How to Build Your Own High-Performing Wood-Fired Pizza Oven from Bricks

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  • Опубликовано: 31 май 2024
  • You could spend months and tens of thousands of dollars building an epic pizza oven, and you still might end up with bad pizza. Or you could build this oven for about 50 bucks (or less). Have fun and get the hang of making delicious wood-fired pizzas without breaking the bank.
    To view the full recipe along with more ChefSteps specialties: chfstps.co/3g6s0hc
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    To find out more, visit our website: chfstps.co/3kwjQmn
    *AT YOUR OWN RISK: If you try this yourself, you are doing so at your own risk. Adult supervision is required. Consult a physician before performing any physical activity. Do not get burnt - surfaces are extremely hot. Ensure that you do not use fire irresponsibly or in areas that are susceptible to combustion. You may wish to consult with your local fire department. Ensure that you have immediate access to fire extinguishment equipment. Do not consume materials that are not intended for consumption, cut yourself with sharp objects, cook on surfaces that are not intended for food preparation, ignite materials that are explosive, or ingest food that has not sufficiently cooled down.
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Комментарии • 2,4 тыс.

  • @daimaoh2
    @daimaoh2 3 года назад +2506

    I built this with bricks from Lowe's. Was $65; took 16 minutes to construct. The pizza came out amazing, surprisingly good. Highly recommended.

    • @thedestroyer3879
      @thedestroyer3879 3 года назад +27

      What were the bricks that you used ?

    • @daimaoh2
      @daimaoh2 3 года назад +88

      @@thedestroyer3879 you should get kiln fired clay bricks.

    • @thedestroyer3879
      @thedestroyer3879 3 года назад +39

      Thanks for the first answer but i was also wondering what are the 2 flat stones

    • @daimaoh2
      @daimaoh2 3 года назад +40

      @@thedestroyer3879 idk just the biggest flat one they had. It's concrete ,not clay.

    • @juliovila8233
      @juliovila8233 3 года назад +7

      You use a certain type of brick and what are the slabs

  • @hollygaughan2780
    @hollygaughan2780 3 года назад +710

    This design works. My buddy built one yesterday using the layout from this video, I made a batch of dough, and we made some awesome pizza. As you might expect, the rear end of the cooking surface is hotter than the front end, so we had to rotate the pizzas halfway through the bake. No big deal. Pizza top and bottom cook rates were pretty even. We earned the lasting admiration of women, children, and small dogs and had a great time doing it. If you can't have fun making pizza this way, you should probably just order delivery. If you have to nitpick everything about the video and/or design, you're taking life too seriously. Great idea, ChefSteps!

    • @BeasleyStreet
      @BeasleyStreet 3 года назад +11

      Life's to short to be worried about the finer points, just having a go is the point!!🤝👏👍

    • @fergussamaai316
      @fergussamaai316 3 года назад +5

      Nailed. It. Well said here & ditto

    • @tommcquade5213
      @tommcquade5213 3 года назад +6

      Well said. This man is giving up his time to provide a sweet affordable solution to wood fired pizza ovens and like you said trial and error till you get the perfect pizza. I'm loving this and can't wait to try it this summer

    • @olguiq1013
      @olguiq1013 3 года назад +8

      @Holly... It's 1:40am and started building this right now... STARVING and what better way than to enjoy a Saturday-Sunday middle of night!!!

    • @BeasleyStreet
      @BeasleyStreet 3 года назад +2

      @@olguiq1013 you sound like my kind of person...no doubt assisted by a glass or two of something ...I trust it was fine dining 👍🤝🤗😉

  • @judd.1427
    @judd.1427 9 месяцев назад +16

    Crazy to see this is a legit, adult-approved thing now. I did this at a friend's house in high school around 20 years ago, almost exact same design. Just seemed logical. Used bricks and large pavers leftover from their DIY back patio. Friend's mom got mad at me for ruining the bricks. Later she decided it was a creative idea, was no longer mad. We didn't have a proper peel, just kinda threw it in as best we could. Pizza cooked super fast. Crust was always done before toppings. Oh well. Time to build another one in my own backyard.

  • @Trazynn
    @Trazynn 3 года назад +36

    When you're camping and you carried a ton of bricks with you, but you don't have a level, you can always use a cup of water!

  • @mhackney
    @mhackney 3 года назад +692

    1) Using regular bricks are fine, they won't explode or anything like that, they will just slowly degrade from repeated heating and cooling. Might take 50 or so heating/cooling cycles for this to be a problem but replacement bricks are cheap! However, use more expensive fire bricks if you want it to last indefinitely and can't be bothered to rebuild.
    2) The big slabs should be made of an igneous rock like basalt, paving slabs should do the job, (basalt is called "bluestone" in NSW + Victoria, Australia), as concrete slabs aren't designed for continuous heating / cooling
    3) Build up a big fire after you have built it then let it cool - this will highlight any major problems before you make your first delicious pizza!

    • @ashutoshdube6560
      @ashutoshdube6560 3 года назад +32

      I am still confuse for that big slab....I did not get It....what should I use....let me tell you what are the option I have
      1.stone slab
      2. Marble slab
      3. Rcc concrete slab
      4. Rock slab
      5. Granite slab
      6. Iron/mild steel slabs
      Pls I am looking for the reply.

    • @jamesobrien4462
      @jamesobrien4462 3 года назад +19

      @@ashutoshdube6560 marble or granite is what u want

    • @jamesobrien4462
      @jamesobrien4462 3 года назад +24

      Granite is the best

    • @marcdemell5976
      @marcdemell5976 2 года назад +3

      How about just rocks from the woods? They are free.

