James Gop, the founder of the live-fire event company Heirloom Fire, outgrew his first catering rig as the company's business profile swelled. Heirloom Fire's expansion was a serendipitous boon for Gop's personal outdoor kitchen because, for years, Gop didn't have a grill at home. "Like the saying goes 'The cobbler's own children never have any good shoes,'" says Gop, chuckling.
That first rig was modeled after a conventional catering grill. But Gop goes big with everything: Heirloom Fire uses custom-made equipment that includes a unit with a 15-inch flywheel with gears, and the Berkshires, Massachusetts, company creates a sweeping old-timey vibe for its catering gigs, complete with staff in button-downs, vests, suspenders and an array of derbys and bowler hats. Gop, of course, also went grand and custom with his starter grill. "What I tried to do with this piece is encapsulate everything I have on-site at an Heirloom Fire event," says Gop. "This unit doesn't break down into pieces. So I figured I'd go completely wild with it." Part of the Heirloom Fire brand is chunky angles, so the rig's legs were replaced with square stock, and couplings were added that can be tightened to hold their grip so the unit remains level on uneven ground.
After endless tweaks and modifications, the rig is now eight-feet tall and two-feet-square in length and width. It features an open firebox at waist level and a three-tiered plate system to one side. The three-tiered stack includes a top-tier for hanging roasts and chickens and a plancha for intense-heat cooking. "I love a good charred carrot from the plancha," says Gop. "You get bitterness and sweetness and toffee qualities."
Too much is never quite enough for Gop, so he also had an oven fabricated that lives under the grill rig. It is built from a bent piece of "steel—"picture a 50-gallon drum barrel shape," says Gop. The fire is built in the back of the oven, and he uses it most often to bake sourdough bread made from a starter culture from the 1800s. A counterweight door was installed to open the oven using a brick and a pulley, rather than maneuver the substantial door by hand.