaned out with a brush used for

>that purpose, most likely. I doubt that soot and embers all over the bread

>would have been any more 'perfectly okay for period' than it would be OK

>for the Current middle ages. What lead you to that conclusion?

>Ras

 

Well, it was a forwarded post, so I wasn't led to that conclusion!  When

requesting permission to forward, I pointed out to the potter who had done

the experiment that the oven would have been swept, and explained that I'd

seen the single chamber oven at Old Salem, NC scraped with a tool like an

angled bar at the end of a rod then swabbed out with a fairly stiff broom

made of corn husks. She said that one of the others on the project had

attempted a quick swipe with a whisk broom, but the oven was too hot for

that plan to work well!

 

I hope the oven experiment itself was of interest, but I'm not surprised

discussion of it was distracted by discussing an uninformed cooking

statement!

 

Is any Cook going to Lillies next year that could meet up with this potter

and work with her?

 

Bonne

 

 

Date: Tue, 9 May 2000 10:02:33 -0500

From: "Decker, Terry D." <TerryD at Health.State.OK.US>

Subject: RE: SC - What kind of recipes  would you experiment with....

 

>   I am talking about the ones where you build a fire in the oven and then

> when the oven walls are up to temperature you clean out the fire. Anyway we

> started thinking about some of the recipes which tell you to put a dish in,

> after first the bread baked, then x kind of dish and then y kind of dish.

> (don't have any recipes at hand right now) <clipped>

>

> So, what would you do if you had one of these to play with?

>

> Maeve

 

The temperature of the oven is on a declining curve, so organize your baking

so the recipes needing the highest temperature bake first.  

 

I would probably experiment with pizza or bread first, because I can do

those in my sleep and they bake best around 400-500F.  Followed by the pies

and tarts, which bake at a lower temperature.  

 

Standard recipes should work fine, except the times are for constant

temperature ovens and may not work with a declining heat oven.

 

Bear

 

 

Date: Tue, 9 May 2000 10:48:34 -0500

From: "Decker, Terry D." <TerryD at Health.State.OK.US>

Subject: RE: SC - What kind of recipes  would you experiment with....

 

1) Is the oven in question a standard "hearth oven"?  I have experience using

> these for baking, but what throws me is the statement that the fire is swept

> out after the walls reach a certain temperature.  I have used hearth ovens

> in the past, but have never heard of sweeping out the embers.  

 

>From the statement, the type of oven is similar to the southwestern horno, a

declining heat, thermal mass oven.  The hearth ovens I think you are talking

about are part of a fireplace which provides the heat or have a separate

firebox, which is a fairly new innovation.  Medieval ovens were fired by

building a fire inside the oven, heating the thermal mass, then withdrawing

the fire and baking in the firing chamber with the heat radiating from the

thermal mass.

 

> 2) How long

> will this oven maintain a decent temperature?  Does the heat dissipate

> quickly, or over a period of hours?  Is this similar to a Tandoor?  That's

> what I'm thinking.

 

The heat dissipates slowly, primarily into the firing chamber.  The time

this takes depends on the mass of the oven, the temperature the mass

reached, and how well insulated the outside of the oven is.

 

Tandoors are primarly a verticle opening, continuous heat (constantly fired)

clay oven.  The oven being discussed is almost certainly a horizontal

opening, roughly hemispherical baking chamber with the base of the

hemisphere being the floor of the chamber.  

> 3)  How hot does the baker allow the walls to get before killing the flame?  

> This would make a difference, certainly, in the order in which you stacked

> the oven, as the author of the original post suggests.

 

According to one baker who took over a communal oven, the soot on the top of

the chamber changes color as the oven is fired, from black through the reds

to white.  I suspect each oven has its heat curves depending on a number of

variables.

 

Highest temperature baking is done first, followed by medium temperature

baking, followed by the stuff you just want to warm up without using direct

heat.

 

> As for the tenderness of pastry in an oven which cooks at a low temperature,

> I would hazard a guess that the pastry would possibly dry out excessively

> before the crust was browned and cooked through.  Again, this all depends on

> the heat of the oven, which is an unknown at this point.

 

According to some people, the declining heat works in favor of low temp

pastries, especially later in the cycle.  There is apparently less of a

tendency to dry out compared to a constant temperature oven.

  

> Breads, also, may not rise enough when cooked at lower temperatures (i.e. not

> enough "oven spring"), or possibly even too much (not enough heat to kill

> the yeast before it rises past the point where the gluten can no longer

> support the crust, causing it to collapse). Rapid changes in temperature can cause

> unpredictable results in baking (of course, if the change is steady and slow,

> then there may not be a problem).  Just a few of my thoughts on the matter.  

> I would love to have more information on this oven.

>

> Balthazar of Blackmoor

 

The oven floor is commonly swabbed with a wet sponge to help remove the ash.

This makes for a moist oven.

 

A layer of meal may be scattered on the bottom of the oven to help keep the

bottom of the bread from burning.

 

Depending on the fuel used and the thermal mass of the oven, the oven

temperature should be between 400-600F.  This is not a problem because the

first temperature drop should be very steep and most breads can stand it.

There are a some French breads which call for a 550F starting oven which is

dropped to 400-450F shortly after the bread is loaded.

 

After the initial drop, the thermal exchange is a slow, steady decline.

Oven times are usually longer with declining heat ovens, and temperature of

the oven chamber is often more even than that of continuous heat ovens.  The

declining heat oven is more difficult to use, because you have to understand

the heating characteristics of your oven and how it matches the bake goods

you prepare.

 

I've been trying to find the time and money to build a horno for over a

year.

 

Bear

 

 

Date: Tue, 9 May 2000 01:11:28 -0400

From: "Bethany Public Library" <betpulib at ptdprolog.net>

Subject: Re: SC - What kind of recipes  would you experiment with....

 

try my oven page at http://members.tripod.com/~AoifeFinn/oven.html

 

So many poeple have visited it that the counter reset! I'm amazed! last time

I looked it was over 14,000, but that was probably a year ago or more. At

any rate, this is a perfectly legit thermal mass oven, and while it would be

more likely that you'd find one looking like a large mound of dirt, this one

with turf insulation happens to be appropriate as well, I know to Ireland

but maybe to other areas as well. The pix and a description of how to use it

are all there.

 

I read that the Viking village found in York Englnad had evidence that

there may have been small birds roasted in the communal oven, but it's

primary purpose was for bread. Most other early sites where thermal mass

community ovens are found also describe the purpose as solely for  baking

bread. Later in period, however, commercial ovens were used to bake all

sorts of things such a smeat pies, roasts, etc. I'ver ead directions to heat

an oven until you cannot hold your arm in for a count of three, or where a

cube of bread browns at a certain rate. It's a question of personal

judgement and familiarity with your recipes. If you've ever had an oven

fail, you'll know you got to a point where just by popening the door you

knew it wasn't hot enough, or was too hot. The signs are subtle, but once

learned are as reliable as a thermometer.

 

Aoife

 

 

Date: Wed, 10 May 2000 16:01:46 -0500

From: "Decker, Terry D." <TerryD at Health.State.OK.US>

Subject: RE: SC - What kind of recipes  would you experiment with....

 

> Have you checked Elizabeth David's book on breads?  I don't know a whole lot

> of work with bread, but my lord does, and he got quite excited

> about all of the information in the book about ovens.

>

> Kiri

 

Yes. It has excellent information about ovens, but not about building them.

 

As for David's English Bread and Yeast Cookery, I would recommend the

edition from the early 70's (1972?) with Karen Hess' annotations over the

current edition.

 

And the Second Edition of Wood's Sourdoughs of the World from Antiquity has

a nice section on experimenting with an

Ancient Egyptian bakery.  You want both editions of this book.  The First

Edition has more recipes.

 

Bear

 

 

From: Etain1263 at aol.com

Date: Tue, 26 Jun 2001 12:04:12 EDT

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Fwd: [Mid] Beehive oven builders? (fwd)

To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org

 

Here is the url to Aoife Finn's site about her behive oven:

http://members.tripod.com/~AoifeFinn/oven.html

 

Etain inghean Ruaidhri

 

 

Date: Mon, 2 Feb 2004 08:05:00 -0600

From: "Terry Decker" <t.d.decker at worldnet.att.net>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Period baking ovens

To: "Cooks within the SCA" <sca-cooks at ansteorra.org>

 

>I am having a difference of opinion with someone at my work about the arched

>space often shown under built-in wall ovens.  He says he has seen a picture

>showing a fire in that space; I've only ever seen wood stored there, if

>anything is in there at all.  What have you folks come across?

