Gregor looking forward to your evaluation on the Roccbox. Hoping that it works for you. The price point makes it a really viable option if it can perform and also hold up in use.
Ron
So it showed up yesterday. I can't say that I know it or that this is more than just first impressions but I don't think I made the wrong choice. In both buying over building and in the one I chose:
Roccbox by Gozney.
Damn.
It is small but very solid. There's a photo on one of the pamphlets that shows a person standing on it. I am not surprised - the build quality is really exceptional. It's dense - it's almost 50lbs but the size is smaller than a standard Weber.
Also, I want to admit that I was wrong. It comes with a gas burner standard and since I wasn't sure how much oak I had left and there was only an hour til dark when the kids and I decided to try it out I just pulled a propane tank off the camper (it has two and I keep both full all the time) and hooked it up. In about 20 minutes it was 700F on the floor.
Gas is very easy. So easy.
The oven itself is smaller - like maybe a 12" pizza is all you can do. I wish it was larger but the size is a decent compromise and larger pies are always harder. Still, even a few more inches would be nice.
That's what she said! Sorry. I'll never grow up.
Since it's smaller my normal peel is too big and the metal one that comes with it is quite nice but they suggest making the pizza on the counter and then transferring it to the oven. I can make a perfectly round pizza but the transfer makes that tricky. Better to make and move on a smaller wooden one so I whipped this up from some 1/4 baltic birch scrap.
In keeping with the Neapolitan tradition I went with a simple sauce of crushed San Marzano tomatoes with just a single clove of garlic and some salt.
The oven has already taught me a lot. This dough is not my normal 70 or 72% hydration dough. The super high heat needs less water so this is 60% hydration. My normal dough is 1/4tsp yeast, 12g salt, 350g H20 and 500g ** Caputo flour but for this pizza in a much, much hotter oven we cut the hydration to 60% so it's 300g of H20.
The process is simple; put yeast and salt in the water and let sit a few minutes. Mix flour in until combined and then let rest for 20-30 minutes. Kneed and let rise covered for 4-6 hours, make into dough balls and let final rise for a few more hours - all at room temp.
Mise En place.
Built in temp probe is very slick and simple.
And pretty accurate. But I'll still use my Fluke. This thing is perhaps the single most used tool in the kitchen after the digital scale.
The kids went crazy for the thing - flames leaping, funky shape and the pizza cooks so fast you can watch the whole process from start to finish with a childs attention span. Pizza's are done in about 90 seconds.
This is, I suppose, my first attempts at true Neapolitan pizza since I've not had acces to anything this hot before.
The speed is a double edged sword - it is blazing hot and cooks in less than two minutes but if you aren't paying attention for even just a few seconds you'll burn the pizza. The back is probably 200F hotter than the front and this seems like a problem but it's just what it is (it mimics a true pizza oven in this way). You deal with by spinning the pizza 2-3 times in the cook just like a real pizza oven. You need the crust to face the vertical flame as it comes up to get the spotting and charring. The top is super hot but more even.
This was roundly lauded as the "best pizza ever" by the kids and they're pretty harsh critics - I've made and they've eaten well over 1000 pizza's since I've started "Pizza Fridays". I feel like my pizza life has been learning to race an underpowered old Miata and suddenly I'm behind the wheel of a new Porsche - or for me a GT40. The power is amazing but can get you in trouble quick.
I'm going to try the wood attachment soon but right now the ease of turning on the gas is making me lazy and the fact that the high setting is Neapolitan and the low setting is NY style really takes the work out of the whole process. I was so wrong.
We got it yesterday evening and we've had pizza for every meal for the past 24 hours.
I can't wait to take this camping. I can't believe I waited so long to get this.
I'm so happy I didn't try to build one.
Gregor