    • @nivekplays9676
      @nivekplays9676 2 года назад +1

      @@marcdemell5976 well something flat is ideal i’d say but yet again those should work fine just don’t through your pizza on right away.

  • @RomPereira
    @RomPereira 3 года назад +52

    I do love the traditional brick oven with all its possibilities, but, come on, you cannot beat this 30 minutes freaking nice pizza cooking thingie he made. Kudos for you dude!

  • @darkatro1590
    @darkatro1590 10 месяцев назад +18

    I had the idea of making a Wood-Fired pizza oven and did not know where to even start. All these other videos are very advanced and require a lot of time and material. This is the best video I've found for a very basic yet effective wood fired oven. It's cheap, portable, and gets the job done.

    • @mesiroy1234
      @mesiroy1234 Месяц назад

      Dont getbcancer form metel coating on your doug

    • @mesiroy1234
      @mesiroy1234 Месяц назад

      Like non rust coating on red bricks. Pls google it

  • @obivandamme
    @obivandamme 3 года назад +40

    That is exactly what I was looking for when searching for DIY Pizza Oven. There really are videos showing you how to make a pizza oven yourself that requires full metalworking equipment to weld a steel oven door. This is DIY in perfection and that pizza looks nice. Wouldn't mind to have less black spots on the crust, but still.. fantastic

    • @aceboogisback9946
      @aceboogisback9946 Год назад +1

      I'm wondering if two wood blocks were too much? Maybe it would've come out less burnt had he let it bake for longer at a slightly lower temp?

  • @MrSethmichaels
    @MrSethmichaels 3 года назад +452

    Him: you want that spotty leopard bottom
    Pizza: Hello, I am black Panther

  • @BennyTheButcher2
    @BennyTheButcher2 3 года назад +725

    Great build! Just a warning to everybody else... You absolutely cannot use just any brick from the big box store. They must be lead-free. Also, cement - or conglomerate - blocks can definitely explode when they are heated. Be careful, y'all!

    • @terrypiper31
      @terrypiper31 3 года назад +46

      Great advice. What are the stone plates for the pizza to cook on and top? A fire brick runs $3.18ea (locally) so if he is making it out of 47 plus mortar and two large flat stones I cannot see where his pricing comes from to be under $50. It's a great idea but someone is gonna get hurt.

    • @GadBoDag
      @GadBoDag 3 года назад +46

      I can't imagine the amount of lead transferred onto a pizza crust by briefly resting it on a stone would even be measurable, much less harmful.

    • @seymourskinner2533
      @seymourskinner2533 3 года назад +42

      GadBoDag I’m more concerned about those bricks just exploding actually

    • @mastheadmike
      @mastheadmike 3 года назад +51

      No mortar. Stack and go. Longevity isn’t the goal. This can be set up and deconstructed pretty easily. The only consideration I did was to put my regular cordierite pizza stone on top of the paver. It is smoother and food safe.

    • @terrypiper31
      @terrypiper31 3 года назад +26

      ​@@GadBoDag The bricks exploding, due to heat, is what Ben is trying to explain. With the heat being @750 degrees is why he brought that up. I'm no lead expert but please report your findings after 10 pizzas in this setup. The lead may not, or may, show and a simple blood test at a med facility will cover it as proof. My question is how the suggested unit will last over that same time. Can "big box store" bricks endure the temp swings? My experience shows they will not because I used some in support of a firepit and of the 6 used 0 are left.

  • @ladyofthemasque
    @ladyofthemasque 2 года назад +12

    Thank you for sharing these tips & tricks! The Prepsteaders channel recommended your video on how to craft a makeshift brick pizza oven, since she was doing an episode on how to craft a brick rocket stove for emergency cooking needs, and mentioned how to turn it into an oven, too.

  • @006guitarplayer
    @006guitarplayer 2 года назад +73

    I made this today with spare bricks and pavers around the house. This is the absolute BEST way I've ever cooked a homemade pizza in my life. Without a doubt worth it; you are AWESOME! The crust honestly came out just as good as my favorite pizza joint in Jersey. AMAZING 🍕

    • @robertborden2666
      @robertborden2666 Год назад +4

      That’s exactly what we did at home. Friends tore up a brick patio and gave us everything we needed. Zero dollars. First R&D run and we made the best pizzas ever at home. We did three more rounds and then took it on the road with the Boy Scout troop. We were the hit of the big event. We made 16 pizzas in the rain and nearly won the chopped competition out of 12 troops! I can’t wait to put it back up and make more. Cheapest and best thing I’ve ever built. Ugly but wonderful.

    • @houseatreides1
      @houseatreides1 Год назад

      How long did it take to heat up and cook a pizza ?

    • @006guitarplayer
      @006guitarplayer Год назад +2

      It took about 25 minutes to heat up the the oven/paver enough (650F+) then about 8-10 minutes to cook each pizza.

    • @houseatreides1
      @houseatreides1 Год назад +1

      @@006guitarplayer that's fast
      ..thanks

    • @elisabethjones4917
      @elisabethjones4917 11 месяцев назад +1

      How did it hold up using old brick? Did you use any brick with holes in them?

  • @jend4128
    @jend4128 3 года назад +5

    I have been looking for a video that would show how to build an easy pizza oven. I can build this myself and for a low cost! Thank you so much for sharing! Love it!