>Nancy Kiel

 

What I have seen suggests that it is wood storage.  The firebox style of

oven is (to my knowledge) a modern period invention which came into use

after iron became readily available.  Fireboxes require the heat be

conducted, which is very wasteful of energy in a totally stone or brick

heat-mass oven.

 

Bear

 

 

Date: Sat, 4 Sep 2004 07:23:52 -0500

From: "Terry Decker" <t.d.decker at worldnet.att.net>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Another bread question - bakeries

To: "Cooks within the SCA" <sca-cooks at ansteorra.org>

 

> While we're discussing bread... I was talking about baking  in period

> with someone a while ago, and a question arose.

> I was under the impression that bakers made all or almost all  bread,  as

> a general rule, from scratch and by their own recipes, and people simply

> purchased it.

> The person I was speaking to believes that the individual household

> would prepare their own loaves, and then bring the risen loaves to the

> baker to bake. A communal oven, so to speak, but not a single baker.

> Of course, I'm looking mostly at later period, urban situations... and

> she has looked largely at somewhat earlier, more rural settings,

> villages, rather than large cities - would that be the difference? Or is

> one of us mistaken? Or is this just another case of that messy word

> "period" - covering a thousand years and an entire continent (with

> extras,) of course there are differences?

> I'm interested in this... Bear? *G* Anyone else?

> AEllin

 

You are actually speaking of several different cultures and at least two

occupations, bakers and oven-keepers.

 

Bakers prepared dough, baked bread and specialty cakes and would rent oven

space to customers (for baking their dough) during the baker's baking.

Baker's thrived because they offered a better product than most people could

produce.

 

Ovenkeepers either owned ovens or were licensed to run a communal oven.

They collected fees for baking bread for people who had no oven.  Communal

ovens were (and still are) more common in rural villages, where the village

owns the oven and the ovenkeeper is an employee of the village.  There are

still some ovenkeepers in rural France and Italy (and probably other

places).

 

Since ovenkeepers were often paid in kind and sold the excess bread they

received, they came into conflict with the bakers.  Over time, most of the

ovenkeepers were subsumed into the baker's guilds.  You can see some of this

in the history of the whitebakers and brownbakers in London.

 

Large households in England tended to hire a baker at the profit fixed under

the Assize of Bread and the baker was then responsible for purchasing

materials and preparing the household's bread.

 

Just how things were done depends largely on time and place, economics and

the regulations in effect.

 

Bear

 

 

Date: Sat, 4 Sep 2004 09:54:08 -0400

From: "Phil Troy / G. Tacitus Adamantius"

        <adamantius.magister at verizon.net>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Another bread question - bakeries

To: Cooks within the SCA <sca-cooks at ansteorra.org>

 

Also sprach Brett McNamara:

> Many cultures still do this today. I don't have sources to hand, but

> I recall the practice of bringing dough to baker happening in such

> diverse locales as Morocco, Italy, and parts of India.  In Italy they

> make distinct patterns on the top of the loaf, kind of a makers mark,

> so they know which one to pick up.

> An oven is obviously quite a resource investment.  It takes a lot of

> fuel to get the thing to any kind of thermal mass.  However, once

> there, maintenance is far more economical.  A big, shared one makes

> sense.

> We know for sure that grain was brought to a miller throughout period,

> it's not unlikely dough would be brought to baker by the same culture.

> Wistan

 

There are medieval English laws on the books (maybe look in one of

the Assizes) specifying the penalties for short-weight loaves, and

also for a sort of bait-and-switch scam some bakers would pull, in

which a loaf left for baking on the counter would be placed over a

little trapdoor, under which was an accomplice (presumably an

apprentice of some sort) who'd hide under the counter and pull off

handfuls of dough from the underside of the loaf. The baker would

then knead these handfuls together, shape into loaves, bake and sell

them as his own.

 

Which, I guess, is a roundabout way of saying, yeah, bakers did

sometimes bake loaves the customers brought in for that purpose. C.

Anne Wilson also mentions it briefly (the practice of bakers baking

bread made by others) in "Food and Drink In Britain". Offhand, I

don't know what her source for that information is, but I've seen it

mentioned numerous times.

 

I think that, as Wistan mentions, the fuel requirements for a

dedicated oven, not to mention the possibility of fire, even in a

small village, and, for all I know, some weird Norman licensing thing

(as with millers), might tend to make having a real baking oven in

one's home, unless your home was a manor house of some kind, unlikely.

 

And stories of other things, like cassoulet and cholent, being

dropped off at the baker's to be picked up when needed seem to abound

until the early 20th century, which leads me to suspect an oven in

the home was a comparative rarity in the Middle Ages. Which, of

course, does not preclude baking on the hearth, either under a cloche

of some sort, or in a pot, or wrapped in leaves or a cloth, etc.

 

Adamantius

 

 

Date: Mon, 6 Sep 2004 10:58:16 -0400 (GMT-04:00)

From: Christiane <christianetrue at earthlink.net>

Subject [Sca-cooks] Re: Another bred question ??? bakeries

To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org

 

In English manor houses, the custom grew to hae ovens and kitchens in

separate buildings from the house. Pennsbury Manor in Pennsylvania,

built in the English fashion in the 17th century, has a separate

kitchen building and a "bake and brew" building where large-scale

baking and brewing took plac.

 

In Philadelphia, very few homes there were built with ovens,

archeological surveys have confirmed this. Women or their maidservants

would take their pies, cakes, and breads and other baked dishes to the

baker to have them cooked.

 

Now, the above twoexamples are out of period and out of the continent,

but the colonists seem to have been following customs long set in

England.

 

In medieval Sicily, very few homes had ovens. According to Clifford

Wright's research, most of the kitchen implements in hosehold accounts

were ones used for open-hearth cooking. Mr. Wright doesn't mention if

people brought things to the baker to be baked or if they just bought

bread. But nuns and lay sisters found a way to support their convents

in a specialty niche that the general lack of ovens provided with the

large-scale baking of cookies, cakes, and sweets.

 

Gianotta

 

 

Date: Thu, 28 Oct 2004 09:01:28 -0500

From: "Terry Decker" <t.d.decker at worldnet.att.net>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Fwd: Oven temperature question

To: "Cooks within the SCA" <sca-cooks at ansteorra.org>,  "Randy Asplund"

        <randyaf at provide.net>

 

>> I have a question for the bakers.

>> 

>> At the end of the day of a medieval baker, how hot is his oven?

>> 

>> I also want to know how long it might stay that hot, and what

>> temperature it might be by morning.

>> 

>> I need to replicate putting a casserole filled with sticks in such an

>> oven and then taking that out in the morning. I am curious about what

>> a reasonable simulation with a modern oven might be? Would it be best

>> to start at a certain temperature and then gradually back it off over

>> the course of several hours to simulate medieval oven cooling?

>> 

>> Randy Asplund     (734) 663-0954

 

Did the baker relight the fire or have an oven that could be fired during

baking to maintain the heat?  I suspect you are thinking of the beehive

style oven that absorbs heat into the mass during firing then radiates it

back into the baking chamber after the fire is cleared.  In such a case, the

internal temperature after firing should be between 400 and 500 degrees F.

This will decline over a number of hours (depending on the mass of the oven

and the length and quality of the firing).

 

Breads (which require higher temperatures) were baked first, pies and coffins

next, then small cakes and dishes requiring lower heat.  While no source I

have found specifies the details, large quantities of bread (as for the

trenchers of a major household) were baked in advance and may have required

multiple firings.

 

I'm not sure what you are think about with a casserole of sticks and taking

it out in the morning.  I suspect most baker's fired their ovens before the

baker's mass (around 2 am), then cleared them after they returned and began

baking the loaves that had been prepared the night before.  Again, because

of the fire danger, the firing may have waited until after mass.  As with

today's bakeries, the fresh bread would have been on the shelves  when the

store opened.  The oven would have probably been cleared, cleaned and

prepped for the next morning sometime in the late afternoon.

 

Forget about trying to simulate a heat mass oven with a modern constant

temperature oven.  Modern ovens are designed to dissipate heat quickly and

you can't get the slow decline of the heat you need to match the temperature

gradient of a medieval oven.  Also, due to the nature of the beast,

temperatures flucuate inside a modern oven in ways that are completely

incompatible to a heat mass oven.  Just set the temperature and use it

 

Bear

 

 

Date: Thu, 28 Oct 2004 08:36:37 -0700 (PDT)

From: Chris Stanifer <jugglethis at yahoo.com>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Fwd: Oven temperature question

To: Cooks within the SCA <sca-cooks at ansteorra.org>

 

I think the closest approximation to a mass oven used in medieval  

times, which is widely available

to the ley-public, would be either a wood-fired pizza oven or a "deep  

pit" style oven.  Still, you

are likely to get better results from the wood-fired oven.

