After watching our brick oven pizza video, John in Arizona sent us these photos of his DIY brick oven. Much like our brick oven design, it uses brick and angle iron. I forgot to ask John where he got his angle iron from. I like that the brick oven fits nicely right next to his propane grill, right off the patio, all set for cooking.
"My wife and I love your show. We put this together and wanted you and your wife to see it"
Cool! This is the second set of pictures I've got from a viewer. A big thank you to John for sending these. love it. See the link at the bottom of this post for links to other pizza and bread oven photos.
John tried out his oven with a pizza stone, and I've talked with a few people who have tried this method, its much better to just slide the pizza right onto the hot bricks. The bricks are about 700F, so its pretty sterile. And bricks are made out of clay, which is what pottery is made out of, so i'm thinking its pretty safe to do.
More Pizza Oven Plan Photos Here
Love that roaring fire in the photo there, and the pizzas have a smokey hint to them when using wood. Do you have a backyard oven? send us photos or a link to your site, thanks!
meemsnyc
Wow, what a simple and cool idea. These are just regular old bricks you buy at the hardware store?
Kyle Meyer
I don't know if anyone responded to your question meemsnyc but they need to be clay bricks. I can't find them at my big box store but you may be able to find some on sharing websites..
Lee
I don't like the fact that the bricks are just balanced on edge on each other, if someone bumps it hot bricks and fire could be everywhere. Please look into making something more substantial using mortar, for your safety and those around you, too!
J Kim
Whats the Silver rod thing with holes supporting the bricks?
Eric Gunnar Rochow
@J Kim, that's piece of angle iron holding up the brick roof. if you watch our How To Build a Pizza Oven video, you'll see how it is assembled : https://gardenfork.tv/brick-pizza-oven-video-and-plans-gf-tv thx, eric.
Crystal D.
This is great! We have been really wanting one of these and I was pretty sure there must be an easier way. Thank you for all the tips. I can't wait to try it!
Alec Popivker
What did you use under the clay bricks for support? Did you insulate below? Thanks!
chris
I want to try this..does it have to be made of ALL clay brick or can I just use clay brick for the lower section where the pizza sits on while baking? All I'm finding is cement bricks.
Eric Gunnar Rochow
you need clay brick for this to work, cement brick will fall apart. thx! eric.
Eric Gunnar Rochow
i used two pieced of tile cement board, aka Durock, below the bricks. thx! eric.
Rob Baker
Why not Firebrick? Have you ever thought about covering it with a ceramic heat blanket (I have some left over from lining my maple syrup evaporator that I might try to help make it more efficient in holding the heat in)... also, do you cover it to keep it from the elements when not in use?
Michael melone
There is a guy in Chicago on Craigslist giving away 100s of bricks from his bungalo home built in the 1950s . . . not sure if they are clay, but they all have 3 holes in them . . . will the holes create a problem (as long as you make sure they are not open when you stack?
Eric Gunnar Rochow
i'm not the masonry expert, but if you had all the bricks face down when building an oven, i do not think its a huge red flag, thx, eric
John
Responding to the issue that Lee raised. This design is obviously a temporary structure.
But, if you would like to avoid the problem of say someone bumping into it, you could loosely
wrap the oven with metal strapping maybe at 2 or 3 locations. Then lay the oven roof down
on top & if it gets nudged it would at least be bundled together.
The straps would only be visible from the sides.
Just a thought...
matt
I am in process of getting brick for one of these. I do have a question, by the way yous is fantastic, anyway, how much heat escapes out the front? Is there a way to make a smaller openimg so you can save on fuel?
Thanks
Eric Gunnar Rochow
I've seen a few photos of ovens like this where the opening has been closed down a bit, but i don't find it an issue. thx! eric.
Jean Weber
I can't tell you how much fun we have had since finding your video. Thank you so much. I would love to post a picture but have no idea how to do it. We used fire brick for the floor of the oven and Craigslist clay bricks called "mission style" that the fellow said were from Home Depot. Then we topped it with a metal roof from a cupola also from CL.
D
Could a chimney be added @ back of oven?