posted 2 hours ago
If you bake in firebox nothing will taste like a smoke, because the smoke would be long gone at this moment. If you were using white oven during the burn, then it would not matter either, since the white oven is sealed. To incorporate three features: cooking, heating with mass and baking is challenging.
You could use one of the Walker stove designs.
You could also build Podgornikov style firebox which is excellent for cooking (with fire and also radiating coals). If tall enough it can be considered to be an L-tube. The exhaust is heating the top plates and can heat the bell. Firebox of 230x230 mm (9x9"), 3 bricks tall and 2 bricks down to the grill would be a power equivalent of a 4.8" batch box. You would want a larger firebox to heat your large pots efficiently. The top plates should have openings, because a pot on direct fire cooks faster. The stove would have incorporated heating wall (taller part of the bell) - popular in the kitchen stoves in central Europe of the past, frequently located on the kitchen/bathroom wall.
Baking in such firebox is more difficult, because it's open at the top but I tried it and it worked to some extent, but would not work for bread,.
Basically to bake well you need a masonry ceiling in the oven that will radiate the heat to the top of baked dish. For cooking it's the opposite - the roof is obstruction to heat radiating from the coals that allow wonderful simmering after the fire is gone. Coals radiation makes perfect paellas, soups, stews - dishes that do not want continuous high intensity fire.
If the firebox had sufficient power, the hot gases could be directed to heat a black oven built from bricks. All of it can be designed, but not necessarily easy to build.