When I was first looking to invest in a personal pizza oven, I thought I’d likely wind up with something clunky — an apparatus that would mostly live in the storage unit, to be pulled out every so often for occasional use.
After testing the Stoke Pizza Oven — which promises all the features of a proper wood-fired pizza oven in a more portable package — for a few weeks, it turns out that the sleek, compact pizza oven is indeed a great addition to weekends in the country as I’d originally suspected it would be — but it’s been even more fun using it around town, both in parks and in friends’ backyards. And that’s the case both for myself — a first-time wood-fired pizza oven user — and my husband co-tester, who just so happens to be a former pizza maker.

Stoke Pizza Oven – Wood Powered
Getting Started with the Stoke Pizza Oven
Know your fuel options
The Stoke comes in wood-or gas-fueled models. I opted for wood-fired, because I think it makes a better-tasting pie and I also didn’t want to deal with the logistics of gas.
While Stoke’s tutorial on unboxing the wood-fired model demonstrates how to use the oven with wood pellets and a firestarter, the video also suggests you can use small pieces of wood or a mix of wood and charcoal, for lower-and-slower cooking. So far, I’ve only used small wood pieces and no synthetic fire starters, but the flexibility is nice — I plan to experiment with the wood and charcoal combo soon.