  • @sabersight908
    @sabersight908 3 года назад +18

    LOVE when they talk about pizza, pizza is my love

    • @danemmerich6775
      @danemmerich6775 3 года назад +1

      Love the......Pizza is my Love! Me too. PASSIONATE!

  • @keithhepworth4934
    @keithhepworth4934 2 года назад +2

    I built this and use it regularly. My kids and I have fun making the dough and building our own pizzas.

  • @jarooty2
    @jarooty2 День назад

    did it! We had wood fired pizza tonight! Thanks for this!

  • @Acofodo
    @Acofodo 3 года назад +30

    We made this improvised pizza oven this weekend and it
    turned out really really good. I used 25x12x6,5 cm bricks (standard here in Slovenia) and 60x40x5 cm chamotte plates - the ones that get installed into pizza and bread ovens. It took around an hour for plates to heat up. They are all natural, so no worries there regarding health safety. The plates are also heat resistant as they withstand really high temperature in real ovens. Next time I will try to get two plates closer together by 1 cm so pizza will cook even quicker. I will do this by installing just one line of bricks, laying them on their sides instead on laying them flat. Instead of 13 cm high I will get 12 cm. Chamotte plates cost around 30 € each but are worth investing if you plat to use it more than once. After all you can install them into real oven, but that is another story and another diy project! Cheers ChefSteps!

    • @robertbrewer2190
      @robertbrewer2190 3 года назад +1

      If only we could find chamotte stone plates in the US. Another channel that built this oven with no credit to Chefsteps had a crack in lower plate before first pizza.

    • @Acofodo
      @Acofodo 3 года назад +1

      @@robertbrewer2190 To get the chamotte stones I had to find a specialist, I am shure there is one in US :). Regarding the crack - I am no expert, but I would say that the "stone" was to thin to take so much heat directly or maybe it was moist.

    • @damjanmarkovic452
      @damjanmarkovic452 3 года назад

      Svetovno! Razmišljam o podobni zadevi - a vam funkcionira ta design, uspete, da se ne bi dno preveč speklo, glede na zgornji del pice? Hvala!

    • @Acofodo
      @Acofodo 3 года назад +1

      @@damjanmarkovic452 sicer smo to do sedaj izvedli samo enkrat, amapak je bilo uspešno. Dizajn je pravi, pizza se je enakomerno zapekla oz je bila pečena z obeh strani. Tako kot sem navedel v zgornjem komentarju, bom naslednjič obe šamotni plošči poskusno dal malo bolj skupaj zaradi same hitrosti peke. Srečno in uspešno!

    • @damjanmarkovic452
      @damjanmarkovic452 3 года назад

      @@Acofodo hvala za odgovor!:) Mislite se da spraviti pečko na 400+ stopinj, da bi bila pica pečena v manj kot 2 minutah?

  • @teddingtonbear3265
    @teddingtonbear3265 3 года назад +675

    Him: "How the bottom looking, wow, looking good."
    Me: "nope"

    • @KeithMichael0804
      @KeithMichael0804 3 года назад +27

      You are right . That wasn’t “ leopard “ spotting of the crust . Maybe he needs to add another layer of bricks from the flame to the cooking surface

    • @teddingtonbear3265
      @teddingtonbear3265 3 года назад +93

      @@KeithMichael0804 Yeah I'm not an expert on pizza but I am an expert at burning things so I know a burnt food stuff when I see it lol.

    • @MrMofenu
      @MrMofenu 3 года назад +12

      @@KeithMichael0804 My thought when i saw it, it's either to close to the fire or he should have waited a bit before starting to cook his pizza

    • @karenmcdonald4263
      @karenmcdonald4263 3 года назад +2

      @@teddingtonbear3265
      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣👍

    • @jwil6902
      @jwil6902 3 года назад +43

      That wasn’t leopard spotting...that was panther spotting

  • @TerryHelliker
    @TerryHelliker 3 года назад +3

    I will have to try it this summer! I can’t get enough pizza and have always wanted to try making pizza in an outdoor pizza oven! Also, that burnt bottom is the best! Great video, thanks!

  • @janecre1025
    @janecre1025 Год назад +2

    many thanks for this video. We made our oven following this video and it is absolutely perfect. We use it to cook pizza and also have a barbecue with burgers too. This is the best home build pizza oven on yourtube

  • @daedaetinez6406
    @daedaetinez6406 3 года назад +3

    THANK YOU!! I wanted to make it a easier way and you brought me a easy way. I have this stuff in my house now! I’m excited 😆 🍕 🔥 😋

  • @jergarmar
    @jergarmar 3 года назад +20

    I made a slightly modified version of this and tried it out today, worked surprisingly well, even though I was just using small sticks of leftover wood. So I had a hard time maintaining temperature, but even then I got a good puffy crust and some spotting in the bottom. So should be even better with proper hard wood and a bigger fire. Thanks!

    • @gregordejaco1287
      @gregordejaco1287 Год назад

      May I ask how you modified this version?

    • @jergarmar
      @jergarmar Год назад +1

      @@gregordejaco1287 It's been a while now, but I think I made the vent in the back bigger, as a result of a bit of trial-and-error. Also, I think ours is a half-brick bigger, because of the size of the slabs we bought? Something like that. I still have this set up in my yard, and make a neapolitan pizza every so often, but since I have a bigger family, one thing that's hard here is making a lot of pizzas in a row. In a real pizza oven there's more room, so you don't have the "cool spot" issue. But this certainly works for a couple pizzas!
      For our family, we usually use 2 pizza stones in the oven (alternating between them), and a NY-style dough (that is, with oil), and cook them for 7-8 minutes at a time. Usually we make either 6 or 9 12-inch pizzas (each pizza ~210g), one after another, but we've occasionally done 12 if we have a lot of company. Super fun Friday night meal, every month or so.