 

 

Speaking from experience, a wood-fired oven of decent commercial size  

(say a 3.5' radius base), if

the coals are left in at night, can still push out between 200 and 275  

degrees F the next morning.

  I have worked with ovens which, due to business volume, were kept 'at  

temperature' until closing

(11 pm or so), and were still pushing 300 - 310 F at about 8 the next  

morning.

 

Bear is most likely correct in his belief that medieval ovens would  

have been cleared out after

the final use of the day.  The risk of fire would likely have been too  

great to keep the embers

burning unattended overnight.  Clearing the oven would have caused the  

temperature to drop

drastically over the intervening hours, though i would not be willing  

to hazard a guess as to how

much...

 

William de Grandfort

 

 

Date: Thu, 28 Oct 2004 10:02:10 -0600

From: MD Smith <editor at costumepress.com>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Fwd: Oven temperature question

To: Cooks within the SCA <sca-cooks at ansteorra.org>

 

My experience baking in ovens built in the 18th and 19th centuries is

that they are fired once, the coals are raked out, the floor swabbed and

the breads inserted. The fires are not kept burning around the edges as

in a modern pizza oven.

 

Modern commercial bakers using vintage or reproduction ovens sometimes

keep them firing continually, but this has the unhappy effect of burning

the oven out sooner rather than later, and makes the floor hard to swab

for the proper steam. Hence steam injectors, which seem

counter-intuitive in a mass oven, and are hard on the masonry.

 

The time it takes to fire an oven to bread baking temperatures varies

widely according to (as Bear mentioned) the size of the oven itself, the

thermal mass around it and the fuel used. Other conditions that affect

how long it takes to fire an oven to bread baking temperature:

 

What was the prevailing weather the week before firing?

 

Is the oven outside, built on an outside wall or an interior part of the

fireplace?

 

If outside, is the dome protected from rain/snow?

 

Has the masonry been properly maintained?

 

Is this the first firing of the year?

 

Is the oven fired regularly (once a week at the very least)?

 

Are there fires in the fireplace routinely?

 

MD/Marged

 

 

Date: Thu, 28 Oct 2004 12:24:20 -0400

From: "Phlip" <phlip at 99main.com>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Fwd: Oven temperature question

To: "Cooks within the SCA" <sca-cooks at ansteorra.org>

 

> Interesting.  From your experience, how long do these ovens maintain their

> operational temperature

> once the coals are removed?  And, do these ovens use wood coals, or actual

coal??  I have heard of

> a few ovens which are still coal-fired, in use in the eastern U.S., but I

know that these ovens do

> maintain a coal fire during operation (under the cooking surface, if I  

> am not mistaken).

 

Trust me, you wouldn't want coal in direct contact with your food- you need

to keep a seperation from it if you use it as a heating source for a  stove.

It imparts a very unpleasant flavor, rather like what coal smells like when

burning.

 

Europe just didn't have access to coal during most of our period- what they

had was the wrong kind for efficient fuel, for forges or for stoves. That's

why I use charcoal on my forge.

 

The Chinese did have, and used, the right sort of coal. Not sure if they

used it for cooking, but a wok would have provided a decent barrier between

the coal and the food.

 

Saint Phlip,

CoD

 

 

Date: Thu, 28 Oct 2004 10:51:28 -0600

From: MD Smith <editor at costumepress.com>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Fwd: Oven temperature question

To: Cooks within the SCA <sca-cooks at ansteorra.org>

 

> Interesting.  From your experience, how long do these ovens maintain  

> their operational temperature

> once the coals are removed?  And, do these ovens use wood coals, or  

> actual coal??  I have heard of

> a few ovens which are still coal-fired, in use in the eastern U.S.,  

> but I know that these ovens do

> maintain a coal fire during operation (under the cooking surface, if I  

> am not mistaken).

 

The ovens were fired with wood. Coal would have fouled the surfaces. I

have no experience with coal fired ovens other than the ovens in coal

fired cast-iron stoves. If I never have to mess with a coal stove again,

it will be too soon!

 

When planning the baking, the head baker (not me) determined whether we

needed to get one or two batches of bread from the firing. If two

batches, the oven was fired somewhat hotter and the first batch watched

carefully and snatched out before it could burn. The second batch took a

little longer to bake, but probably only a few minutes. To my best

memory, we never did the obvious thing and stick an oven thermometer in

there. The head baker went by experience.

 

The falling temperatures allowed for pies, then cakes. The bread baking

was usually finished by 1 or 2 PM. A load of pies, a load of cakes and a

load of cookies later and it was 5 PM - "quittin' time"!

 

At the end of a day of baking (usually a Saturday), one of the cooks

made several "Mother Tyson's Tomato and Cheese Pies" and the other

historic interpreters on the site brought beer and a good time was had

by all. So the oven was still hot enough after 8 hours to do a few  

pizzas.

 

It was not uncommon for us to do a crock of beans - ready to go in after

the pizza came out and left in over night. When I fetched them out the

next morning ( at 15 hours later) the pot was too hot to handle, but the

air temp in the oven was not scorching. The oven mass was still warm, so

I'd do a batch of "laundry" and drape it over the dome. In the winter

I'd stick a bowl of bread dough in the "cool" oven for its first rise,

then take it home to finish.

 

BTW, for those large batches of bread ( at  50 loaves), the head baker did

the prep work in her kitchen and brought the dough over to the Tyson

House for shaping and the final rise. She lived a block away . . .

 

 

Date: Thu, 28 Oct 2004 13:11:10 -0500 (GMT-05:00)

From: Christiane <christianetrue at earthlink.net>

Subject: [Sca-cooks] Re: Fwd: Oven temperature

To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org

 

A book that I read awhile ago, "Bitter Almonds," the biography of a

woman who had been raised in a lay convent in Sicily, describes how the

novice girls would have to prepare the convent's wood-fired ovens for a

day of baking. The building they were in was a medieval one, but I

don't know when the ovens dated from.

 

To determine whether the oven was hot enough for baking bread, the

girls would scrape a long, dried stalk of fennel along the floor of the

oven. If it immediately produced sparks, it was hot enough.

 

Gianotta

 

 

Date: Thu, 28 Oct 2004 17:53:10 -0500

From: "Terry Decker" <t.d.decker at worldnet.att.net>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Fwd: Oven temperature question

To: "Cooks within the SCA" <sca-cooks at ansteorra.org>

 

In general, medieval European ovens are closer to New Mexican hornos than

pizza ovens or pit type ovens.  The fire is built on the floor of the oven,

the mass is brought to temperature, then the embers are raked, the floor is

swabbed, coarse meal is scattered on the floor of the oven, the shaped

loaves are loaded and the oven is closed for about an hour to bake the

bread.

 

There are a couple illustrations which may show constant temperature ovens

with a seperate firebox, but the issue is open to question.

 

Bear

 

 

Date: Thu, 28 Oct 2004 19:33:40 -0700

From: "Cathy Harding" <charding at nwlink.com>

Subject: RE: [Sca-cooks] Fwd: Oven temperature question

To: "Cooks within the SCA" <sca-cooks at ansteorra.org>

 

We are blessed with a bakery with a mass oven for neighbors.  they allow us

to "borrow" it several times a year.  (pictures of one such event can be

seen here http://www.nwlink.com/~charding/baking.html )

 

The timing and rough temperatures are to the best of my recollection. The

bakery is no longer allowed to make bread for sale in this oven due to

health regulations.  But they have pizza parties occasionally.  The oven is

usually fired cold. We generally start a fire in the oven the night before

we intend to bake, and keep the fire going for several hours.  Part of the

technique in this is building the fire in the front of the oven and pushing

it back so that the entire mass gets hot. At about 1 am we fuel it up for

the last time and close it down (put the door on it....)

 

About 8am (that's what we plan but it is often later) Bill goes down and

starts up the fire again, the rest of the house is making dishes, breads,

etc.  Generally about noon - 1 pm we are ready to start baking.  by this

time the oven is hot, the oven thermometer is off the scale, generally about

800 to 900 degrees.

 

Traditionally, (at least according to an Italian friend who always shows up

for this party) pizzas are baked in an oven with a small fire.  You

certainly get  a really delicous slightly smoky very crisp crust and very

fast, just a few minutes. after about 45 min of pulling pizzas out, The

coals are raked out, the oven swabbed and we move on to veggies, foccacia

bread, stuffed breads, etc.

