La Fortuna




Mobile Wood-fired Pizza

Catering • Workshops • Festivals 
Toscana Series Ovens

Heavier masonry means these pre-finished ovens will hold heat longer. This means that, in addition to being great for pizza and roasting, they're excellent for baking large batches of bread. Like the Primavera series, they are covered in an exterior stucco finish and have a handsome traditional appearance. Available in 32”, 36”, 40”, and 44” sizes, these ovens are heavy (1400 to 2000 pounds) and will require a heavy-duty stand (which we can provide, or you can have made for you), plus a forklift to set them in place. The Toscana ovens use the same components as the Casa 2G, offering top performance with the convenience of pre-assembled construction.


Bottom line: If you plan to feed large groups and/or bake lots of bread, the Toscana offers the highest performance available in a pre-assembled oven.


Download the spec sheet to see more details and pricing.










Toscano oven pictured outside the Forno Bravo warehouse.  Color pictured is Terra Cotta.


For questions you don't see answered here, or to order, please contact us.

How much oven do you need?


A good question. Here are the factors to consider:

  1. Capacity: bigger ovens hold more food, but take longer to heat and consume more wood.

  2. Mass and insulation: Thicker masonry takes longer to heat up (and uses more wood), but holds its heat longer, meaning more even temperatures and also superior bread-baking performance. Thicker insulation helps retain that heat.

  3. Portability: The pre-assembled ovens allow the option of taking it with you when you move. In the case of the Primavera ovens, which weigh a couple of hundred pounds, this is a very realistic option. The Toscana series are heavier—you'll need a forklift to move it (on both ends of the trip). And the Casa 2G ovens are site-built, so they are basically a permanent feature of the house.


Note that managing an oven full of pizzas is a skill that takes a lot of practice. The La Fortuna team makes thousands of pizzas a year, and we have dedicated dough shapers and pizza toppers. Even so, it is difficult for us to work quickly enough to get more than 6 pizzas in our 43” (110 cm) oven at a time—by the time #6 goes in, #1 is ready to come out. What does this mean for you? Simply that unless you make pizza several times a week, you're unlikely to be able to work quickly enough to fit more than 2-3 pizzas at a time in your oven.


Is it possible to have too much oven?


Sort of. An oven that is “too big” uses more wood and takes longer to heat up. Having an oven that is bigger than you need costs you money in the wood you burn, and also is less convenient because of the extra waiting time for heating up. Having said that, if you are not confident choosing between 2 sizes, in most cases, it's probably a good idea to go with the larger. Yes, you will use some extra wood, but even prime firewood is not that expensive, unless you are firing the oven several times per week.