Monday, July 1, 2013

Roasting Chickens

After your bread comes out of the oven, there should be residual heat to bake something else, if not more bread. Why waste the heat?

Chicken goes in after bread come out


Two hours later

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Extreme Matzo

From The New York Times

Baked in wood-fired brick ovens, of course


YUMA, Ariz. — Here, on a Christian farmer’s land five miles from the Mexican border, lies the holiest of fields for some of New York’s most observant Orthodox Jewish communities. Wheat harvested on these 40 acres is destined to become matzo, the unleavened bread eaten by Jews during the eight days of Passover.
Joshua Lott for The New York Times
The harvest in progress. Ultra-Orthodox Jews start guarding the grains before the wheat is harvested to ensure they are not overripe or wet from rainfall.
It is not an everyday plant-and-pick operation, and the matzo made from this wheat is not everyday matzo.
Yisroel Tzvi Brody, rabbi of the Shaarei Orah synagogue in Borough Park, Brooklyn, stood at the edge of one of the fields on Monday, stooping to rub a grain of wheat between his wrinkled thumb and index finger. Removing his glasses, he brought the grain close to his eyes and turned it from side to side, like a gemologist inspecting a precious stone.
“It is to ascertain that it’s not sprouted,” Rabbi Brody explained. “If it has, it’s not valid.”
For seven weeks, while the wheat grew in scorching heat under impossibly blue skies, two men clothed in the traditional black and white garments of the Hasidim stayed in a trailer overlooking the crop, to be able to attest that the wheat, once matured, had been untouched by rain or other moisture. Workers were prohibited from carrying water bottles in the field. Dust danced in the air as the wind blew, but unpaved roads could not be wet while the wheat was growing. The goal was to prevent any natural fermentation from taking place in the grains before they were milled into flour and the matzo was baked, sometime in the late fall.
Tradition calls for keeping watch over the matzo from the time the wheat is milled. Ultra-Orthodox Jews have carried that practice several steps further, guarding the grains before the wheat is harvested to ensure they are not overripe or wet from rainfall. That can be a challenging task on the rainy East Coast. Nonetheless, one segment of the Satmar sect, the largest Hasidic group in the United States, grows its wheat there, following seasonal weather forecasts to search for areas where rain is least likely to fall right before the wheat matures.
Five years ago, another Satmar group began shifting its wheat-growing operation here, where rain is rare at this time of year. That opened a new front line in the competition for the most rigorous standards in the production of matzo. (In a taste test, though, Vos Iz Neias?, a Jewish blog, chose neither, picking instead matzo made by the Pupa and Zehlem Matzoh Bakery in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, which is run by Hasidic Jews of the Puppa sect. It is said that they, too, have used Yuma wheat.)
Samuel Heilman, a professor of sociology at Queens College of the City University of New York, whose research focuses on the social ethnography of Jewish Orthodox movements, said the competition between the two Satmar groups — each led by one of two brothers — was about one-upmanship.
“One is always looking to be more authoritative than the other,” Professor Heilman said, “and one of the ways they’re making this happen is over matzo — our matzo is more kosher than yours, we’re more scrupulous and careful over matzo baking than you are.”
Zalman Teitelbaum is the younger of the brothers and a rabbi in one of the Satmar congregations in Williamsburg, where many of the sect’s members live. The bakers who follow him use East Coast wheat.
Aaron Teitelbaum, the older brother, is the chief rabbi of the Satmar community based in the village of Kiryas Joel, N.Y., settled by his uncle, Joel Teitelbaum, the dynasty’s founder and its grand rabbi. Wheat used there comes from Yuma.
On Monday, Rabbi Aaron Teitelbaum got something close to a rock star reception when he paid a visit to the farm, straight from New York, to bless the wheat harvest. Rabbis and congregants at the farm formed a tight knot around him, taking pictures and jostling for a chance to touch him.
Rabbi Brody, clad in a bekishe, a traditional ankle-length black coat, approached Tim Dunn, the farm’s owner. “How many degrees is now?” he asked.
“It’s about 108 degrees,” Mr. Dunn told him.
Rabbi Brody sighed.
Mr. Dunn remembers a call five years ago from a man who asked if he had any interest growing kosher wheat. He said yes, without any real idea about what working with ultra-Orthodox Jews would require. The first lesson came when his wife reached to shake hands with a visitor and the man, a rabbi, pulled back. (By custom, men and women are to avoid touching, unless they are related.)