 

this year we baked 20 loaves of bread made from spent grain from brewing the

day before (following the Rumpelstiltskin's first you brew, then you bake).

they went in about 5pm,the oven was at about 400 and dropped to 375ish

during the baking.  Next time we are taking more detailed notes, and someone

will be in charge of them (this years notes seem to have disappeared.) other

stuff, more veggies, baked apples, etc. come next and the last thing is

always a flan.  it went in at 8pm the oven was about 220 - 200. at almost

10pm the oven was still at about 190-200. The next day the temperature was

about 100.

 

We are planning on building our own.  We have been collecting bricks from

earth quake damaged chimenies for several years. (we live in the Pacific

North West)

 

One of the best books I have found is the Bread Builders hearth Loaves and

masonry ovens by daniel Wing and Alan Scott.

 

Maeve

(An Tir, Olympia Washington)

 

 

Date: Mon, 15 Nov 2004 14:43:22 -0500

From: "Martin G. Diehl" <mdiehl at nac.net>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Pictures of smallish bread oven construction

To: Cooks within the SCA <sca-cooks at ansteorra.org>

 

Sharon Gordon wrote:

> I am searching for pictures of construction of an oven that

> that could be used to bake several things for a family or a

> small group of camp-mates.

 

Do you want the oven to look like a period oven?

 

I found some pictures ... see below.

 

> And I also recall hearing about one that people made on

> some sort of platform so it could be moved from camping

> event to camping event.  I'd love to know more about that

> if anyone on the list helped build it or has gotten to use

> it.

 

I even found pictures that indicate this was done in period.

 

Masonry is quite brittle.  The cement joints and even the

bricks might not travel well.  I suggest that you plan on

building it in place.

 

I generally use a portable hearth for dutch oven cooking.

 

> I've found some info on use of the ovens in the

> florilegium in the bread, ovens, and camp-ovens files.

 

You might even have seen this note,

"Subject: Re: SC - Building ovens"; Date: Thu, 03 Jul 1997

BTW, with maturity (and advice), my name has a 'better'

spelling now.  <g>

 

After writing that message, I have learned more about arch

and dome structures.  I now feel that building a temporary

or portable oven with an arch would be too unstable.

A corbelled structure might be a better choice.

 

For excellent illustrations and comparisons, please see,

"Masonry Arches"

http://www.brantacan.co.uk/masonryarches.htm

 

The last link, "Electric Brick Oven", while seemingly not

to our purpose, is a good indication of the layout and

construction of a rectangular oven.

 

> Sharon

> gordonse at one.net

 

The 'net graciously yielded up some images on this topic ...

 

"The Bread Always Rises in the West"

http://www.whirlwind-design.com/madbaker/demisun.html

This was the last image I found ... and possibly with

the information you need.

 

A portable oven. From "Medieval Life Illustrations"

http://www.godecookery.com/afeast/kitchens/kit031.html

 

"Pre 17th Century Potworks"

http://www2002.stoke.gov.uk/museums/pmag/Nof_website1/

local_history_static_exhibitions/potworks/pages/pre_17th_century.htm

 

"Cardiff & the Vale of Glamorgan - Cosmeston"

http://www.red4.co.uk/gallery/cardiff/cosmeston/breadoven.htm

... Not very portable

 

"The ancient art of making bricks"

http://www.gomanzanillo.com/features/bricks/

 

"Electric Brick Oven" Hah!

http://mha-net.org/msb/html/bakeov10.htm

http://mha-net.org/msb/html/bakeov11.htm

 

I am,

Vincenzo Martino Mazza

 

 

Date: Tue, 8 Feb 2005 18:50:24 EST

From: Devra at aol.com

Subject: [Sca-cooks] Re: baking in wood-fired ovens

To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org

 

    There is a nice article on baking in fireplaces, & wood-fired ovens, & using bake kettles, in the most recent issue of Food History News (xvi, no III)

 

      Devra

 

Devra Langsam

www.poisonpenpress.com

 

 

Date: Sat, 26 Feb 2005 17:15:14 -0600

From: "Terry Decker" <t.d.decker at worldnet.att.net>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Re: coffyns

To: "Cooks within the SCA" <sca-cooks at ansteorra.org>

 

Town ordinances often limited the use of ovens in town, so the baker

provided oven space for a fee.  Bring in your loaf, pie or what have you and

the baker would bake it.  A village without a baker would often have a

communal oven with an ovenkeeper to do the baking.  If a local lord had the

oven privilege, then he would provide an oven and ovenkeeper and collect the

fee for its use.

 

Those townsfolk with money tended to buy their bread, cakes and pies ready

made (Menagier bought trencher bread from the baker for a wedding dinner).

And if you need a specialty item cut a deal with the baker.  If the baker

prepared raised coffins, I suspect it was a special job.

 

Noble households also hired bakers (under the same fees and requirements set

by the Lucrum Pistoris, for England at any rate).  Since most of the

cookbooks we reference are probably from noble or royal households, then the

instructions are for the division of labor between the kitchen and the

bakery within the household (a key issue for accounting within the

household).  That might not translate to business for the town baker.

 

Bear

 

>  Okay I  agree with you right up to the baker and his pans or traps if you

> prefer. Instead of borrowing pans why not have yonder good wife take her

> mix in a covered bowl to the baker. After all most recipes talk about

> turning over the ingredients to the pastier and asking for the right kind

> of coffin or pastry  for it.  Tends to give the baker a lot of business

> even in a smallish town.

> Da

 

 

Date: Sat, 26 Feb 2005 21:46:15 -0500

From: Daniel Myers <edouard at medievalcookery.com>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Re: coffyns

To: Cooks within the SCA <sca-cooks at ansteorra.org>

 

On Feb 26, 2005, at 12:26 AM, Micheal wrote:

>  Okay I  agree with you right up to the baker and his pans or traps if

> you prefer. Instead of borrowing pans why not have yonder good wife

> take her mix in a covered bowl to the baker. After all most recipes

> talk about turning over the ingredients to the pastier and asking for

> the right kind of coffin or pastry for it.  Tends to give the baker a

> lot of business even in a smallish town.

 

I remember reading that in London there were set fees (by law?) for

having one's chicken baked in a crust at the pastler - something like

2p.

 

Buy a freshly killed and cleaned chicken at the market, and take it to

the pastler who wraps it in dough and bakes it in the bread baker's

oven (giving the baker a cut of the fee).

 

I'll see if I can dig up the reference tomorrow.

 

- Doc

-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

   Edouard Halidai  (Daniel Myers)

 

 

Date: Thu, 06 Jul 2006 12:13:49 -0500

From: Anne-Marie Rousseau <dailleurs at liripipe.com>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Stone/Brick Ovens

To: Cooks within the SCA <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

 

On Thu Jul  6  9:56 , Karin Burgess <avrealtor at prodigy.net> sent:

> has anyone on this list built and used an outdoor stone/brick oven?  

> I am toying with the idea of building one in my backyard but wondered

> about the product produced in one.

> Any thoughts on the subject?

> -Muiriath

 

I've built a couple, and used even more. All with varying levels of  

success :)

 

were you trying to do a period oven? or just any outdoor oven?

 

I have plans to do one in my own backyard as well, and when its time,  

these are the plans I'm going to use:

 

http://www.sunset.com/sunset/garden/article/0,20633,690891,00.html

 

putting it on an ergonomically tall platform, of course :)

 

we dont get to bake at events nearly enough, in my opinion :)

 

--Anne-Marie

 

 

Date: Thu, 6 Jul 2006 18:10:45 -0400

From: "Stephanie Ross" <hlaislinn at earthlink.net>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Ovens

To: "SCA-Cooks" <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

 

Here is a short blurb about an oven in an excavation in Britain.

 

http://www.birmingham.gov.uk/GenerateContent?

CONTENT_ITEM_ID=27355&CONTENT_I

TEM_TYPE=0&MENU_ID=12669&EXPAND=1485

 

~Aislinn~

 

 

Date: Fri, 11 May 2007 07:29:27 -0400

From: Johnna Holloway <johnna at sitka.engin.umich.edu>

Subject: [Sca-cooks] Handcrafted Terra Cotta Oven

To: scabakers at yahoogroups.com,       Cooks within the SCA

        <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

 

Here's the latest foodie toy.

Handcrafted Terra Cotta Oven

Our authentic European wood-fired oven infuses everything it cooks with

a kiss of smoky goodness, producing tender and flavorful fish, meat,

vegetables, breads?and the most fantastic pizza we?ve tried yet. This

rustic oven becomes a focal point of your garden or terrace and a hub of

activity when entertaining. Fueled by hard- and fruit-woods, heat builds

up in the internal oven chamber and dissipates slowly through the cooler

outer shell. Includes oven, stand, door, oven rack, cover, pizza paddle

and brush. Oven is handmade in Portugal; 33" exterior diam./22" interior

diam.; 25" tall. Total height, 59" with stand. 350 lbs.