  • @frodokhunt
    @frodokhunt 2 года назад

    I built this , screwed it up the first time but once I learnt what to get right it turned out amazing ! Thanks heaps for your video ! It's been a dream to make pizza like this at home

  • @redrosebeautytherapy5607
    @redrosebeautytherapy5607 3 года назад +1

    Thank you so much for sharing, I have plenty bricks in my backyard and also firebricks from my old storage heaters. Can not wait :)

  • @PaulDominguez
    @PaulDominguez 3 года назад +7

    This is awesome! I've been thinking of doing the same but always wondered why no one else has done it. Weekend pizza project.

  • @lockedog3000
    @lockedog3000 3 года назад +23

    I love the 8 bit ending music.

  • @zainabazzy195
    @zainabazzy195 2 года назад +1

    Saw this in the morning🤔
    I have the bricks so why not !
    Made it in the afternoon
    Super happy with the results kids also loved the new pizza oven.
    We are keeping it 🤗
    Thank you chef.

  • @VegasBugs
    @VegasBugs Год назад +2

    Can't wait to build this. Thanks for the great content.

  • @monolito
    @monolito 3 года назад +3

    Thank you so much for this. I'm totally building this next werkend

  • @tomtemofonte9086
    @tomtemofonte9086 3 года назад +5

    Found firebricks at Lowes - more expensive (about3.50 each) but seems to be the best approach. Looking for Bluestone for the flat surfaces or equivalent (ceramic may work - handles higher heat).
    I cannot wait to try it. Thank you for the vision.

  • @Branjensen27
    @Branjensen27 3 года назад

    probably the best video on a brick oven. Simple, cheap option

  • @TruthPrevail777
    @TruthPrevail777 7 месяцев назад

    The best oven DIY video so far. Easy technique, precise, good presentations and the final product. Enjoy show much. Thank you.👍

  • @mitchelldbarnes
    @mitchelldbarnes 3 года назад +68

    As a professional, commercial, real-life bricklayer (mason) I lost it when he put the level across his cute lil dry stack diy brick "foundation"
    I like what he did here, that's a pretty ingenious little outdoor cooking setup. I liked this video and will be passing it along to all the various folks that don't understand that they really don't need or want, nor can they afford an actual brick and mortar outdoor pizza oven.

    • @Nanorisk
      @Nanorisk 3 года назад +2

      mitchelldbarnes serious question: if I am to make this semi-permanent, what kind of bonding material do I need? Or does it even require bonding at all?
      I figured if there is no seam between the bricks, it can be more efficient?

    • @mitchelldbarnes
      @mitchelldbarnes 3 года назад +13

      Nanorisk I think if you tightly stack actual fire brick this sort of oven will be adequately semi -permanent. Readily available common or paver brick will eventually crack and then fall apart under repeated heat stress, but refractory ceramic fire brick can handle pottery kiln temperatures and are very uniform in shape so they stack tightly and lock together quite well without mortar or any other bonding agent if you start with a smooth flat foundation. If you stack em’ up as tight as you can I think your pizza oven will stay put indefinitely. Just don’t hit it with your lawn mower...

    • @ChristmasLightsTonight
      @ChristmasLightsTonight 3 года назад +1

      What's the cost you typically quote them, and the biggest driver?

    • @jmurphy6767
      @jmurphy6767 3 года назад

      @@mitchelldbarnes Is there a risk in regular bricks exploding? or just cracking and falling apart? Are fire bricks more prone to damage from moisture and freeze/thaw?

    • @totherarf
      @totherarf 3 года назад

      @@jmurphy6767 Yes!... and Yes!
      Heat Slowly to drive the moisture out then you are good to go!

  • @dinardo72
    @dinardo72 3 года назад +5

    WOW! It worked! Great video thank you so much! I spent $66.59 (2 - 18 X 24 X 2 step stones, 47 - 7.75 x 4 x 2.25 standard bricks and 50 lb.bag leveling sand)
    and took about 30 minutes to level and construct. This is the best Neapolitan and also Gluten Free pizzas I have made yet because of this "hot rod" pizza oven!

    • @steviealvaalbany2730
      @steviealvaalbany2730 2 года назад +1

      OK but where did you get the recipe to make the pizza lol that’s where I’m struggling

    • @dinardo72
      @dinardo72 2 года назад

      @@steviealvaalbany2730 ruclips.net/user/vitoiacopelli is the best I have found!

  • @jodirauth8847
    @jodirauth8847 3 года назад

    I am totally doing this. Thank you for posting this.

  • @FeitePetter
    @FeitePetter Год назад +1

    So I built this in my garden for about 35$. (Just the large Stones and some sand). In Norway that is really not much as costs here are HIGH compared to, well, anywhere. The bricks I just scavenged as you can find left overs anywhere, and you don’t need many.
    Now I’ve tried quite a few commercial pizza ovens for garden-area/space-use ranging between 600-2500$, and I have to say this is by far the best - Even in the fast & dirty just-stack-some-bricks-version.
    If you actually Seal the cracks (i lack the vocabulary for proper stone masonary in english as I am Norwegian, but I trust you to understand what I mean; "if you build it properly") it is a true ruthless pizzamaschine rivalling the heat of all the seven hells!
    Best home made pizza. Ever.

