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-   -   Food and Drink Finally upgraded to a new gas grill (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=274690)

Great Expectations 07-22-2013 11:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Omaha (Post 9826827)
I've never met anyone who has regretted buying one. Everyone I've met who has one loves the thing.

How do they stand up to weather? It's ceramic so what happens if it rains while it's hot?

I've had mine for six years and it would look brand new if I cleaned it with some Windex.

The shape of the Egg is designed to contain the heat with only a small vent at the top to create a draft to keep the fire going. Today’s Egg is manufactured from high fiber ceramics developed for the space shuttle program designed to reflect heat and this allows temperatures of up to 650 degrees Celsius (1200 Fahrenheit) to be reached. The external surface has a high gloss ceramic glaze applied to provide crack and weather resistance.

I've never had mine above 800, but I have it over 600 weekly.

Fire Me Boy! 07-22-2013 11:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by morphius (Post 9826962)
Saw this earlier this month:



http://www.wired.com/opinion/2013/07...tter-than-gas/


(Personally I use charcoal, but I really don't care what anyone uses)

"Translation: Cooking over charcoal makes your food taste like bacon. Let me repeat that: blah blah charcoal blah blah BACON."

Eleazar 07-22-2013 11:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fire Me Boy! (Post 9826923)
Natural? No. Natural fire burning from wood flavors whatever it's cooking. Pure beef (or chicken or pork or whatever) flavor, sure. But the smokiness that comes from grilling is a natural accompaniment to meat.

That said, I don't know many serious grillers that use briquettes. Most use natural lump charcoal. That doesn't have fillers, and you get a better, natural flavor.

Natural to me means the taste of the food and not the fuel material.

Charcoal always contains chemical additives like nitrates, starches, lime, even coal. Lump charcoal may not contain the binders to give it the shape, but even in the event you have pure charcoal with no chemicals added in manufacture, you are still taking it on faith that the wood used by whatever corporation made it was not chemically treated or from some other dubious waste/scrap wood source like discarded stained hardwood flooring.

This is hair splitting, which is what any good gas vs charcoal debate amounts to. I just opined that natural to me is the taste of the food and not a campfire

Eleazar 07-22-2013 11:36 AM

I meant to say, I have one of those Korean style flat electric grills that I would put up against anything else I have owned. Electric is really nice for being able to heat things evenly and without drying the meat out. If you arent a thermometer obsessed kind of guy they are great for precisely controlling the temp. Experiment with one

Bugeater 07-22-2013 12:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by R8ers (Post 9826824)
Make your own hardwood charcoal

Go on...

Fire Me Boy! 07-22-2013 12:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bugeater (Post 9827139)
Go on...

Process is here: http://bit.ly/16VdsW6

Bugeater 07-22-2013 12:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fire Me Boy! (Post 9827149)
Process is here: http://bit.ly/16VdsW6

Asshole. LMAO

Saul Good 07-22-2013 12:25 PM

This thread makes a lot more sense once you realize how full of shit we all are. We all think we know what we're talking about...but we don't.

Fire Me Boy! 07-22-2013 12:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Saul Good (Post 9827161)
This thread makes a lot more sense once you realize how full of shit we all are. We all think we know what we're talking about...but we don't.

Speak for yourself. I know four truths:

1. Charcoal beats gas.
2. Cast iron is best.
3. WD-40 for when it sticks, but isn't supposed to.
4. Duct tape for when it moves, but isn't supposed to.

Tytanium 07-22-2013 12:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Great Expectations (Post 9826138)
Why not just get a big green egg?

It gets much hotter than the gas grill in the op in just a few minutes and smokes better than the Weber bullet.

You also don't ever have to replace it

Because a BGE costs thousands of dollars. I'd rather buy a Weber One-Touch, a good sized gas grill, and make a UDS and STILL spend a lot less than I would on a BGE.

ghak99 07-22-2013 01:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Inmem58 (Post 9826956)
A top sirloin is a more chewy than a New York and a Filet, that's why I prefer a sirloin.

New York? Chewy? Taste the gas? :shake:

Someone is slipping lumps from the aids tree in your chimney.

Dayze 07-22-2013 01:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fire Me Boy! (Post 9827167)
Speak for yourself. I know four truths:

1. Charcoal beats gas.
2. Cast iron is best.
3. WD-40 for when it sticks, but isn't supposed to.
4. Duct tape for when it moves, but isn't supposed to.

agree. though, WD40 on my grill grate makes my stead taste funny.
but, it doesn't squeak when I eat it, so there's that.

Predarat 07-22-2013 01:28 PM

http://bit.ly/1aEFERc

Chief_For_Life58 07-22-2013 01:43 PM

turn that puppy up as high as it goes, head to whole paycheck, I mean whole foods, buy a 20 dollar dry aged ribeye, head home, season with salt and pepper, throw it on grill for 3:30-4:00 each side, enjoy.

007 07-22-2013 02:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Predarat (Post 9826734)
Has anyone ever used an out door, electric plug in grill? Those things put both gas and char coal grills to shame. Plug it up, set the temp, ready almost instantly.

http://c.shld.net/rpx/i/s/i/spin/ima...prod_631121101

I looked at one of those too but reviews said that while it was a nice little grill it would not get hot enough in winter months. Between that and a small cooking space I decided against it.


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