 

$2000 dollars but that includes the white glove service.

 

http://www.surlatable.com/product/545897.do

 

Johnna

 

 

Date: Thu, 6 Sep 2007 11:02:29 -0700

From: Lilinah <lilinah at earthlink.net>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] bread recipe in Fadalat al-Jiwan fi Tayyibat

        al-t'aamwa-l-alwan

To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org

 

I wrote:

> No, it's Bread that is "cocido en el horno", i.e., cooked in an oven.

> There are other ways to cook bread.

 

I should expand. In Andalusian cooking there are at least two ovens -

there are two mentioned in both the Anon.Andalus. and in the Fadalat.

 

One is the Middle Eastern oven, the tannur (cognate with the Indian

tandoor). This is a cylindrical oven that is open at the top. Bread

is slapped on the side and cooked when it falls off. In Judhab, a

tray of bread or sweet pastry or batter-coated bananas is placed in

the bottom of the oven, then a chicken is suspended in the center of

the oven so that the drippings fall into the bread or pastry. When

the chicken is cooked it is eaten with the item on the tray.

 

The other is the European style oven (in Spanish "horno"cognate with

the Italian "forno"), which is open in the front.

 

As far as i can tell, in both cases the wood or charcoal is placed in

an opening separate from and underneath the baking chamber.

 

Of course there are breads cooked in a pan, on a griddle, on a rock,

etc. over a wood or charcoal fire/embers.

--

Urtatim (that's err-tah-TEEM)

the persona formerly known as Anahita

 

 

Date: Sun, 23 Sep 2007 09:21:52 -0400

From: "Anne Murphy" <afmmurphy at gmail.com>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Manchet

To: "Cooks within the SCA" <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

 

I have my grandmother's books from the late 19th and early 20th

century, when they were just starting to use gas. They're translating

the other way - giving temperatures for those who are perfectly used

to judging by feel.

 

A hot/quick oven was about 400 - anything from 375-425.

 

Medium/moderate etc was about 350.

 

Slow is about 325.

 

Now, this, of course, is for home ovens attached to wood or coal

stoves, not a professional brick bread oven. But it is what I was

going by when I was doing the Small Cakes a few years ago, and baked

them at 400, rather than the more SCA common 350, because the recipe

called for a quick oven...

 

AEllin

 

On 9/11/07, Michael Gunter <countgunthar at hotmail.com> wrote:

> Just for reference, does anyone have the data on a "hot" woodburning

> oven, such as when the coals are first raked out and the roasts are  

> put in as compared to a "soft" or cooler oven? Is 400 about right? What

> temp would constitute a "soft" oven?

 

> Gunthar

 

 

Date: Tue, 25 Sep 2007 22:42:38 -0500

From: "Terry Decker" <t.d.decker at worldnet.att.net>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Manchet

To: "Cooks within the SCA" <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

 

A heat mass oven is likely to run 700-800 degrees F at the end of the firing

and might even be higher depending on the type of woods burned, the size and

length of the firing and the mass and heat absorbtion of the oven walls.

Once the heat source is removed there should be a rapid drop in temperature

down to high oven temperature around 500-600 degrees F as the oven mass and

oven chamber come into equilibrium.  After the initial drop, the sealed oven

will slowly lose heat.  For a baker, the general order of baking is bread,

covered dishes, then torts and sweets.

 

Since I don't think many of us have a lot of experience with wood fired

ovens, I would recommend using an oven thermometer to get a feel for the

temperature and the rate of heat loss from an oven.  One of the big

advantages of a heat mass oven is the temperature is fairly uniform anywhere

in the oven chamber, although you have to take care not to scorch the  

bottom of the bread because of its proximity to the hot oven floor.

 

Continuously fired ovens which use a seperate firebox, gas or electric to

produce continuous heat in the oven max out at around 500 degrees F  unless

specifically designed to create higher temperatures and get too cold for

decent baking around 250 degrees.  They also tend to heat more unevenly. and

develop cold spots in the oven chamber, which may or may not be a problem

depending on how uneven the heating is.

 

Bear

 

 

Date: Mon, 17 Dec 2007 07:50:45 -0500

From: Johnna Holloway <johnna at sitka.engin.umich.edu>

Subject: [Spit-Project] Superior Clay

To: Medieval-Open-Fire-Cooking at yahoogroups.com,  Creating period spits <spit-project at lists.ansteorra.org>

 

In one of my home magazines, I came across this company's ad

and thought people might like to browse the website.

 

The company offers

Rumford fireplace components, clay chimney pots, herringbone fireplaces

and masonry bread ovens, as well as a variety of other quality clay

products.

 

http://superiorclay.com/

 

Johnna

 

 

Date: Mon, 19 May 2008 12:03:09 -0700 (PDT)

From: Helen Schultz <meisterin02 at yahoo.com>

Subject: [Sca-cooks] Paging Devra

To: Cooks within the SCA <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

 

Devra, this sounds like a book you should look into getting for the Poison Pen Press! I heard of it through another list I'm on.

http://www.intabas.com/kikodenzer.html#ovenbook

 

"Build Your Own Earth Oven, A Low-Cost, Wood-Fired Mud Oven;

Simple Sourdough Bread; Perfect Loaves"

by Kiko Denzer $15

 

The author teaches you to make semi-permanent sand and clay ovens...All you

need is some chunks of concrete for the base, some sand to make your

form, 21 firebricks, and some clay you can dig up at your local claypit. He does

one chamber and two chamber ovens, with or without a chimney.

 

~~ Katarina Helene

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Meisterin Katarina Helene von Sch?nborn, OL

Shire of Narrental (Peru, Indiana) http://narrental.home.comcast.net

Middle Kingdom

 

 

Date: Mon, 19 May 2008 18:31:53 -0400

From: Johnna Holloway <johnnae at mac.com>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Paging Devra

To: Cooks within the SCA <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

 

She offers it already under the crafts section.

*Build Your Own Earth Oven (2^nd Edition): a low-cost, wood-fired mud

oven - $14.95

*Kiko Denzer.Examines the philosophy and concepts behind the basic

dome-shaped mud oven, an ergonomic design found in Africa, Europe, and

the Americas and still in use today. Detailed diagrams, illustrations,

and photographs enable anyone to build his/her own oven ? and a full

chapter on sour-dough bread-making renders the theoretical practical.

Lively prose and charming anecdotes. Highly recommended by Alan Scott

and Dan Wing, co-authors of */The Bread Builders: hearth loaves and

masonry ovens/*. Bibliography, resource listings, appendix. 127 pp, pb.

Handprint Press

 

Johnnae

 

Helen Schultz wrote:

<<< Devra, this sounds like a book you should look into getting for the Poison Pen Press!  I heard of it through another list I'm on.

http://www.intabas.com/kikodenzer.html#ovenbook >>>

 

 

Date: Tue, 01 Jul 2008 13:29:12 -0700

From: Dragon <dragon at crimson-dragon.com>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Groovy Camp oven

To: Cooks within the SCA <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

 

Susan Fox wrote:

<<< We ought to make one on wheels, like we keep seeing in period woodcuts.

Uhhh, like this.  <http://www.godecookery.com/afeast/kitchens/kit010.html>;

Transporting it would be a bear, but possible with a trailer. >>>

 

True all that. Also depends on exactly how big you make it and what

you make it from. There are ways to make it much lighter using

vermiculite or kao-wool fill to insulate it.

 

<<< I'm building a permanent brick bread oven in the new place actually.

There's this half-finished brick BBQ that would convert pretty easily;

just fill in the hollow inside, pour a slab then start building the

dome. Booyah! >>>

 

Spiffy. I want to do the same at my place but I am starting from

nothing, you at least have a head start.

 

I highly recommend getting refractory brick for the firebox, don't

use common red brick. The refractory is more expensive but will last

a LOT longer. You would be replacing the common brick in just a few

years if you fired the oven regularly. Common brick is fine for

everything else, the outside facing and any other part of the oven.

 

I also highly recommend this book if you are serious about this:

 

The Bread Builders: Hearth Loaves and Masonry Ovens by Daniel Wing

and Alan Scott

ISBN: 978-1890132057

http://www.amazon.com/Bread-Builders-Hearth-Loaves-Masonry/dp/1890132055/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&;s=books&qid=1214944001&sr=8-1

 

Dragon

 

 

Date: Wed, 2 Jul 2008 06:16:35 -0600

From: "S CLEMENGER" <sclemenger at msn.com>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] camp ovens and mass ovens at home

To: "Cooks within the SCA" <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

 

We built on-site, "temporary" brick ovens at Uprising this year (Uprising

being Artemisia's biggest annual event).  I believe that they were modeled,

somewhat, on the Estrella ovens.  We didn't mud them, but they worked

decently anyways.  We'll be using them again in the future, and will be

doing more experiments with them next years.  I'd like to try some meats,

maybe, and definitely some Shrewsbury cakes and some marchpanes, but what we

did get in the two days we fired them up (whole wheat bread on one day, and

a barley bread on the second day, with baked fruit cobblers on the second

day as well) were pretty tasty.  We'd lost a bit much of the heat on day 2,

so while the bread came out beautifully, the cobbler cooked but didn't

brown. I'm going to override the initial instigator of the idea, and get us

a probe thermometer for next year.....