  • @kimberlykislak4176
    @kimberlykislak4176 3 года назад +6

    After watching your video last night, I built this from debris from our house that burnt down a couple of years ago. Thank you I am so excited to bake something. It's been 2 years without an oven. Your awesome for making this video.

  • @Crowleystomb
    @Crowleystomb 3 года назад +12

    When using your brick oven so it doesn't turn out black and burnt you must continue to rotate it a quarter at a time every couple minutes. Since surface block seems to crumble cement bits on bottom of pizza it would seem wise to either use a screen or an actual pizza stone. I love the concept of your creation, man. Absolutely genius and easy to make on a budget!! Great video :)

    • @Jenjenilou
      @Jenjenilou 2 года назад +3

      Using a pizza stone makes a lot of sense. Think I would prefer that to it going onto a concrete slab.

    • @korzer
      @korzer 2 года назад +6

      You used cement block ? cement is poisonous :D

  • @KenCoppola
    @KenCoppola 2 года назад

    Great video and thank you for stating the supplies. Most videos skip that. Looking forward to building it.

  • @GoldenHandsCooking
    @GoldenHandsCooking Год назад +1

    wow! great pizza oven and the pizza cooks really well, didn't even get burnt. Tomorrow I will also try to cook like this

  • @rickmetz769
    @rickmetz769 3 года назад +5

    Great idea and zuggestions/modifications from the comments as well. Looking forward to making one with a taller fire pit. I LOVE wood fired cooking and enjoyed it as I traveled with the military, I have always said I was going to build me an oven and believe I will start with this set up. Thanks for the idea,,,

    • @johnstrickland3933
      @johnstrickland3933 2 года назад

      Get a portable metal such oven table. They have them so u can set hot coals on them an build this on to of that

  • @mfridmanyt
    @mfridmanyt 3 года назад +19

    I think if you want to make this food-safe, you need to (at a minimum) put something over the concrete paver, for example a pizza stone or pizza steel. I'd be surprised if the pavers are controlled for toxic metal content, since they are not expected to be used for cooking. Another idea would be to get a scrap of granite slab, which would cost around $200 for a 16x24 as shown, or maybe to cast yourself a lower slab from refractory cement. Either way you are looking at some $$, but not as much as a full blown permanent pizza oven.

    • @TexanEnglish1
      @TexanEnglish1 2 года назад

      I’m asking about this on main thread

    • @hefeibao
      @hefeibao Год назад

      At that price point you are beyond DIY on the cheap.

    • @Ch1oeW
      @Ch1oeW Год назад +1

      @@hefeibaopizza stones are $25 here in Canada. Very reasonable for DIY

    • @fernandoherranz4095
      @fernandoherranz4095 Год назад +1

      I'd say at a minimum to be safe, get a pizza stone or 2 and put your food on that. Not too keen on putting my pie on a concrete slab that has God-knows-what in it being heated at such a high temp. Great vid overall and looking forward to giving it shot someday!

  • @tex24
    @tex24 3 года назад

    Wow! A home made pizza oven that's completely doable. Thanks!

  • @danielvalenzuela5990
    @danielvalenzuela5990 2 года назад

    i´ve just stopped by to said this is an awesome and cheap solution video for those with low resources, love to watch it ! my bless for u!

  • @stefanjo300
    @stefanjo300 3 года назад +224

    I'm from Sweden and I need instructions from ikea

    • @IQzminus2
      @IQzminus2 3 года назад +9

      In the end we get some Lego instructions graphics, lego is Danish so you know barely understandable. But we might be able to make due

    • @sundarpichai940
      @sundarpichai940 3 года назад +11

      Self-deprecating humor is the best!

    • @reubx
      @reubx 3 года назад +12

      Just buy a few extra bricks so you have parts left over.

    • @tommcquade5213
      @tommcquade5213 3 года назад +1

      Don't think particle board and wood dowels are ideal for a wood fire oven 🤣

    • @BeezerWashingbeard
      @BeezerWashingbeard 3 года назад

      It is for firewood :)

  • @ImperiumPopulorum
    @ImperiumPopulorum 2 года назад +9

    I'll make this for sure

  • @FrustratedBaboon
    @FrustratedBaboon 17 дней назад

    For once I search on RUclips for fast brick oven pizza and find this as the my first video. Amazing video and great details and there is no need for people to spend money on gadgets and then you have no place to put that Pizza Oven, Toaster Oven, Turkey cooker, Smoker, and the list goes on and on. Just build it and use it!!! That thing I bet if you had a larger brick structure above could smoke a brisket and then you could warp it an put in your regular oven for rendering etc.

  • @ABWSKITCHEN
    @ABWSKITCHEN 3 года назад

    This is Epic, thank you for sharing your experience and ideas, definitely we will make it.

  • @MaeV808
    @MaeV808 3 года назад +24

    Def safer option for a non electrical enginger like me! Plus my mom won't kill me for trying to mess with the oven.😂 I love Alex and ChefSteps for all these cookin hacks!

    • @rosivo3142
      @rosivo3142 3 года назад +1

      hello young one, please be careful as these bricks can explode. regular bricks are not made for dramatic temperature fluctuations. if you can get your hands on firebrick, please use those instead

    • @francoflores2435
      @francoflores2435 3 года назад

      Very good!! Esxelent work!! Very nice the music. Could someone tell me the name of the flamenco songs? Thanks

    • @ricardotegni1731
      @ricardotegni1731 3 года назад

      Do u mind sharing ur dough recipe?
      Thanks

  • @LawNOrderHumanRightsUnit
    @LawNOrderHumanRightsUnit Год назад +12

    Great video! I made a pizza oven today using bricks and pavers, however I used tile pavers instead of brick and my bottom paver cracked at 265 F. I see you’re using concrete pavers. I’ll grab some of those ASAP! Bon appétit!

