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"...and where is there among you the one who here, on this very earth, tastes in its wholeness the sanctity with which the sky that we breathe in, pervades at each instant your bread and wine. " - O.V.de L. Milosz
Baking is not a transitory profession. People tend to take baking as a lifestyle, and nobody more so than brick oven bakers. There is a small, but growing number of brick oven bakeries around the country, many of them centered in the San Francisco Bay area. A surprising number of the best ovens were built by acknowledged brick-oven master Alan Scott who uses simple and efficient designs and local materials to create ovens that can feed entire communities. Because the brick ovens tend to be fairly small compared to commercial gas-fired ovens, and require such attention to detail, they are not suitable for large-scale bakeries but are ideal for a small, community-scale, sustainable business. Most brick oven bakers are also catering to a local community. WildFlour bakery, for instance, in tiny Freestone, sells all of its 900 daily loaves from its hybrid bakery-coffeeshop and community center. The texture and flavor of these breads are entirely different from any loaf baked in a conventional oven.? Wood plays an important role. Because of the proximity of almond orchards, most California brick oven bakers use almond wood in their ovens. The wood burns clean and at high temperature and is readily available for bakers to buy due to the fact that almond trees are regularly cut down and replanted every couple of decades after they become less productive. Brick ovens cook with a radiant heat. The bricks are super-heated when the oven is fired (literally, a large fire is lit inside the oven itself) in the morning and then, slowly, the bricks radiate heat back out over the course of the day. Once the coals are raked aside, the loaves, which were individually hand-shaped the previous day, are placed in the oven to bake. Depending on the size of the oven, the shape of the bread, and the number of loaves baked per load, each load of loaves can produce unique results.. But if you?re not looking for consistency, the 2,000 year old process needs no improvement. "Whether you build a wood-fired oven for family use or to supply the community,? says Scott, the process of building the structure, and then using it to bake bread counts as one of the best experiences of community life."
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