Building them was lots of fun.  I got a few pictures, but all you can really

see of it is this square pile of brick and sand.

 

--Maire

 

 

Date: Fri, 21 Nov 2008 22:55:12 +0000 (GMT)

From: Volker Bach <carlton_bach at yahoo.de>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] 12th century oven image

To: SCA Cooks <sca-cooks at ansteorra.org>, ldyannedubosc at yahoo.com

 

--- Pat Griffin <ldyannedubosc at yahoo.com> schrieb am Fr, 21.11.2008:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Hortus_Deliciarum_-_Antichrist.jpg

 

I found this while doing research on something else.

Isn't that a beehive oven the poor unfortunate is being

stuffed into? >>>

 

It looks like one, but I would be careful trusting the Hortus Deliciarum miniatures. All we have are 19th century reproductions, and there is a good deal of interpretation in them.

 

Giano

 

 

Date: Fri, 21 Nov 2008 17:29:22 -0600

From: "Terry Decker" <t.d.decker at att.net>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] 12th century oven image

To: <ldyannedubosc at yahoo.com>,       "Cooks within the SCA"

        <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

 

I think it more resembles a medieval glass blowers furnace than a bee hive

oven. The two are similar in shape, but without a full view, it's

impossible to tell.  Since it is a religious print, I think "cast into the

furnace" might be more appropriate than "popped into the oven."

 

Bear

----- Original Message -----

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Hortus_Deliciarum_-_Antichrist.jpg

 

I found this while doing research on something else. Isn't that a beehive

oven the poor unfortunate is being stuffed into?

 

 

From: Myles Durga <cedric404 at yahoo.com>

Date: March 13, 2009 2:30:47 PM CDT

To: StefanliRous at austin.rr.com

Subject: Mud Oven

 

Sorry, this took some time to get to.  I re-created an oven at estrella of the same design that the period encampment has been using for years.  I helped build a couple over there and was confident enough to try my own.   Feel free to post this on list if you think it's okay.

 

I used 12 cinder blocks to hold up the oven.  Placed 2 layers of 6.  I filled the holes of the cinder block with dirt, but did not fill between the cinder blocks.  I then put a piece of plywood on top of the blocks.  It was 1/2 inch thick. Fire brick came next, 32 of 'em.  After the fire brick which I laid in a rotating 2x2 pattern.  I used 30 clay brick to form a beehive shape.  Rotating every layer to cover the edges between.  Every layer got one of more LESS bricks to form the beehive.  The edges of the lower levels really did hold the higher levels.  I then covered the top with 4 bricks accross. This allowed me to have a flat top for playing objects.  For the front.  I stacked two bricks on sides on each side and placed a piece of sheet metal accross to hold the brick for the front.  The height was approx four bricks stacked.

 

Once the bricks were in place, I threw lots of mud on it.  I continued to put mud on till I could see no more bricks.  I fired up the oven and as it dried I put more mud over the holes that are created by drying mud.  I continued to do this for 4 days.  With a total of 6 layers of mud.

 

The making process was fun.  And it was great to use.  I give the project a c+. Here are the reasons why.

 

I should have put dirt between the cinder block too.

I should not have used a piece of plywood.  (this actually burned through underneath)  Use more cinder block and you can place the fire brick directly dirt and block.

 

The temperature was very difficult to control.  This was expected, but I had way too much variation.  I attribute this to cherry wood, which burned VERY hot and fast.  And also, a person who stopped to talk about it mentioned something about thermal mass.  My simple saxon mind interpreted as "Throw more mud on"

 

I should have made another oven or a fire pit nearbye.  To move burning wood or embers out of the oven to get access to the baking.  Turns out a friend brought a small metal bucket in which I put embers in.  And even used it as a hibachi for grilling an elk steak.

 

I am recreating this oven at home.  And will find a place to put up pictures and experience using as soon as I have some.

 

I am western slope of Colorado, near Artemesia.  About 6000ft above the darn ocean.

 

Cedric Cenfrithes sunu

Baker Wannabe

 

 

Date: Tue, 24 Mar 2009 10:25:46 -0700 (PDT)

From: Myles Durga <cedric404 at yahoo.com>

Subject: [Sca-cooks] Mud oven - repost, sort of.

To: sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org

 

This is an excerpt of an email to Stefan about my experience with a mud oven at Estrella.  Not knowing the etiquite of the list, I should have posted here also.   Also, I have been reading all the oven stuff in the Florilgeium and have a couple of thoughts.  Anyone have some ideas.

 

Two things I noticed in the articles on the site that I have read.

 

1. There was discussion about the small open box type area underneath the oven. My first thought, and I got this from experience, this is where to put the embers and burning items when you clean out the oven for use.  People have stated that they have seen pics with just for wood storage and also pics of fires.  This would explain both.  But, of course, this is only opinion.

2. I heard mention of swabbing out the oven after fire and before use.  What is used here?  Never heard this before.

 

<<< I used 12 cinder blocks to hold up the oven.  Placed 2 layers of 6.  I filled the holes of the cinder block with dirt, but did not fill between the cinder blocks.  I then put a piece of plywood on top of the blocks.  It was 1/2 inch thick. Fire brick came next, 32 of 'em.  After the fire brick which I laid in a rotating 2x2 pattern.  I used 30 clay brick to form a beehive shape.  

 

<snip> >>>

 

Cedric Cenfrithes sunu

Baker Wannabe

 

 

Date: Tue, 24 Mar 2009 17:43:41 -0500

From: "Terry Decker" <t.d.decker at att.net>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Mud oven - repost, sort of.

To: <cedric404 at yahoo.com>,    "Cooks within the SCA"

        <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

 

Dumping hot ash into the space under the oven can be a fire danger and may

be hazardous to whoever is loading the oven.  The only ovens I've seen that

have open space underneath are Roman ovens that were set up outdoors where

using the space to protect the firewood from rain might be an advantage.

 

A swab is a cloth wrapped around one end of a pole and dipped in water

(think string mop).  The cloth removes the remaining hot ash that could burn

the bread and injects a little moisture into the baking chamber.  Once

swabbed, scatter coarse meal on the floor of the baking chamber to keep the

bread dough from sticking to the oven and to help reduce soot on the bottom

of the loaf.

 

Thermal mass isn't so much about "throw more mud on" (although it may help)

as it is about making the oven denser to retain more heat from the firing.

The fact that you burned through the plywood suggests the base may not have

been thick enough or that the base wasn't mortared (mudded as it were) well

enough to keep the oxygen from fueling the burn.  IIRC, the U.S. Fire Safety

Code for stoves and fireplaces calls for a one inch air gap between a metal

heat shield and any wall within 24 inches of the heat source.  You might

consider a metal base next time.

 

Bear

 

<<< This is an excerpt of an email to Stefan about my experience with a mud

oven at Estrella.  Not knowing the etiquite of the list, I should have

posted here also.   Also, I have been reading all the oven stuff in the

Florilgeium and have a couple of thoughts.  Anyone have some ideas.

 

Two things I noticed in the articles on the site that I have read.

 

1. There was discussion about the small open box type area underneath the

oven. My first thought, and I got this from experience, this is where to

put the embers and burning items when you clean out the oven for use.

People have stated that they have seen pics with just for wood storage and

also pics of fires.  This would explain both.  But, of course, this is

only opinion.

2. I heard mention of swabbing out the oven after fire and before use.

What is used here?  Never heard this before. >>>

 

 

Date: Wed, 25 Mar 2009 07:30:12 -0400

From: Johnna Holloway <johnnae at mac.com>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Mud oven - repost, sort of.

To: Cooks within the SCA <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

 

You might try and have your public library get these books in for your inspection

Building a Wood-Fired /Oven/ for /Bread/ and Pizza by Tom Jaine.

 

The other classic is

/The Bread Builders/: Hearth Loaves and Masonry Ovens by Daniel Wing and

Alan Scott.

 

Or check out Elizabeth David's book. All contain sections on how the

ovens are used.

