Outback Pizza Ovens – Australia’s Trusted And Favorite Wood Fired Pizza Oven Supplier

There is nothing as exciting and refreshing as making your own Pizzas in Australia in lush green and spacious living space – The Backyard! When it comes to fairly different for your backyard outdoor kitchen and barbecue centers, another novel product that an expert landscaper can recommend you is a wood fired pizza oven.

Let me tell you why, Pizzas baked in wood fired ovens take hardly a minute or two, they are economical, saves money, fun, moreover no need to re-lit as the heat retained in it will be suitable to cook food for long period of time. In short they are just perfect for partying at home when you want to give your best shot at food. And while you are at it, trust me there is not anything like the smell of pizza being cooked in a fire wood oven. It wont be like those traditional pizzas you get from market or spend hours cooking indoor. These outdoor oven pizzas have been shaped to act as the pizza equivalent of a BBQ grill.

However there are still ways for you to build something as splendid as the pizza oven, how about saving your energy and get what you want off the rack just like that? We at Outback Pizza Ovens have carved such convection ovens which are according to the latest trends and techniques in outdoor home entertainment. For good reason; these attractive pizza ovens can cook anything and adds a totally new experience to cooking out of doors. Folks all over the suburb who enjoy cooking and entertaining outdoors are adding our sleek and sturdy beauties to their patios and back yards. Enjoying their most from cozy family dinners to large parties all centered around these latest trends in oven wood cooking.

Outdoor cooking using wood fire ovens have breathed a new life into the art of cooking. We at Outback Pizza Ovens give you just the type of Wood ovens you have in mind. You can select from a wide variety of styles, designs and conveniences we have integrated in these ovens for you.

Starting with our Little Italy, this lady bird shaped pizza oven has a refractory dome structure with a fire brick floor design. Looks great on a balcony or pool BBQ area and the pizzas produced from it gives you the most delicious taste you might not have had anywhere else. Surprisingly, this wood fire brick oven can produce food for a big crowd Can bake up to three loaded wood fire pizzas at one time. From appetizers to desserts, you can cook an entire meal in this attractive and special appliance. No need for DIY techniques as we have taken care of it already. Australia wide delivery!

Our second product Smoke and Fire is our top-of-the-line pizza cooker and it amazes and thrills folks with it’s cooking and smoking abilities. This oven and smoker is ideal for the serious home entertainer or the caterer who wants to offer something different and exciting to his or her guests. When you have this fully featured and special appliance at your disposal, you are sure to delight and excite your guests or customers. This is one special unit, as it features not only a pizza oven, but also a smoker. In this metal steel oven, you can create unique and delicious dishes, which can range from appetizers to main dishes and even desserts or bakery items. No DIY needed. This comes all ready to use. We show you pizza oven Brisbane-style cooking that you wont get anywhere else.

We like that this is a multi-purpose pizza cooker. If you like smoked meats, you can get it from this great wood-fired pizza oven and smoker. If you dream of wood-fired pizzas for Saturday night dinner, this will deliver. Imagine smoked peaches with homemade vanilla ice cream for dessert. We are sure that the Smoke & Fire cooker will delight and amaze you with its versatility and quality cooking abilities.

Then comes our third model named Workhorse because its designed to handle whatever you bring it. Its our largest and deepest oven, so it can cook a wide variety of foods. You might start with wood-fired bruschetta, then present a main dish of roasted chicken wrapped in pancetta and roasted mushrooms. Finish with wood-fired homemade biscotti. You will enjoy amazing meals like this year-round when you have this in your backyard. Besides the huge capacity and versatility of this pizza cooker, we like that this oven is all stainless steel constructed. This makes it durable, attractive and makes you feel like a professional cook. We are sure you will also get professional results from this amazing wood-fired pizza oven. This oven too comes assembled. So you can just get on to cooking as soon as you receive it

Our most Special Black Beauty has a classic and streamlined look that will work well in a variety of backyards and outdoor cook spaces. Like all our wood ovens, its ideal for roasting, cooking pizzas, or a variety of other wood-fired foods. Your friends and family will gather around with plates held high as they wait for food to come off this beautiful stove.

