I got one - works great. Same results as a brick oven, with a few limitations as well as some advantages. Only done one cook, but learned some lessons which will make later ones better.
aris wrote:I got one - works great. Same results as a brick oven, with a few limitations as well as some advantages. Only done one cook, but learned some lessons which will make later ones better.
Nice! Been waiting for someone on these forums to give it a thumbs up....I'm definitely getting one of these bad boys! How expensive would you say it is to run in terms of pellets?
I have not costed it and only done one cook, but I estimate you need at least 4 or 5 scoops to start it - then about 1 (maybe two) scoop of pellets per pizza. It cooks pizza real fast - like 60-120 seconds depending. You need to give it another 60 seconds between pizzas to heat the floor again - then you're good to go for the next one. So the advantage is you can get going in 10 minutes (unlike a wood oven which can take an hour or more). Unlike a wood oven, there is no residual heat - when the hopper runs out of pellets (this can happen quicker than you think) - it drops in temperature very quickly. This is not a bad thing - it cools down and you can store it away quickly.
The only other advice i'd give is to get coarse corn meal (pollenta) to help slide the pizza off the peel. The pellets from UUNI are food grade oak. They are decently priced too - I should have bought a few more bags.
Very smart looking and insulated, etc. Obviously a bit prettier than the uuni but worth the extra dosh? To be honest though the weber pizza thing is only 140... is the uuni worth the extra?
What do you gain? A separate unit and being able to use pellets I guess?
My Uuni was delivered this week. It's the series 2, which now includes some improvements such as better flame control, but more importantly a stone base. Because I pre-ordered in January I completely forgot to order pellets, but UUni pulled out all the stops and got some out yesterday and should be arriving today for a weekend cook.
If anyone has any tips on where to buy cheaper premium pellets, I would like to know. I know wood pellets are used in heating systems, but I suspect the fuel for that isn't suitable for cooking?