 

Johnnae

 

 

Date: Wed, 25 Mar 2009 15:33:54 -0400

From: devra at aol.com

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] oven-building

To: sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org

 

Another book is 'The Forgotten Art of Building and Using a Brick Bake Oven", by Richard M Bacon (ISBN 9780911469257) from Alan Hood Books.

 

Devra the baker

 

 

Date: Wed, 25 Mar 2009 16:23:22 -0700 (PDT)

From: Lisa Mohr <gulesandor at yahoo.com>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Mud oven - repost, sort of.

To: Cooks within the SCA <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

 

As to how much wood it takes to fire up an oven, that strictly depends on the size of your oven and how much mass you're trying to heat.? In the fairly large one Dame Leticia and I built, it took maybe a bushel basket full of assorted sticks and bits over a period of an hour and a half or so, longer if it had been quite a while since the last firing.

 

Elizabeth David mentions some of the fuels used in English ovens, leading me to believe that perhaps the rampant, invasive and nasty pollen-producing Scotch broom we have growing around here might work.?

 

Elisabeth

 

 

Date: Sat, 12 Sep 2009 13:55:21 -0400

From: Johnna Holloway <johnnae at mac.com>

To: scabakers at yahoogroups.com,       Cooks within the SCA

        <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

Subject: [Sca-cooks] Another bread oven

 

Baronessa Lucrezia-Isabella di Freccia | mka Tina Nevin

(Thamesreach Shire, The Isles, Drachenwald | London, UK)

 

has been posting about medieval food on her blog

for several years now.

 

She's moved over to

http://thethorngrovetable.blogspot.com/

 

and is featuring her adventures of "Pizza & Bread Oven Building" in the

backyard.

 

Johnnae

 

 

Date: Fri, 26 Mar 2010 13:33:30 +1100

From: Raymond Wickham <insidious565 at hotmail.com>

Subject: [Lochac] floor oven

To: <lochac at lochac.sca.org>, art and sciences sca <as at sca.org>

 

people may find this useful

 

Estonian Journal of

Archaeology

2002 pt 1

 

Kristiina Korkeakoski-V?is?nen

 

From cairn to oven: on the use of ethnological documents in

interpreting remains of historical structures; 50?69

 

Kivivarest ahjuni: etnoloogia andmete kasutamisest ajaloolise

aja ehitusj??nuste t?lgendamisel. Res?mee; 67?69

 

Abstract. Since

the summer of 1997 the Department of Archaeology at the University of Turku has

investigated a complex of archaeological remains of the late 16th and early

17th centuries related to an Orthodox village

at Papinniemi in Uukuniemi (500 km east of Turku). Beginning in the

summer of 1998, training excavations for students have focused on the floor of

a dwelling at the site. In the northeast corner of this structure was a

collapsed cairn that could be identified as the remains of an oven from the

initial stages of the fieldwork. With reference to morphology, materials and

primary field observations of structural details and ethnological analogies,

this article suggests a possible reconstruction of the feature as a Karelian

oven of the so-called leukauuni or ledge oven type. This example is also

intended to focus on the relationship between archaeology and ethnology and to

review the metho?dological opportunities provided by this relationship.

 

 

Date: Fri, 23 Jul 2010 23:59:12 -0500

From: "Terry Decker" <t.d.decker at att.net>

To: "Cooks within the SCA" <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] On Nattes  VERY LONG

 

You don't have fine temperature control with a wood fired oven.  You have a

heated mass of masonry radiating that heat and losing temperature in an

extended arc.  Too hot, you damage the marzipan.  Too cold, you don't brown

it. A hot iron allows you to view the results and adjust the temperature as

needed.

 

Your statement makes me wonder what type of oven was being used.  You might

get scorching of the bottom crust due to proximity to the oven floor, but

for the most part, a wood fired oven bakes fairly evenly.  Uneven baking

suggests a badly designed or constructed oven or that the baking chamber was

opened too often, allowing cold spots to form in the chamber.

 

Bear

 

----- Original Message -----

<<< So I wanted to be sure I understood this correctly - it is better to make

the marzipan with the 'hot iron' method than in the oven because it is

easier to control the heating because the sentence seems a little awkward?

I read in the Schachtafel der Gesundheyt that oven baked bread could have

uneven finishing - burnt in some places and undone in others.  I imagine

that the temperature variations could wreak havoc with the oil/sugar

content in the marzipan.  Last weekend at a garage sale I found an iron

designed for burning the sugar on creme brulee.  Should be perfect to

experiment with!

 

Katherine >>>

 

 

Date: Mon, 02 Aug 2010 08:57:34 -0400

From: "Phil Troy / G. Tacitus Adamantius" <adamantius1 at verizon.net>

To: Cooks within the SCA <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] cuskynoles

 

On Aug 1, 2010, at 7:26 PM, Stefan li Rous wrote:

From the recipe:

<<< When ready to bake, take the filled pastries from the tray one by one,

wipe their backs with water, enough to make them sticky, and stick them

all to the inner wall of the tannur, taking care not to let them fall

down. >>>

 

Are all foods cooked in the tannur cooked this way, stuck to the walls? This would really seem to restrict what you can cook in a tannur. Or is meat, in particular, cooked differently? I seem to remember having some tannur cooked chicken.

=======================

 

The rationale is that dough-based products stuck to the walls of the tannur will stick to the rather porous limed inner surface (it's basically tile grout, sort of chalky), but not too tenaciously because the dough will shrink at the edges as it cooks and begin to peel itself off the surface of the tannur, especially since the wet dough has an instant jet of steam built up between the hot wall and itself. Often what happens it that the trick to removing the cooked bread or pastry is to know exactly when to go in after it with a long hook: it has puffed up enough to be fully cooked, and also to push itself off the wall; the experienced baker knows when it's expanded as much as it'll go without launching itself off the wall and onto the coals.

 

As I understand it, meat is usually put on long skewers, placed vertically in the tannur, and leaned against the upper lip of the oven mouth.

 

Adamantius

 

 

Date: Wed, 4 Aug 2010 07:54:59 -0500

From: "Terry Decker" <t.d.decker at att.net>

To: "Cooks within the SCA" <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] tannurs

 

Adamantius answered my questions about a tannur with:

<<< The rationale is that dough-based products stuck to the walls of the

tannur will stick to the rather porous limed inner surface (it's basically

tile grout, sort of chalky), but not too tenaciously >>>

 

How were medieval/mass ovens typically lined? Different from these

Indian/Asian ovens?

================

 

Mass heat ovens will vary from unlined to terracotta to mortar.  It depends

mostly on available materials.

 

================

<<< because the dough will shrink at the edges as it cooks and begin to

peel itself off the surface of the tannur, especially since the wet dough

has an instant jet of steam built up between the hot wall and itself.

Often what happens it that the trick to removing the cooked bread or

pastry is to know exactly when to go in after it with a long hook: it has

puffed up enough to be fully cooked, and also to push itself off the wall;

the experienced baker knows when it's expanded as much as it'll go without

launching itself off the wall and onto the coals. >>>

 

The entrance to the oven is usually covered over, correct? So you can't

really see the bread baking. This sounds a bit tricky knowing when to open

the oven and pull off the bread. Late enough that the bread is baked well

enough, but not so long that any have fallen off into the coals.

 

So if there are coals, does this mean a tannur is not a mass oven? Where

the oven is heated up to temperature, all the coals are raked out and the

food is then put in and is baked by the retained heat only? I that case

there wouldn't be any coals to be concerned about the bread falling onto.

 

Stefan

==================

 

Tannurs are continuous fire ovens.  They are a covered cylindrical clay pot

with a heat source in the bottom center with space for baking around the

heat and up the walls.  They are more efficient buried in a mass to prevent

heat loss, but they aren't designed to bake by mass heat.  It's a very old

oven design, found in Mohenjo Daro and Harrapa (approx 2500 - 1500 BCE).  It

may be quite older.

 

Unlike European mass heat ovens, where the baking chamber is closed off to

retain heat, the cover of the tandoor is regularly opened to check on the

food being cooked and to rotaate, remove and replace.  The tandoor is best

suited to cooking for small groups while the mass heat oven can be sized to

cook for a family or an army.

 

Bear

 

 

Date: Wed, 4 Aug 2010 08:05:37 -0500

From: "Terry Decker" <t.d.decker at att.net>

To: "Cooks within the SCA" <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] tannurs

 

<<< Think of a tall, tapered cylinder, sort of like the classic shape of an 80's

nuclear plant. There's an opening at the base, to which is attached a pipe

that angles up at a 45-degree angle or so for a couple of feet. A fire is

built in the base, and the base, up to the midway point, is buried. Air is

blown into the pipe and creates a fierce heat, like a blast furnace, running

maybe, what, Bear, 900-1400 F?