Cooking in a wood-fired oven is similar to cooking in a regular oven. Here, however, you use wood to fire your oven and you can heat the oven to up to 500C. These wood ovens also stay hot for a long time, proof that these oven pizzas are not only heat-tight but constructed with only the high quality craftsmanship that we are proud of.

Best of all, this oven (like all our wood-fire pizza ovens at Outback Pizza Ovens) comes to you assembled. Not everyone enjoys the DIY aspect of putting their wood-fired pizza oven together themselves, so we take care of that for you. You wont have to wait a minute to fire this oven up. Cook Perth pizzas and other goodies and enjoy the fruits of your labor.

Our 2012 line of modern and traditional wood fired pizza ovens have been engineered for the ultimate cooking experience for amazing flavour. They are also designed to last a lifetime. Our pizza ovens heat up faster, hold heat for a longer period of time, more durable than ever before and are delivered anywhere within Australia.

In addition to that you can get Top Pizza Oven Recipes from our Website. Enjoy the ambiance of Oven Pizzas and turn eating into a real event. Relax and have a quiet drink after the guests leave for their home. What could be more peaceful than staring into those dying cinders as the stars dance above your head?

Epimedium with short flower spikes and large spider-type flowers

This article in the Epimedium series catalogs Epimedium species by their plant form and flower types in order to help you select the best plants for your site. There are too many Epimediums to list in a single article so check out the others in the series to see other categories such as white Epimediums or large Epimediums. The next group are evergreen epimediums that have large flowers in pink to white, but are borne on short flower stalks. Epimedium brachyrrhizum, first described from China in 1997 is similar to another species, Epimedium leptorrhizum (Zone 5-8) that has been known since 1938. Both have spreading rhizomes with Epimedium brachyrrhizum possessing a thicker rhizome, spreading considerably slower. For us E. leptorrhizum never exceeds 6″ in height, while E. brachyrrhizum typically reaches 1′ tall. Both evergreen species are topped in early spring with very short flower spikes of 8-12 flowers ranging from pink to lavender, and occasionally white. E. brachyrrhizum (Zone 5-8) is represented in the trade by two hard to find cultivars Epimedium ‘Elfin Magic’, and soon, the white flowered PDN selection Epimedium ‘Little Angels’. The foliage of E. brachyrrhizum turns a nice shade of lavender in the winter. Epimedium ogisui(1993) (Zone 6-9) is a similar spreading evergreen species with near horizontal spikes of large white flowers. The Chinese Epimedium epsteinii (Zone 5b-8), also named in 1997, is a similar evergreen species with short, but spreading rhizomes and short flowers spikes, sporting up to 12 large bicolored inflorescences of purple cups and spurs, backed by a white outer sepal. Plants in this group make superb groundcovers, often with attractive red mottled foliage. Some of the most showy epimediums are those with large flowers on long spikes. The evergreen Epimedium acuminatum (Zone 5-8) from limestone cliffs in the Southern Chinese provinces of Yunnan and Sichuan leads this list along with its hybrid, Epimedium x omeiense (acuminatum x fangii). E. x omeiense is fairly new to cultivation, first flowering in cultivation in 1982 (W. Stearn 2002). In our studies, the primary easily visible difference is that Epimedium acuminatum has smaller, narrower leaves and is shorter in stature, 12″ tall for E. acuminatum, compared to 24″ tall for E. x omeiense. E. acuminatum flowers with 18″ long arching spikes, each adorned with up to 50 large flowers composed of long dark purple spurs, highlighted by pale lavender inner sepals. The flowers are so large, the spikes can become quite heavy, so much that their tips nearly touch the ground. For this reason, I recommend both E. acuminatum and E. x omeiense be planted atop a berm, so the flowers can be better enjoyed. Both E. acuminatum and E. x omeiense are prized for their long-pointed and wonderfully mahogany mottled leaves. Compared to the tight clumping species, this is a reasonably good spreading species. Heronswood’s E. acuminatum ‘Ruby Star’ (white sepals, lavender spurs, and a purple cup), and Darrell Probst’s E. acuminatum ‘Night Mistress’ (pink spurs, purple spurs, and a purple cup) are the two easiest to find clones on the market. Mikinori Ogisu=s wild collected clone of E. x omeiense released as Epimedium ‘Stormcloud’, Dan Hinkley’s ‘Myriad Years’ (white sepals, light lavender spurs and a purple cup), and the Japanese ‘Akane’ Epimedium are the easiest to find in the market.

