June 11, 2018, 10:49 AM
PASigGrillGrate - A Very Cool Product
There have been some threads about these before, but I wanted to let everyone one they are having another 15% off sale for Father's Day if anyone was thinking about them.
I bought a set of GrillGrates for a small Weber charcoal grill (the Smokey Joe) but have been using them on my gas grill as well with some great results. I was skeptical at first but they do a great job getting a good sear and nice grill marks and best of all, virtually eliminate those dammed food-incinerating flareups that are all to common with fatty meats and hot grills. There were a couple things I didn't like such as how they come in sections you have to piece together which I found a little clunky and the end sides of these things are razor sharp where they get cut.
Pros:
-Can get them VERY hot and not have to have the grill cranked up all the way; they seem to amplify the heat
-Nice searing action
-You get nice grill marks
-Flareups that burn the shit out of your steaks or burgers, etc are elimiated
-Can be flipped over and used as a griddle of sorts for things like smashburgers or steaks
Cons:
-Pricey - mine were around $50 after discount and they are a small set. Larger set may run $120-$150
-Edges are razor sharp
-They come in sections that lock together; would be nice to have one piece grates
-A bit cumbersome to clean, but they give you this flipper tool that helps to clean them as well
-They WILL warp if you get them too hot, it's a warning in the manual
GrillGrateJune 12, 2018, 12:36 AM
SigfestBeen using my Weber Genesis with my new GrillGrates for about a month now. Everything above is true.
My observations.
It’s hard to keep the heat down with the GG. Today I cooked 4 Ribeyes and had the dials just a little higher than low.
I cooked 2 on the Griddle side. 2 on the Grates side. All turned out great (I know no pics).
On the griddle side I used a weight. It made an excellent crust on the steaks. The other side had great grill marks but not as much crust. (I had to cut the fat a little on the edge Of the steak as it wanted to curl up a little.)
The griddle side puts a lot of grease in the foil pan. The other side not as much.
The crud collects at the back. The tool you get helps with pushing it to the rear. I bought the bristle brush that you dip in water to clean it as I’m warming it up. Depending on what you cook, the crud will need removed at least monthly. I warm it up, clean with tool and brush. Let cool. Then lift the grate sides up and dump it into a plastic bag. Better than having it all sit in the bottom.
Another thing I notice, is there is a lot of grease splashing when I cook. Don’t cook close to the opening of the lid or you’ll goober yourself up. Or at least wear an apron.
There is a learning curve with these. And I’m not sure I’ve totally figured it out yet.
June 12, 2018, 12:57 AM
konata88Material? How do they do with fish? Salmon, mackerel, halibut?
I’ve gone back to using cast iron pans for steaks to get a full maillard crust. But may be interested if this works well with fish.
June 12, 2018, 08:10 AM
PASigquote:
Originally posted by konata88:
Material? How do they do with fish? Salmon, mackerel, halibut?
I’ve gone back to using cast iron pans for steaks to get a full maillard crust. But may be interested if this works well with fish.
They are heavy anodized aluminum.