Arizona Is Fertile Ground for New York Matzo

(Page 2 of 2)
Many more lessons followed. For example, no matter how many times Mr. Dunn cleans his equipment, the rabbis will come by and clean it some more. The purpose, they told him, was to rid the machines of every bit of dirt, a painstaking task that often includes blowing air into the tiniest nooks and crevices.
Joshua Lott for The New York Times
A fan is used to clean harvested grain, which will be delivered to Orthodox bakeries in Brooklyn and Kiryas Joel, N.Y., where baking will begin five months before Passover.
A Christian farmer's wheat in Yuma, Ariz., becomes matzo.
Joshua Lott for The New York Times
A phone call under a grain cart.
Joshua Lott for The New York Times
Two Hasidic Jewish men harvesting wheat from a 40-acre farm in Yuma, Ariz., on Monday.
“When I meet prospective clients, I tell them, if I can meet these guys’ standards, I can meet anybody’s standards,” said Mr. Dunn, who grows 12 varieties of wheat on his farm. Some is shipped to Italy, where it is used to make pasta. Some goes to a laboratory that develops new breads.
Matzo is made from soft white wheat. Once harvested, that wheat must be brought to a warehouse before dark, and when it is transported, the top of the truck that carries it must be covered.
After the grain is cleaned and packed into containers, which are sealed by the rabbis, it is shipped by train to Elizabeth, N.J., then taken by trucks to Orthodox bakeries in Brooklyn and Kiryas Joel.
Rabbi Eli Hershkowitz, who manages the Satmar Central Matzoh Bakery on Rutledge Street in Williamsburg, said the dough is kneaded and rolled by hand and baked in wood-fired brick ovens. It is how it was done centuries ago in Eastern Europe, where Hasidic sects trace their roots, and how it is also done at the Congregation Satmar Matzoh Bakery three blocks away on Broadway, which is run by followers of Rabbi Zalman Teitelbaum, the competition.
A one-pound box of Passover matzo costs about $25; “$14 to $15 is just the cost of labor,” Rabbi Hershkowitz said.
Baking will begin five months before the holiday, which starts on the evening of April 14, 2014. Rabbi Hershkowitz estimated that the Orthodox bakeries of Brooklyn would produce between 80,000 and 100,000 pounds of matzo using Yuma wheat. A family might consume about 20 pounds over eight days, he said. “We’re large families.”
At noon, Rabbi Aaron Teitelbaum climbed onto a combine and started the engine to begin the harvest. A Hasidic man was at the wheel. Mr. Dunn’s son, Kirk, who is studying agronomy at the University of Arizona, rode by his side as the combine lumbered across the field, gathering grain, the rabbis cheering from the sidelines.

Monday, June 24, 2013

"Sprouted Bread Oven"

This is from 
Lisa Heldke

hello,
i took your mud oven workshop last year at the "baking camp" in Skowhegan. This spring I've been building an oven with a friend. We used another friend's hull-less oat straw for the cob. We made the oven, covered it with a tarp, and then I went away for a week. (We didn't fire it.) When I came back, it had sprouted! I guess the combine didn't do a very good job.... 
THought you might get a kick out of a photo of the "sprouted grain" bread oven. 
Now I feel like I should wait to fire it till I can harvest the oats! (Okay, no.)


Maybe this could be the true test if you've used enough insulation over the dome. If the oven is fired and the "dome top garden" doesn't die, then the heat is staying where it should stay, in the oven. Of course the sprouted bread oven needs to be watered, but I thought mud ovens needed to be waterproof. Yes we could put a roof over the dome, but then "the garden" wouldn't get sunlight. Okay, a translucent roof could work, although "the garden" would still need to be watered.
Any other ideas?

