Very impressive set up in Bilmo's post. Thanks for sharing.
Ref the Zebra pot video, I've used a dustbin at Scout camp to create a bigger version that worked well - but it did need a lot of wood to get it going. Now that I've seen the excellent rocks in the bottom idea, I'll be adapting my version with them. The wire frame on the top is another good idea - not sure how I'll scale that up, but I like a challenge.
Somewhere I watched someone (possibly Mr Mears) make a small loaf in a steel Crusader mug (mk1 type, not the bigger alu one). I've been quite successful with that technique. Obviously you need a metal lid. I've always wrapped my basic dough - flour, water, salt, oil - in baking parchment. The parchment helps to keep the mug clean and it makes the loaf easier to remove. If you're baking alone, there's plenty in one batch. A steel Tatonka kettle (1.5l, I think) produces a 4 person loaf, but I've had more issues with underdone insides as the loaf gets bigger.
Keep up the posts - this is yet another brilliant source of shared ideas. Thanks to all involved.
All the best.
Ref the Zebra pot video, I've used a dustbin at Scout camp to create a bigger version that worked well - but it did need a lot of wood to get it going. Now that I've seen the excellent rocks in the bottom idea, I'll be adapting my version with them. The wire frame on the top is another good idea - not sure how I'll scale that up, but I like a challenge.
Somewhere I watched someone (possibly Mr Mears) make a small loaf in a steel Crusader mug (mk1 type, not the bigger alu one). I've been quite successful with that technique. Obviously you need a metal lid. I've always wrapped my basic dough - flour, water, salt, oil - in baking parchment. The parchment helps to keep the mug clean and it makes the loaf easier to remove. If you're baking alone, there's plenty in one batch. A steel Tatonka kettle (1.5l, I think) produces a 4 person loaf, but I've had more issues with underdone insides as the loaf gets bigger.
Keep up the posts - this is yet another brilliant source of shared ideas. Thanks to all involved.
All the best.
Last edited: