Ooni. The brand that brought the pizzeria pizza oven to the backyard.
Ooni is a Scottish pizza oven brand, founded in Edinburgh in 2012. The product range consists of compact outdoor pizza ovens for home use — gas, wood, pellet, or electric powered — as well as matching accessories from peels to spiral mixers. Not a masonry oven manufacturer, not a grill all-rounder, not an industrial kitchen outfitter.
Ooni is the brand that invented a type of pizza oven that didn't exist before: an oven for your own backyard that delivers the same heat as an Italian pizzeria, but is small enough that it doesn't need to be built in. Anyone who lights an Ooni oven for the first time and watches the flame bring the stone surface to 450 degrees in twenty minutes understands why a whole generation of amateur pizza makers has fallen in love with the compact form of this oven. Not because it simplifies pizza making — it only does so to a limited extent — but because it reaches the temperatures that make a true Neapolitan pizza possible in the first place.
From Edinburgh — how a problem became a brand
Ooni's founding story reads like that of many young brands: It began with frustration. Kristian Tapaninaho, a Finn in Scotland, wanted to bake the pizzas at home that he knew from Italian restaurants. The pizza stone in his household oven didn't even come close to delivering the desired result — the temperature remained too low, the bottom heat too weak, and the dough turned dry instead of crispy. In hardware stores, he found only two categories: massive brick ovens costing four-figure sums or garden grills that never got above 300 degrees. In between: nothing. So he built his own prototype. His first model — still under the name "Uuni" — went online via Kickstarter in 2012. The campaign exceeded all expectations, and the prototype became a company. In 2018, Kristian Tapaninaho, along with his wife Darina Garland, renamed the company "Ooni" — easier to pronounce for English-speaking customers, with the same idea behind it.
Today, Ooni is based in Broxburn near Edinburgh. The product range has grown, but the basic idea has remained: compact, affordable ovens that enable authentic Neapolitan pizza — on the balcony, in the garden, camping, anywhere you have a solid surface and a gas cylinder or a handful of wood pellets.
The Oven Principle. Why an Ooni gets hot differently
A classic household oven reaches 250, maybe 275 degrees. An Ooni reaches 450 to 500 degrees — and not just anywhere in the chamber, but exactly where the pizza lies: on a cordierite stone that is heated directly under an open flame. This heat cooks a Neapolitan pizza in 60 to 90 seconds. The dough rises, the crust becomes bubbly and crispy, and the cheese melts before the tomato sauce dries out. Anyone who has tasted the difference between a pizza from a household oven and one from an Ooni understands why temperature is the key factor in pizza making — and why all other ingredients (flour, yeast, water, tomato, mozzarella) only reach their full potential with the right heat.
The trick with Ooni is the design: a narrow combustion chamber, a stone close to the flame, insulation that keeps the heat in without deforming the outer casing. The ovens are made of powder-coated steel, weigh between 10 and 30 kilograms, and can be carried by one adult. No concrete work, no bricklaying, no foundation — set up the oven, connect the gas cylinder or fill with pellets, ignite, wait 20 minutes, bake.
The Product Families. An overview
The product range is divided into five series, each with its own fuel logic and target group.
Koda — the Gas Line. Koda ovens are propane-powered, ignite at the push of a button, and are ready for use without tools. For anyone who wants to heat the oven quickly without having to organize wood or pellets. Current models range from the compact Koda 12 for individual pizzas to the Koda 2 Max with a 24-inch baking surface for large family pizzas. The mid-range Koda 16 is the best-selling model: 16-inch baking surface, L-shaped burner that distributes heat evenly over the entire stone surface. The Koda 2 Pro, the current flagship of the medium size, has two separately controllable burner zones — front and back can be regulated independently, so the dough doesn't burn on one side while the other is still raw.
Karu — the Multi-Fuel Line. Karu ovens are designed for wood and charcoal from the factory, with an optional gas burner accessory available for retrofitting. For those who want the typical wood-fired flavor but want to keep the option open to quickly bake with gas if the wood isn't prepared. The Karu 12G is the entry-level model, the Karu 2 Pro is the current big brother with a 16-inch baking surface and an extended combustion chamber. In practice, multi-fuel means: one oven, three fuels, the smoky taste if you want it, the cleanliness of gas if the neighbor complains.
Fyra — the Pellet Line. The Fyra 12 is a wood pellet oven, compact, designed for 12-inch pizzas, the classic for anyone who wants the smoky taste without the logistical effort of wood logs. Pellets are loaded from the top, feed automatically, and the oven maintains a stable temperature over long baking phases. For families who bake 15 or 20 pizzas in one evening, the Fyra is the logical oven — little reloading, constant heat, a smoky note in the dough.
Volt — the Electric Line. The Volt ovens (Volt 12, Volt 2) are the only Ooni ovens that can also be operated indoors. They run on a standard 230-volt socket and reach just under 450 degrees — not quite as hot as the gas and wood ovens, but significantly hotter than any household oven. For kitchens without garden access, for apartments in high-rises, for winter months when the garden is not usable. The Volt 2 was included in Oprah's Favorite Things list in 2025.
Halo Pro — the Spiral Dough Mixer. Not an oven, but the logical counterpart: Anyone who takes their Ooni oven seriously will eventually reach the point where manual dough kneading is no longer sufficient. The Halo Pro is the matching dough mixer, designed for highly hydrated pizza doughs up to 5 kilograms. Spiral hook, patented removable dough breaker, 7.3-liter stainless steel bowl, 58 speed settings. Available in two color variants — Polar White for light kitchens, Charcoal Grey for dark ones.
The Accessories — what goes with the oven
An Ooni oven alone doesn't make pizza. The accessory range includes everything that happens between the dough bowl and the dining table: pizza peels in various lengths and shapes (for sliding in, turning, removing), replacement stones, custom-fit covers for each oven model, folding tables and modular tables as bases, dough tools for bowls and worktops, heat-resistant gloves, and prep stations for preparation. Each accessory is tailored to the specific situations that arise when making pizza at home — not generic goods from the grill aisle, but specifically developed for pizza ovens.
For example: The covers are custom-cut for each model. There's a separate cover for the Koda 2 Max, another for the Koda 16, and different ones for the Volt series. The reason is not marketing, but fit: a universal cover leaves gaps through which rain can enter, or it stretches at the outlet nozzles of the burner supply line. A model-specific cover fits without overhang. The same principle applies to pizza peels — different lengths for different oven depths, perforated versions for easier release, turning peels with shorter handles for rotating the pizza in the oven.
Which oven suits whom
The decision between fuel variants often depends not on the pizza itself, but on the usage situation. Those who want to bake quickly and don't want the hassle of handling wood buy a Koda. Those who like the typical smoky taste and are willing to keep wood or pellets on hand opt for the Karu or Fyra. Those who don't have a garden or want to bake indoors in winter choose a Volt. Those who travel frequently or move the oven between locations check weight and folding table availability.
The size depends on the number of pizzas: A 12-inch oven bakes pizzas for two to three people in series, a 16-inch oven is sufficient for six to eight guests without long waiting times, and a 24-inch oven (Koda 2 Max) can handle larger birthday parties. Most first-time buyers underestimate the size of their future area of use — once they own the oven, they bake more frequently and with more guests than planned. When in doubt, it's worth going one size up rather than needing to upgrade after a year.
Ooni in the genussland assortment
Ooni is a core part of our assortment for everyone who understands pizza not as a side dish, but as a cooking occasion in itself. The brand fits the idea of this shop: a tool that doesn't pretend to do everything, but does one thing right. An Ooni oven is not an all-round garden grill with a pizza stone function, but an oven designed for exactly one task — and therefore does it better than all all-round devices combined. Anyone who understands this knows why the range has its own section here. The accessories are chosen so that no one has to search two more shops after buying the oven to find the right peel, the right cover, or the folding table.
Those who are new to pizza ovens will find not only the ovens here, but also the basics: the matching peels, stones, and dough tools. Those who already have experience will discover the specialties — the Halo Pro, the modular tables, the model-specific covers.
Ooni is not for everyone who wants to make pizza once in the summer. Ooni is for everyone who understands that pizza at home only works with real heat — and who is willing to put a dedicated oven in the garden for it.