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Gang Members Make Bread

Watch this inspired video about one tough baker who teaches "untouchable" gang members how to co-exist and bake bread. http://tribecafilm.com/online/focus-forward/good-bread


Thursday, June 13, 2013

Best Oven Size

Unfortunately there is no best oven size. The size oven you build should relate to what you are going to use the oven for. The two primary uses of wood-fired ovens are bread baking and pizza baking.
If your oven is used just for bread baking, then you can build it fairly small. For pizza making, you'll have to make it bigger even if you're making only one pizza at a time.
A pizza needs to be moved around in the oven so that it will bake evenly and it takes space to do this.
I recently made some pizzas in a 16.5" X 30"and I had a hard time. The length was fine, but the width was not. There was simply no way to maneuver the pizza around.
At home in my 32" diameter, round earth oven, I build a fire one side of the oven and bake on the other side. When the floor cools off, with my metal peel, I simple move the fire and coals to other side of the oven and bake where the fire used to be. Depending on how many pizzas I want to bake, I might move the fire back and forth several times.
With this technique, I can maintain a 700ºF floor temperature, and this is an ideal temperature for making pizzas.
If it's just breads you're baking, and assuming you aren't making more than four breads at a time, you can get by with a smaller oven because once you place the breads in the oven to bake, you shouldn't need to shuffle them around.
If you're going to be baking breads and pizzas (of course, never at the same time) then build a larger oven.

                                   
16.5" floor diameter. Much too narrow for pizza baking                                    



                                    
 28" floor diameter. Plenty of room for pizza baking
                                         

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Finishing An Oven


Fernand Toucourt, the stone mason, finishes an oven in France

                                    
Applying mortar between the stones that form the arch


                                    
Stucco over perlite insulation


 Smoothing the cement stucco



Friday, May 31, 2013

Roofing

Unless you live in a very dry climate, you really need a roof to protect your earth oven. In the past I've used surface bonding cement as a stucco over the earth oven, but it is simply not 100 percent effective.
And you are looking for 100 percent effectiveness. 95 percent is not good enough. One small crack can allow in enough moisture to turn your earth oven back to its source. Mud.
I assure you that you'll sleep better if your earth oven is properly protected.
I know some people who toss the blue tarp over their earth ovens, but they admit to me that sometime they forget and if it rains...
There are many ways of covering an earth oven with a roof, but the easiest way I've found is to buy a length of metal roofing, cut it to size and drape it over the oven. It will probably cost less than $30.00, and your oven will then be protected from the elements. A worthy investment.


cracks in surface bonding cement



cracks in surface bonding cement

 Draping metal roofing over earth oven

 roofing secured with bungies

Sunday, May 19, 2013

May 18, 2013 Workshop

And yet another wonderful workshop with a great group of participants. Building an oven under a clear sky with blazing sunshine was a joy. Wood-fired pizza for lunch with a little red wine, not bad, not bad at all.                                
                                                                  Photos by Ken Taylor





Sunday, May 12, 2013

Oven Workshop

Just finished an earth oven workshop with Roy Feihel and Melissa Hunnibel assisting me. While watching a couple of instructional videos I could see a driving rain outside, but as soon as we began the oven, the rain stopped. Building ovens in the rain is a demanding process, although we did have two canopies set up. The oven we constructed has an 18" diameter baking surface.
Next Saturday we'll be doing another workshop.

Thursday, May 9, 2013

Bread Earth And Fire: Earth Ovens And Artisan Breads

For the past couple of years I've been revising my book "Bread Earth And Fire"
The book is being retired, and in its place is
"Bread Earth And Fire: Earth Ovens And Artisan Breadswith new material to help beginning oven builders and bread bakers.
The book is available on Lulu as a physical book and ebook. Soon to be available on Amazon's CreateSpace. Cover design may vary.