    • @agamer5619
      @agamer5619 Год назад +4

      PLEASE DONT USE CONCRETE PAVERS

    • @woogie6785
      @woogie6785 11 месяцев назад

      Why not?

  • @ml9633
    @ml9633 2 года назад +1

    Well done. Winter here, my wife has it on my to do list for Spring. Nice pizza, looks tasty. Thanks, Maurice :)

  • @tomchernota8051
    @tomchernota8051 Год назад

    Genius, thanks a million.
    Exactly what I was looking for..

  • @HeavenleeMe
    @HeavenleeMe 3 года назад +3

    Awesome! My dad and I made a killer pizza oven in our backyard for $500 worth of supplies. Compared to other ovens, that's pretty cheap and it makes awesome pizza but I still wish I would've known about this.

    • @Trandinhkhoi1209
      @Trandinhkhoi1209 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/_p_3iuEAGbk/видео.html

  • @andreacelestep
    @andreacelestep 3 года назад +14

    I built this oven with some friends a couple weeks ago. First time firing pizzas was just ok. Second time, we used almond wood and that made all the difference! Pizzas cooked in about 5 mins. Bottom was perfectly crispy, crust was fluffy with a good bite. Toppings came out just right. They were some of the best pizzas we have ever had!

    • @Trandinhkhoi1209
      @Trandinhkhoi1209 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/_p_3iuEAGbk/видео.html

  • @lynnbockenhauer5992
    @lynnbockenhauer5992 2 года назад

    Made this pizza oven with bricks and edging found on my properties. Only purchase were the slabs. Been cooking awesome wide fire pizza and corn on the cob! Amazing

  • @abdielgarcia5899
    @abdielgarcia5899 3 года назад

    Did it and it’s awesome. Thank you very much.

  • @JB-hn6qw
    @JB-hn6qw 3 года назад +4

    Yeah, I would line the inside with fire bricks. The moisture inside the bricks and concrete slabs can kinda explode when exposed to high heat, but very cool idea.

  • @francescotomaselli7853
    @francescotomaselli7853 3 года назад +196

    how's the bottom looking? *looks completely burned* LOOKING GOOD!

    • @bajasoque7154
      @bajasoque7154 3 года назад +4

      It is called "leopard spotting" xd

    • @scarjss613
      @scarjss613 3 года назад

      Yeah..... I noticed that too lol

    • @bisanzio1000
      @bisanzio1000 3 года назад +14

      @@bajasoque7154 No "leopard spotting",
      panther total black!!!

    • @grumpyae86
      @grumpyae86 3 года назад +5

      Looks like black panther not a spotted leopard that’s for sure lol

    • @roccosiffredi6427
      @roccosiffredi6427 3 года назад

      More like zebra spotting

  • @charmainemouland-begbie2828
    @charmainemouland-begbie2828 3 года назад +1

    This is amazing I build this design on breeze blocks for extra high I but a small oven tray in and can now get 2 pizzas in I've also added a few bricks on the top and made a proving area for bread fantastic job

  • @debiheaton6812
    @debiheaton6812 3 года назад

    Super cool! Thanks so much for this build!!!

  • @thewthew1987
    @thewthew1987 3 года назад +6

    This is the most rewarding video without getting too fancy with chemistry equipments and its basically fool proof

  • @gregdekker5952
    @gregdekker5952 3 года назад +4

    I love the simplicity and usefulness. I would just need to engineer a way to get it off the ground! I don’t want to be on my hands ‘n knees tending the fire. Also, having a counter on one or both sides would be a big plus!

    • @sgtpepper1138
      @sgtpepper1138 2 года назад +3

      I was just thinking a few layers of big cinderblocks as the base and lay down a layer of those big bricks so the cinderblocks don't get too hot, THEN build this. A little more expensive, but better than crouching.

  • @brownmut5518
    @brownmut5518 2 года назад

    Best best best diy project I've seen ever. Im building one today. Thanks for this wonderful idea

  • @judithtinai448
    @judithtinai448 Год назад

    Very simple and easy to do. Thanks for sharing.

  • @TheGourmetHusband
    @TheGourmetHusband 3 года назад +72

    I usually Sous Vide My pizza then finish it in the brick oven.

  • @MohamedSalahYouTube
    @MohamedSalahYouTube 3 года назад +10

    i got this amazing video recommended to me , So thank you RUclips Algorithm

  • @bigchainring1977
    @bigchainring1977 2 года назад

    close ups of the finished bubbly pizzas look oh so delicious..yummy..fabulous!

  • @LosCardenitas
    @LosCardenitas 3 года назад

    Wow. This is perfect, thank you.

  • @ProHomeCooks
    @ProHomeCooks 3 года назад +305

    so epic grant, keep up the killer content. Been loving these ideas recently! The wagyu steak blew my mind off.

    • @mohammadsohail6534
      @mohammadsohail6534 3 года назад +3

      How come you dont have your account verified!!! Crazy

    • @jajajajajaba2148
      @jajajajajaba2148 3 года назад +2

      Plz don’t encourage this stupidity, gna end up with a face full of red hot brick pieces

    • @TVideoupload
      @TVideoupload 3 года назад +1

      @@jajajajajaba2148 what are you talking about man? The myth that red bricks explode ? Because that’s simply not true, do your research.

