Oct-22-2017 06:37 AM
Jun-06-2018 10:05 PM
rhagfo wrote:charming wrote:
Sorry to bring up an old topic, but I used the oven some on our last trip and it is really horrible.
I have a round grill pan similar to the one above, would the coating be a problem placing it directly on the heat?
Would likely work, but our unglazed round pizza stone works great. Sit right on top of the existing metal defuser, yes crackedright down the center first use, but pushed together and works great for defusing Heat.
Jun-06-2018 10:01 PM
VoodooMedicineMan wrote:
I put it on the rack that I'm cooking the pizza on. Putting the pizza on the stone.
Jun-06-2018 05:38 PM
Little Kopit wrote:
cast iron circular griddle. 10" or more
😛
Jun-06-2018 04:32 PM
Jun-04-2018 05:15 PM
Jun-04-2018 03:25 PM
Jun-03-2018 06:36 AM
charming wrote:
Sorry to bring up an old topic, but I used the oven some on our last trip and it is really horrible.
I have a round grill pan similar to the one above, would the coating be a problem placing it directly on the heat?
Jun-03-2018 06:14 AM
Oct-23-2017 04:11 PM
rhagfo wrote:donn0128 wrote:
Mine is sitting on the steel difusser plate right above the burner. Some people also place them on the bottom rack. Your choice as the idea is mass.
X2
Mass/defuser for the heat from the burner, we like Papa Murphy pizza and we would burn the center of the pizza, and bottom of cookies before the tops were cooked, since the stone oven works 100% better!
Oct-22-2017 10:49 AM
missouri dave wrote:
D.E. I thought of doing the same thing with a cast iron griddle.
Oct-22-2017 09:46 AM
Oct-22-2017 09:00 AM
Oct-22-2017 08:38 AM
Oct-22-2017 08:20 AM
D.E.Bishop wrote:
We had absolute success in using a stone on the diffuser plate on the bottom of the oven. Unfortunately the stone broke and I haven't replaced since we bought the Winnie.
In as much as the principle is to disperse the heat evenly and in better quality that is done by using thicker metal in the oven floor and most cookware uses thicker metal of different types, wouldn't a 1/4" sheet of aluminum work as well as a pizza stone?
I actually have a stovetop griddle that fits in the oven perfectly and seems to resist warping on the uneven stovetop burners or open fire in the fire ring so why not use that. I just thought of this yesterday after the DW was baking some brownies and she was worried about burning them without her stone. She did by the way, a beautiful job of making the brownies, not dry and not gooey, just perfectly chewy.
I know stones are expensive and a unglazed terra cotta tile will work great but we already have the grill and it is virtually indestructible so why not us that.