 

Adamantius >>>

 

Modern gas-fired tandoors run about 900 degrees F.  I would expect a

charcoal-fired tandoor to run 500-1,000 degrees F depending on how the

exterior bellows is used.  Thinking on it, the design is basically a

Bessemer furnace without the converter.

 

Bear

 

 

Date: Wed, 04 Aug 2010 12:04:26 -0400

From: Johnna Holloway <johnnae at mac.com>

To: Cooks within the SCA <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] tannurs

 

Found a number of these plus websites by searching under Persia Bread  

archeology ovens

http://www3.uakron.edu/ziyaret/tour.html

 

Articles

Some fire installations from Abu Salabikh, Iraq (Dedicated to the  

memory of Margaret Munn-Rankin)

Crawford H.    Pal?orient     Year   1981    Volume   7    Issue    

7-2    pp. 105-114

 

Waines, David. Cereals, Bread and Society. Journal of the Economic and  

Social History of the Orient

Vol xxx, 1987. (in Jstor)

 

Griddles, Ovens, and Agricultural Origins: An Ethnoarchaeological  

Study of Bread Baking in Highland Ethiopia

Diane Lyons 1 A. Catherine D'Andrea 2

American Anthropologist

Volume 105 Issue 3, Pages 515 - 530

Published Online: 7 Jan 2008

ABSTRACT

An ethnoarchaeological study of highland Ethiopian griddle technology  

is compared to bread-baking technologies in Africa and the Near East.  

There is a functional relationship between the use of ovens and  

griddles and the presence or absence of gluten in bread ingredients.  

Ovens are most appropriate for cereals containing gluten and may be  

implicated in the selection of higher quality gluten in domesticated  

wheats. We conclude, based on evidence for griddle use and the  

performance characteristics of African cereals, that indigenous  

species were exploited in highland Ethiopia before Near Eastern  

cereals were introduced. Griddle-cooking practices that bias the  

preservation of Near Eastern cereals over African ones may explain the  

absence of African cereals in the early archaeobotanical record.  

[Keywords: Ethiopia, ethnoarchaeology, archaeobotany, ovens, griddles]

 

Archaeobotanical evidence for early Dilmun diet at Saar, Bahrain

MARK NESBITT 1

Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy

Volume 4 Issue 1, Pages 20 - 47

Published Online: 22 Feb 2007

ABSTRACT

A flotation machine was used to process large quantities of earth at  

the Saar excavation in the 1990 and 1991 seasons. Carbonised seeds and  

charcoal were recovered from a wide range of contexts dating to about  

1900 BC. While overall quantities were low, enough contexts were  

productive to allow quantification. Date stones were the most frequent  

crop remains, with smaller amounts of free-threshing wheat and hulled  

six-row barley. This confirms evidence from other sources (textual,  

dental) for the importance of dates as a staple food in the Early  

Dilmun period. A survey of ethnographic and archaeological evidence  

for date husbandry in Bahrain suggests that the date-palms and cereals  

were grown in irrigated date gardens similar to those found today.

 

Johnnae

 

===========

On Aug 4, 2010, at 9:37 AM, Johnnae  wrote:

< Sounds like something out of Biblical Archaeology. Until I get back take a look at Food in the ancient world from A to Z By Andrew Dalby which is up on Google Books. The sections on cooking utensils and baking have a number of references.

 

Johnna >

 

On Aug 4, 2010, at 8:41 AM, Phil Troy / G. Tacitus Adamantius wrote:

<<< I vaguely recall reading a lengthy article in one of the Middle  

Eastern archaeological journals on Persian baking which included  

pretty detailed discussions of tannurs, griddles, the griddle-like  

object whose name escapes me but which looks like an inverted wok  

sitting on top of a fire, and the aforementioned box oven. The  

article was basically a study of ancient methods that have survived  

to the present day. It's possible Cariadoc or Johnnae might be able  

to recall the article before I am able to dig up the ubiquitous  

smudgy old photocopy...

 

Adamantius >>>

 

 

Date: Wed, 13 Oct 2010 06:57:06 -0700 (PDT)

From: Dan Schneider <schneiderdan at ymail.com>

To: Cooks within the SCA <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Interesting concept....

 

I'm not entirely sure exactly they did things, but mass ovens aren't always cleared out before use; sometimes the fire is just pushed to the back or sides, and the food is put in the middle- traditional Swedish tunnbr?d is still baked that way, and for anything cooked in a container, there's no reason to even clear the oven floor all that carefully. One advantage of keeping the fire going is that you then get different temperatures in different places in the oven, so by moving your dishes around, you can fine-tune the temp the dish is cooked at

 

Dan

 

 

Date: Wed, 7 Mar 2012 20:54:30 -0600

From: "Terry Decker" <t.d.decker at att.net>

To: "Cooks within the SCA" <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Traveling pizza ovens

 

<<< I'm sure someone can correct me if I'm wrong as I have only a conceptual

knowledge of bread ovens. But I would think using clay would be better for

using as the heat would probably seep from the oven more without the clay.

Also wouldn't the bricks be hotter on the outside without the clay

insulation? Not sure.

 

I've built kilns, but not bread ovens.

 

--Mercy >>>

 

Maria Martinez fired her pots in a fire pit.  I'm sure that it lost more

heat than a kiln, but it did the job.

 

The question is not the efficiency, but the purpose.  You can bake bread on

a hot rock or in a pit lined with hot rocks.  You can't bake much bread, but

it works for an individual or small group on the move.  Stack ovens aren't

efficient for large scale baking, but they can be built out of scrap

material, assembled and disassembled quickly and moved fairly easily.  In

this kind of baking, you are not concerned with the heat that escapes, but

the heat that is retained in the brick mass and radiated back into the oven

chamber. The clay does act as a seal and an insulator and makes the oven

more efficient, but makes it harder to disassemble and move.

 

Bear

 

 

Date: Wed, 7 Mar 2012 10:56:57 -0600

From: "Terry Decker" <t.d.decker at att.net>

To: "Cooks within the SCA" <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Traveling pizza ovens

 

You don't need to use clay to hold the bricks together.  The ancient

Egyptians built stack ovens (where the bricks are merely stacked together to

produce a heat retaining mass) for small scale baking.  IIRC, there is an

illustration in David's English Bread and Yeast Cookery (Hess edited

edition).

 

Bear

 

----- Original Message -----

There also used to be a lady here who had a bread oven on a trailer that she

would sometimes bring to events, but I haven't seen her around for awhile.

 

Ana de Serra build to temporary brick oven at the cooks playdate at the West

An Tir War several years ago. The site owner let us leave the bricks there,

so theoretically we could do it again if someone brought a bucket of clay

:-)

 

Juana Isabella

West

 

 

Date: Wed, 07 Mar 2012 16:34:20 -0500

From: Johnna Holloway <johnnae at mac.com>

To: Cooks within the SCA <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>

Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Traveling pizza ovens

 

There's also Dan Wing's "The Bread Builders: Hearth Loaves in Masonry  

Ovens" and Tom Jaine's "Building a Wood-Fired Oven."

 

Johnna

 

On Mar 7, 2012, at 3:42 PM, Patricia Dunham wrote:

<<< Thanks Bear... that sent me scurrying to make sure my English Bread  

and was an edition with the Hess notes! whew, yes it is, 8-).

I'm usually not much interested in American historical cookery, but  

Martha Washington was one of my earlier-acquired historical-oriented  

cookery books and I LOVE Hess! Maybe I'll take a look at the other  

books, just to read over her annotations!

Chimene >>>

 

On Mar 7, 2012, at 8:56 AM, Terry Decker wrote:

<<< You don't need to use clay to hold the bricks together.  The  

ancient Egyptians built stack ovens (where the bricks are merely  

stacked together to produce a heat retaining mass) for small scale  

baking. IIRC, there is an illustration in David's English Bread  

and Yeast Cookery (Hess edited edition).

 

Bear >>>

 

 

Date: Tue, 24 Sep 2013 11:18:34 +0000

From: "Groff, Garth (ggg9y)" <ggg9y at virginia.edu>

To: "atlantia at atlantia.sca.org" <atlantia at atlantia.sca.org>

Subject: [MR] BBC: Saxon Oven Discovered

 

Today the BBC has a very interesting piece on the discovery of a Saxon communal oven in Norfolk: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-norfolk-24211947 .

 

It will be interesting to see how this over is reconstructed. I suspect it might have been a larger version of this 18th century-style oven from the Jas Townsend & Son videos: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i0foHjPVbP4 . Such ovens are also in use at Colonial Williamsburg.

 

Lord Mungo Napier, The Archer of Mallard Lodge

 

<the end>



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