    • @michalviktorin6758
      @michalviktorin6758 3 года назад +1

      With all honesty, you keep making mistakes in your videos and pizzas your presented are bad. For that reason I did not suscribed, even if I am home cook who became pro.
      This opinion of yours that this is epic only comfirmed my view. Do not take this as a hate speech, but take it as challenge to become better.

    • @JAO981
      @JAO981 2 года назад +2

      How about all the chemicals used to manufacture those concrete slabs? Will they transfer to the food with that high heat?

  • @abundantwrage7029
    @abundantwrage7029 3 года назад +3

    Cool idea! However, with regular patio bricks it will likely be a one maybe two time use. Unless the bricks are thermal rated, they will break down under the intense heat required to reach pizza oven temps.

    • @robertborden2666
      @robertborden2666 Год назад +1

      Mine did. I get about 2 rounds out of the cooking paver.

  • @inspirationalpostbyleverso6263
    @inspirationalpostbyleverso6263 3 года назад +1

    Absolutely beautifully, i am the Pancake guy and I will be building this tomorrow morning this is the ideal thing for family and friends in the summer to enjoy the life that you live. The children will love this and will use it also, BRILLIANT for great memories.

  • @tuberongpinoy5423
    @tuberongpinoy5423 3 года назад

    This beautiful ideas how it's pizza oven in your backyard..amazing

  • @howard977
    @howard977 3 года назад +7

    I've been using my brick pizza oven like yours for 25 years . l take it camping , tailgating , friend's houses . Everyone's always amazed how well it cooks pizza .
    l got my bricks for free and l use unglazed terracotta tiles and they were a dollar at home depot 25 years ago . So my oven actually cost $2. I've made hundreds of pizza's on mine .

    • @johnsnow3212
      @johnsnow3212 2 года назад

      Where could one get terracotta, also what is it?

    • @howard977
      @howard977 2 года назад

      @@johnsnow3212 l got mine at home depot in the tile section . terracotta is the type and color of the tile

    • @johnsnow3212
      @johnsnow3212 2 года назад

      @@howard977 doesn't crack from thermal shock?

  • @kan815k
    @kan815k 3 года назад +4

    Now you got me hooked, down to hardware shop to buy the metarials.

  • @tomwingenbach3567
    @tomwingenbach3567 3 года назад

    Thank you! It's perfect!

  • @MontanaVN
    @MontanaVN 3 года назад

    This is the video i need to start my oven, thanks a lot bro

  • @Tommehss
    @Tommehss Год назад +3

    I built one of these this summer! First couple didn’t turn out so well but last set I made I totally wreaked the first one with to much smoke and the second one literally cooked 8 minutes later was perfect! It’s a fine line between to much smoke I find, any tips appreciated!

    • @LightSpinAngler
      @LightSpinAngler Год назад +1

      Make sure your firewood is quality hardwood and well seasoned.

  • @stun_resist_s
    @stun_resist_s 3 года назад +7

    I remember when I worked pizza station and oven at my old restaurant job. the burns on our arms, the sweat on our heads, and the rush of the kitchen- oh the memories!

    • @BirchWeber
      @BirchWeber 3 года назад

      remember how you'd eventually make arm pasta by the end of the night with the combo of sweat and the flour from tossing dough? It's a good chunk of my gig now, and I love it!!

  • @esmiragurbanova5518
    @esmiragurbanova5518 2 года назад

    Thank you for the idea!

  • @robertborden2666
    @robertborden2666 Год назад

    This oven is the best. Pizza comes out so well.

  • @knzay
    @knzay 3 года назад +64

    years of playing will legos have led me to this moment

  • @MosesJrLin
    @MosesJrLin 3 года назад +16

    This is so cool

  • @sabre40
    @sabre40 3 года назад +1

    That’s easiest and best one I’ve seen, well done and I will be making one

  • @locke2517
    @locke2517 3 года назад +1

    This looks like alot of fun. Gonna have to try this

  • @DIYdood
    @DIYdood 3 года назад +18

    Basalt should be used for the slabs, and fired clay bricks instead of concrete bricks. Concrete at high temperatures can explode violently.

    • @pronstorestiffi
      @pronstorestiffi 3 года назад

      That was my first thought. I have seen stone explode from high heat, its not pretty. And i would hate for anyone to be hit by the debris flying.

    • @SupraViperhead
      @SupraViperhead 3 года назад

      True, but that would also DRASTICALLY increase the price. The Redbrick costs about $.88 each while Firebrick is $3.68; so instead of spending less than $40 on the Redbricks, you're spending $154.56 on Firebrick and that's before you even include the slabs.
      At that point, you might as well just get the $250 Ooni.

    • @DIYdood
      @DIYdood 3 года назад +1

      @@SupraViperhead Yes that's quite pricey. This would only be worthwhile if you had a pile of bricks lying around or could get some for free. I've got a tonne of bricks from free local sources, mostly through facebook

    • @SupraViperhead
      @SupraViperhead 3 года назад

      @@DIYdood I keep my eyes out for them, but never see them. I bought about 12 bricks from Lowes with a $50 gift card that I got from work and figured I'd just accumulate them slowly.

    • @karlfreitag1
      @karlfreitag1 3 года назад

      Yes but redbrick is clay not concrete. Should be fine, just not guaranteed to last as long.

  • @fpogoda
    @fpogoda 3 года назад +10

    Great vid, especially for newbs that want to begin simply and inexpensively. But I do have a few questions: 1: How long will it take for the fire to get up to temp? 2: How many fires will the concrete slab tolerate? 3: Have there been any updates/mods since this video aired? Finally, I'm wondering about how much heat is compromised without using the "dome," and whether you've adjusted the size of the rear vent (and the front opening) to gain maximum efficiency and a balanced top/bottom burn. Thanks!!!

    • @shadowpanther298
      @shadowpanther298 2 года назад +7

      Around 40 minutes from when the fire really gets going. And it depends on the concrete slab, I suggest getting basalt but a regular old concrete slab from Lowe’s could last around 50. And no there haven’t. You don’t NEED a dome to make pizza. This oven gets plenty hot to cook one very fast and personally no I didn’t adjust anything, simply wasn’t necessary.

    • @hefeibao
      @hefeibao Год назад

      @@shadowpanther298 Where do you get basalt from? Certainly not any old big box store like Home Depot.

  • @musicman64forever
    @musicman64forever Год назад +2

    Cinder blocks will raise the pizza oven.
    Also, for the middle. Four concrete slabs on the top on the cinder blocks. Then, build the pizza brick oven as he suggested, and buy 4 pizza stones,
    you're welcome.

  • @petrchutny
    @petrchutny 9 месяцев назад

    I LOVE this video. So simple. I'm ON IT!

  • @joelthompson4801
    @joelthompson4801 3 года назад +6

    “How’s the bottom really looking?” (Charred) “WOW! Looking good”. 🤣🤣😂😂😂 seriously, though, I’m making this. Great job! 👍🏼

    • @thorhale
      @thorhale 3 года назад

      you need to eat one of these pies yourself dude. I worked a beautiful wood fired oven and we had pies going in and coming out in 60 - 90 seconds each; if it wasn't right he would just make another one happen and it would take less than 5 minutes. And seriously, if you don't know this guy and this channel very well, he is quite the exacting stickler for excellence, and you would do well to not think you know better than him.

    • @joelthompson4801
      @joelthompson4801 3 года назад +1

      thorhale Cannot take one joke? Obviously youve read but decided stick to the first half of my comment. Ive had brick oven pizza like that before, and it’s phenomenal. This is looks delicious, and I said in the second half of my comment, I WILL try this and I said he did a great job. I guess you missed that part.

    • @30000jerry
      @30000jerry 3 года назад +1

      @@thorhale that's not a good wfo pizza, period. It's burnt, not charred. And it's easy to see why. I haven't watched his channel, but this absolutely it not excellence.

  • @shamilmalinda8928
    @shamilmalinda8928 3 года назад +3

    Hay man you have nice home there as it seems. May be you could give a tour on your garden/ Backyard for a change. He he.

  • @rickstahr
    @rickstahr 3 года назад +1

    We made this a family project on this beautiful New England weekend. It worked perfectly and cost less than $50. Thanks for the inspiration!

    • @yuragimla8258
      @yuragimla8258 2 года назад +1

      Hello, what type of material did you choose for that rectangular slabs?

    • @rickstahr
      @rickstahr 2 года назад

      @@yuragimla8258 I'm sorry I don't remember. it's in this video though. I got them from Lowe's / Home depot (same thing as far as I'm concerned) outdoor garden department and they were extremely heavy. But they tolerate the heat very well.

  • @davewhite756
    @davewhite756 3 года назад

    I’m making pizza with my kids tonight. Thanks for the vid and the experience they will tell everyone about

  • @windfire5380
    @windfire5380 2 года назад +4

    Lots of concern here with concrete exploding from heat. Good to know that this is a thing.
    That stated, looking into what temperatures are needed, it appears those temps are in excess of 600-1000 C or 1100-1800 F. Also has to do with how much moisture is in the cement. It appears the biggest concerns are in tunnels where heat can be trapped.

    • @justinw1765
      @justinw1765 2 года назад

      Cracking is more of a concern. Over time, they will definitely crack.

    • @sharonwallraff2226
      @sharonwallraff2226 2 года назад

      Thank you, Wind Fire!

  • @bruh-ib5hz
    @bruh-ib5hz 3 года назад +5

    So I demolished one of my wall and I've gotta say it's totally worth it. It's free and works great
    P/s: if you wanna try I highly recommend the foundation part of the house because it's the hardest working muscle of the house and will give a better flavor

  • @franciscodavidrodriguez1916
    @franciscodavidrodriguez1916 3 года назад

    This is amazing! if you control the fire to low a little the temperature you can cook almost everithing , wow!!

  • @motrodrigo3670
    @motrodrigo3670 Год назад

    Simplicity is wonderful 👏😊

  • @andrewayers6382
    @andrewayers6382 3 года назад +6

    Grant you look like Rodrigo Santoro from Westworld my dude.

  • @YungPluto3
    @YungPluto3 3 года назад +4

    Hey I was wondering where could you find both grey slabs that you used to make the oven in this video? Also what size are the slabs?

    • @dairebaxter1619
      @dairebaxter1619 2 года назад

      About 24 inches by 20 inches

    • @shadowpanther298
      @shadowpanther298 2 года назад

      @@dairebaxter1619 THANK YOU I spent like 30 mins looking for the size

    • @dairebaxter1619
      @dairebaxter1619 2 года назад

      @@shadowpanther298 it was a rough estamate so get a bit bigger to be safe

  • @mitchellcurtis7419
    @mitchellcurtis7419 2 года назад

    Excellent video, thanks I'll definitely be trying this.

  • @labla8940
    @labla8940 3 года назад

    I like this guy he describes it well a simple oven but he presented well