Learn All About Creative Handicraft

If you need a gift for a special person, or just need some time to unwind, make a creative handicraft. Crafting is therapeutic when you are feeling stressed, and it also can yield a useful or decorative item. Everyone has some measure of creativity, and with modern kits and patterns, a creative handicraft does not have to end in frustration.

If you have a sewing machine, you can learn to make a creative handicraft that will be a useful and welcome gift. Potholders are a great beginning sewing project that can be made from scrap material or unwanted clothing and a bit of double-fold bias tape. Here are the simple instructions for this creative handicraft.

First cut two 8-inch (21 cm.) squares of fabric to be the front and back of the potholder. Choose coordinating fabrics that match your kitchen for these pieces. To make it easier, you can make an 8-inch square pattern from a piece of cardboard to use as a pattern. Cut more 8-inch squares of any old fabric to stack for the filling. You want the stack of fabric squares to be thick enough to protect you from a hot pot, but thin enough to be flexible and able to be sewn through.

Stack all layers so that the outer layers are facing to the outside and the filler layers are inside. You can put a couple of large straight pins through all layers to keep them together. Now sew right across the middle of the stack. Sew across the middle again, perpendicular to the first stitching. You will have divided the square into 4 squares. Sew across the stack again from corner to corner, and again from the other corner to corner. The layers should be joined and sturdy now.

To bind off the raw edges of your creative handicraft, trim with scissors so that all the layers are again even at the edges. Open out one folded edge of the bias tape. The wider bias tape might seem to be easier to use, but the narrow type makes a neater finished product. Starting at one corner, line up the edges of the tape with the edges of the potholder, and start stitching through all layers along the first fold line, which will be about 1/4 inch from the edge. Stitch neatly and slowly, attaching the opened tape all around the edge until you reach the beginning corner. Cut the bias tape off, leaving 3 inches, (7 cm.) to make into a hanging loop.

Fold the bias tape over the raw edge so that the middle fold lines up with the outside of the potholder and the other fold is hiding the raw edge of the bias tape. Now, for best results, hand sew the binding down, forming a loop on your creative handicraft when you get to the end.

This potholder is just one example of a creative handicraft you can create if you have a sewing machine. When it is finished, you will have a useful item made from all recycled materials. Feel free to give this creative handicraft away or keep it for yourself.

Something Fungal This Way Comes…

The gardening headlines this week have been plastered with the threat of two new diseases that could potentially devastate Europes indigenous tree population.

In southern France, along the famous Canal du Midi, a plan has been in motion since last winter that will see the felling and destruction of 42,000 plane trees in the region. This is due to the arrival of Ceratocystis platani, a disease that, since the 1970s, has been blitzing across Europe, originating in Italy. It is believed the blight, endemic to North America, was brought across the ocean by U.S. soldiers in World War Two. While the Midi, perhaps due to its recently endowed world heritage title, is certainly the most noticeable among the losses, the disease has also become prevalent in Switzerland, Germany and Greece, where it now threatens a vast percentage of the original Plane population.
The Canal, a world renowned tourist attraction, was originally designed as an economic conduit that allowed the merchants of old to bypass the treacherous Atlantic Ocean en route to the Mediterranean Sea. However, in a somewhat ironic twist, the original species of Mississippi Plane that have successfully adapted to this affliction are being imported in great numbers in order to replace one of the Canals main attractions. Unfortunately, while Toulouse can cater to their favoured humid environment, it is unclear whether this species will be viable to supplement the depletion that chillier areas of the continent have suffered.
The threat does not stop in Toulouse however – given the virility of the affliction, tree pathologist Steve Woodward (University of Aberdeen) agrees that it poses a grave threat to the urban based Planes of cities like Paris and London. It is the Plane that so commonly and attractively lines our city streets.
“We are talking about a massive disaster here if it continues to spread,” he says.
The disease is a fungal infection that, once exposed to the roots of the organism, will completely overrun it within 3-5 years and due to the damage this causes to the plants integrity, it is imperative that it be removed, lest it should fall and endanger passers-by in doing so. The disease is characterized by cankerous sores appearing on the inner bark of the tree, as well as an accelerated decline in both the quality and density of the plants foliage. No wound to the outer bark is too great or small to escape it and contact equals instant infection.

