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1. The group should be of 4 people. One person in charge of kneading, two people for rolling, and one by the oven. (A larger group will be too crowded, and everyone will just get in the way of one another.)

2. The dough should be exactly the size of 3 matzos. Person #1 takes care of the flour, water, kneading and all that.

3. As soon as the dough is ready, persons #2 and #3 are handed their pieces of dough. #2 will work on it the fastest, making it oven-ready, while #3 and #1 work on theirs a little slower.

4. After rolling, #2 makes the holes in his matzah, and #4 will take it to the oven.

5. When #2 has his hands empty, #1 hands him the third piece of dough to roll out, make holes, and send off.

6. #1, now free, returns to knead the next three-matzah batch. (Starting again from step 2.)

7. By the time #2’s matzah is baked, #3’s should be ready for the oven. (Meanwhile, #2 is working on the third matzah of the first batch.)

8. When #3’s matzah comes out, #2’s second one goes in. By this time, the dough from batch 2 should be ready, and they start again from step 3. (By this round it would make sense to have #2 and #3 switch roles, because #3 is now empty-handed, while #2 is still working on the third matzah of the first batch.)

Some pointers:
A: A Chai-minute shift holds about three rounds of steps 2-8, and takes approximately fifteen minutes. At this point everyone/everything washes up and the fifteen-minute shift starts over.

B: Every fifteen minute shift yields 9 matzos. (Depending on thickness of the matzah, this will usually be about 1 – 1 1/4 lbs. of matzah.)

C: Oven time is about 50 seconds, though there are many variables that strongly influence the speed of baking (including the humidity in the air!).

D: Take it easy! Don’t rush, as there is no point. Your matzos are limited to the capacity of the oven.

While technically, this is not really meant to be a time saver compared to the regular sized chaburahs in matzah bakeries, there is a certain serenity that you won’t find anywhere else. In addition, you can implement any chumras and minhagim as you wish, something that in a regular chabura or commercial bakery you’d have no authority over.

I hope it makes sense, and doesn’t come across as written too nerdy, but this is the “short” version of it… 😉

There’s a ton of fascinating science to the overall mtazha-baking process, including the type of fuel used (gas vs. wood vs. charcoal), weather conditions, origin of the wheat of which the flour is made, and even the length of the chimney! (But I have to leave something for the long version… 😀 )

Disclaimer: I haven’t tried it myself yet, I only got the details from a friend who’s been doing in an Ooni for a couple years now. I can get back with first-hand tips and/or changes once I actually try it. I do, however, run a regular chaburah for the past 15 years, so I am intimately familiar with the nuances of the general process.
« Last edited by Abebee on March 10, 2023, 10:53:08 AM »

Author Topic: Baking Matzah In An Ooni  (Read 8831 times)

Online moko

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Re: Baking Matzah In An Ooni
« Reply #40 on: February 29, 2024, 10:16:56 AM »
Probably with a flat pizza peel style tool
there's enough clearance to roll in one matza at a time
Probably with a flat pizza peel style tool
not a good idea. Kefula by a pizza isn't a big deal.

Offline Yo ssi

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Re: Baking Matzah In An Ooni
« Reply #41 on: February 29, 2024, 10:59:04 AM »
not a good idea. Kefula by a pizza isn't a big deal.
I've seen people do it. (Not with an ooni)

The zetzers job is one of the hardest and requires real talent. I've been to the bakery when a replacement was there and it's a disaster.
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Offline yungermanchik

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Re: Baking Matzah In An Ooni
« Reply #42 on: February 29, 2024, 02:19:06 PM »
Did you have success buying shmura flour and water from Matza bakery? which?

I wanna do it this year, for erev pesach matzas
My friend told me he gets it every year from Boro Park Matzah Bakery and that even though the price for Matzah keeps going up,
 the flour is still $3/lb + free water
Small people talk about other people.
Average people talk about things
BIG PEOPLE TALK ABOUT IDEAS.

Offline Ver hut gazugt

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Re: Baking Matzah In An Ooni
« Reply #43 on: February 29, 2024, 02:33:07 PM »
My friend told me he gets it every year from Boro Park Matzah Bakery and that even though the price for Matzah keeps going up,
 the flour is still $3/lb + free water
lol, these days that is almost the same cost as regular flour.

Offline yfr bachur

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Re: Baking Matzah In An Ooni
« Reply #44 on: February 29, 2024, 02:59:15 PM »
My friend told me he gets it every year from Boro Park Matzah Bakery and that even though the price for Matzah keeps going up,
 the flour is still $3/lb + free water

Actually, makes sense.
Cost of labour and living have gone up exponentialy in the US, NY especially.

I was actualy happly shocked when I found out this years prices in my chabura
minor rise in price of ten shekel a kilo (about 4%) to 240 shekel.

Offline justaregularguy

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Re: Baking Matzah In An Ooni
« Reply #45 on: February 29, 2024, 08:38:53 PM »
When will the trend begin to bake your own matzos
I feel like this is pending a breakthrough in the Jewish community
nothings impossible- the word itself says Im possible

Offline Bored Bachur

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Re: Baking Matzah In An Ooni
« Reply #46 on: February 29, 2024, 10:43:53 PM »
When will the trend begin to bake your own matzos
I feel like this is pending a breakthrough in the Jewish community
I personally wouldn't be comfortable baking my own matzos in an ooni (or for that matter at all), for fear of something going wrong, and inadvertently making chametz.
However that's a personal thing, and I think it's a very cool idea for those willing to actually put in the effort to bake matzos, (and to do it properly.)

Online Euclid

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Re: Baking Matzah In An Ooni
« Reply #47 on: February 29, 2024, 11:04:23 PM »
When will the trend begin to bake your own matzos
I feel like this is pending a breakthrough in the Jewish community
Why not machine matzah then?

Offline imayid2

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Re: Baking Matzah In An Ooni
« Reply #48 on: March 01, 2024, 01:19:24 AM »
Why not machine matzah then?
Tastes like machine matza

Offline EliJelly

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Re: Baking Matzah In An Ooni
« Reply #49 on: March 01, 2024, 01:25:02 AM »
I personally wouldn't be comfortable baking my own matzos in an ooni (or for that matter at all), for fear of something going wrong, and inadvertently making chametz.

+1, I'd rather leave it to the professionals.

Offline justaregularguy

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Re: Baking Matzah In An Ooni
« Reply #50 on: March 02, 2024, 08:35:17 PM »
I personally wouldn't be comfortable baking my own matzos in an ooni (or for that matter at all), for fear of something going wrong, and inadvertently making chametz.
However that's a personal thing, and I think it's a very cool idea for those willing to actually put in the effort to bake matzos, (and to do it properly.)
+1, I'd rather leave it to the professionals.
100% I agree it’s a nerve racking situation. But eventually there will be break offs of reputable matzah bakers so the price gets lower. And then eventually we somehow become more learned/confident in doing it.
True the ooni option is the not way it will become main stream as that’s too small, but it could happen if a convenient way comes up
nothings impossible- the word itself says Im possible