Post by guym on Aug 7, 2018 10:13:51 GMT
I can remember making my first proper pizza in 1999. I was a student living in Leeds. I woke up one day and decided I was going to make a Pizza from scratch. I didn't really know how, but I did know that I loved good Pizza and that nothing I could easily buy tasted as good as something handmade.
I walked down to the Co-op from Headingley/ Hyde Park area and bought the ingredients. I guessed at it. I didn't have a recipe - so just bought what seemed logical. Some flour, some tomatoes, cheese.
Now, that first pizza was pretty terrible. There were lots of reasons, not least buying terrible flour, but I had a go - and I was hooked.
Fast forward nearly 20 years, and now at the tender age of 40 years - I've finally started building the oven I promised myself all those years ago. I'm pleased to say that I also make a decent Pizza nowadays.
So, about the oven.
I always told myself that I'd build the oven once we had a house/ garden/ location worthwhile putting the time effort into the build. I think we've kind of got that now. Our house was first built in 1966, it's got a large garden overlooking open countryside and only one neighbour. In Summer the garden and terrace gets full sun through the afternoon and into the evening. It's in a small semi-rural village. We've got a decent spot for an oven tucked away under a Rowan Tree - up against the north facing fence next to the neighbour.
When we started searching for design inspiration we did the usual thing. Google. "Pizza oven design". Quickly followed by "Modern Pizza oven". The design that came up first and caught our eye was this one. I'm guessing that many of you will have already seen it.
After researching this image a little more I found out that this oven was built in Wallingford, Seattle, USA. It had been architect designed and purpose built for the client.
We liked the look of it. It was different to all the traditional oven designs we were seeing. Definitely not to everyone's taste, or even suitable in many situations, however our 1960's house with recent additions looked like it might go well.
Now comes the plot twist. I wanted to build an oven pretty similar to the Wallingford design - FOR FREE. Not spending any money. You see we had lots of materials leftover from various building works at the house over the last 5 years. Jumbo bags of ballast, building sand, cement, hardcore, lots of timber, some bricks - you get the general idea. Was it possible to build something as ambitious as this for free.
Spoiler alert - the answer is a resounding NO! We definitely couldn't do it. However, the idea of doing it as close to zero cost (ie: a few hundred pounds) definitely remains the plan and we're on track so far. I'll post photos showing progress so far. To date we've spent almost nothing - less than £20 - and we're about to start the oven.
The elephant in the room at this stage is the design. The eagle eyed amongst you will have spotted the cantilevered concrete worktop. The dimensions of ours is approx 2000mm x 1200mm. Ie: massive. And very heavy. Largely unsupported at many points. Raised 900mm in the air. Why 900mm?? That's the height of a standard kitchen worktop. I wanted to be able to prep at the same height as in a kitchen. Fairly standard stuff. Also this was designed by a professional architect practice, and almost certainly built by professionals. I am most definitely neither of those things.
So, one Saturday afternoon in April 2017 I stepped out into the garden and started preparing the area... pictures to follow
I walked down to the Co-op from Headingley/ Hyde Park area and bought the ingredients. I guessed at it. I didn't have a recipe - so just bought what seemed logical. Some flour, some tomatoes, cheese.
Now, that first pizza was pretty terrible. There were lots of reasons, not least buying terrible flour, but I had a go - and I was hooked.
Fast forward nearly 20 years, and now at the tender age of 40 years - I've finally started building the oven I promised myself all those years ago. I'm pleased to say that I also make a decent Pizza nowadays.
So, about the oven.
I always told myself that I'd build the oven once we had a house/ garden/ location worthwhile putting the time effort into the build. I think we've kind of got that now. Our house was first built in 1966, it's got a large garden overlooking open countryside and only one neighbour. In Summer the garden and terrace gets full sun through the afternoon and into the evening. It's in a small semi-rural village. We've got a decent spot for an oven tucked away under a Rowan Tree - up against the north facing fence next to the neighbour.
When we started searching for design inspiration we did the usual thing. Google. "Pizza oven design". Quickly followed by "Modern Pizza oven". The design that came up first and caught our eye was this one. I'm guessing that many of you will have already seen it.
After researching this image a little more I found out that this oven was built in Wallingford, Seattle, USA. It had been architect designed and purpose built for the client.
We liked the look of it. It was different to all the traditional oven designs we were seeing. Definitely not to everyone's taste, or even suitable in many situations, however our 1960's house with recent additions looked like it might go well.
Now comes the plot twist. I wanted to build an oven pretty similar to the Wallingford design - FOR FREE. Not spending any money. You see we had lots of materials leftover from various building works at the house over the last 5 years. Jumbo bags of ballast, building sand, cement, hardcore, lots of timber, some bricks - you get the general idea. Was it possible to build something as ambitious as this for free.
Spoiler alert - the answer is a resounding NO! We definitely couldn't do it. However, the idea of doing it as close to zero cost (ie: a few hundred pounds) definitely remains the plan and we're on track so far. I'll post photos showing progress so far. To date we've spent almost nothing - less than £20 - and we're about to start the oven.
The elephant in the room at this stage is the design. The eagle eyed amongst you will have spotted the cantilevered concrete worktop. The dimensions of ours is approx 2000mm x 1200mm. Ie: massive. And very heavy. Largely unsupported at many points. Raised 900mm in the air. Why 900mm?? That's the height of a standard kitchen worktop. I wanted to be able to prep at the same height as in a kitchen. Fairly standard stuff. Also this was designed by a professional architect practice, and almost certainly built by professionals. I am most definitely neither of those things.
So, one Saturday afternoon in April 2017 I stepped out into the garden and started preparing the area... pictures to follow