In addition to this threat from abroad, a new menace has been identified in rural Devon as a potential watershed moment for the diminishment of our domestic Yews and Lawson Cypresses in the form of Phytophtora lateralis. Identifiable by the patchy colouring of its trunk, a tree will also often exhibit slightly lighter foliage in places followed by out of season autumn colours. The tree will succumb soon after, as this foliage deterioration signals that the tree has become totally infected. While certain soil drenches can be utilized in the earlier stages of the disease, these will likely prove ineffective once it has advanced past the root structure; aside from which, use of these drenches on a mass scale would likely cause further environmental concerns and prove something of a pyrrhic victory.

Due to this increasing encroachment of pests and diseases, a body has been established to specifically target incoming detriments to our native plant life. This group, known as the Tree Health and Plant Biosecurity Action Plan, has been allocated seven million pounds with which, over the next three years, they will attempt to exert a tighter control on the intrusion of foreign fungi and pathogens that threaten the endemic population.
“If we don’t act now, we could end up with a similar situation to the 1970s when more than 30 million trees in the UK died [as a result of] Dutch elm disease.”
-Environment Secretary Caroline Spelman.
The key responsibilities of the plan will include the monitoring of exotic plants allowed to cross British borders, as well as increasing the knowledge and awareness of currently existing domestic threats.

Can Plants Grow Without Soil Hydroponic Gardening Is The Answer!

Hydroponic Gardening is the system in which plants can be made to grow without soil. Using hydroponics to grow plants can be beneficial for many growers since it allows plants to be grown much faster and many times with less problems.

Plants are grown in a solution which consists of water and dissolved nutrients required for the particular plant. There are several hydroponics techniques and systems that are used in producing thriving plants

The different types of hydroponics systems and techniques include the nutrient film technique (or NFT), aeroponics, and the aeration technique.

With the aeroponics technique, plants are secured using rigid pipes, screens, or films. The nutrients are dissolved into the plants’ water supply and the plants’ roots are suspended within the water. The plant then obtains its food nutrients directly from the water or from an air mist which is sprayed directly onto the plant roots.

Hydroponic gardening also requires the use growing media. Different mediums can be used which have to retain the food rich moisture. They must also be able to physically support the plant roots. The following have been the most effective media so far: expanded clay, perlite, styrofoam, sand, rockwool, vermiculite, pea gravel.

Many types plants that can be grown in a hydroponics system. Some plants will grow better in hydroponics system than others, but some of the most popular are lettuce, tomatoes, cucumbers, herbs, watercress, and various other edible plants.

Tree seedlings and flowers can also be grown using hydroponics. Hydroponic greenhouses have been producing millions of plant seedlings every year. These are then transplanted and grown at other locations where they are later planted into soil.

If you are just a beginner at hydroponic gardening, you will no doubt be satisfied with the quality of your crops and the faster rate of growth. Hydroponically grown plants will grow and mature faster and yield an earlier harvest of vegetable crops.

There are many benefits to growing your own plants in a hydroponics system. Hydroponic gardening doesn’t require a fertile farmland or a large water supply growing plants. Vegetable and plants can be grown year round. Hydroponic vegetables and plants in almost any small space, or a basement, or even an apartment balcony.

The hydroponic systems require less space because the plant roots don’t have to spread and search for food and water. The smaller space requirement makes hydroponic gardening perfect for limited space home gardeners.

Hydroponic plants can also be grown in nurseries and greenhouses as well. The benefit of growing these plants without soil in a sterile medium includes not having to remove weeds or dealing with soil-borne pests and diseases. And since all the nutrients necessary for the plant are readily avaliable to it, the plant is noticeably healthier than the plants grown in soil.

The greatest benefit to hydroponic gardening is the ability to automate the hydroponics system with timers and remote monitoring equipment. This reduces the time it takes to maintain the plants and the growing environment. It also allows the grower to leave their system for long periods of time without worrying about watering plants.

Hydroponic growing without the use of soil is not simple, but with time it will become an easy routine. Hydroponics offers the advantage of many techniques that can be beneficial to your plants and produce a richer and healthier plant.