curiousb wrote: » A Room Outside in Limerick stock the pellets, and they will post to you. I got mine from their Dublin shop. I got a Uuni 3 second hand recently and have only used it once. Big difference to my old clay pizza oven, which took up to 2 hours to get to temperature, but would hold it really easy from then on. The Uuni heated up in about 20 minutes, but was harder to hold at temperature, due to using small amounts of pellets rather than big logs of hardwood. if its too hot, the pizza will burn before it's ready, and its too cold the stone gets soot/char on it which flavours the base badly. I would definitely recommend an infra red thermometer to keep checking the temp of the stone.
Johnnyhpipe wrote: » What size bags do they sell in a room outside?
seano2201 wrote: » I'm just about to buy an uuni 3 pizza oven and I'm wondering has anyone discovered where in Ireland it's possible to get food grade wood pellets. Shipping from UK is prohibitive. Thanks
okedoke wrote: » It seems that the pellet standard ENP Plus A1 is foodsafe so i can get them in Woodies. I'd be very interested in hearing anyone elses experiences with the uuni though
RonnieL wrote: » Just pulled the trigger on an Unni 3 as well. Did you go ahead with the ENP Plus A1 pellets? How did you get on? Ordering something like pellets online seems mad since the delivery is bound to be more than they are actually worth, so I'm hoping to source pellets locally, and as you mentioned woodies seem to have pellets that meet that standard.
curiousb wrote: » I'd recommend going for the gas attachment, makes life a lot easier! You can swap them back and forth so you can still use pellets if you like. Definitely no difference on flavour from gas or wood as the pizza cooks so quickly.
RonnieL wrote: » Haven't received the oven yet, but I am planning to get the gas converter, especially for times when I want to cook a good few pizzas. I bought it from https://gobbqco.com/ and they don't have the gas converter so I'll have to source that elsewhere. Looking forward to giving it a go with the pellets at the weekend anyway.
curiousb wrote: » That soot is usually because the stone hasn't got hot enough. When it does it should burn off. The problem with the pellets is it is easy for the temperature to drop again and get the soot back.
RonnieL wrote: » Thanks for the reply. That's grand - I didn't let it burn for that long, and I only noticed the soot after I had let the fire die down, so maybe the stone had been clear previously.
okedoke wrote: » Just ordered the gas connection from uuni direct £57 all in incl postage
Sorry, self-promotion is not allowed on boards. Especially posting in zombie threads.
The Gloomster!