Propane Grill Recommendations?

RCW

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Wow - interesting conversation.....:unsure:

We should clear something up about common outdoor cooking terminologies. The terms just get confused sometimes.

Just a copy/paste I found on the interwebs:

"grilling means cooking over a fire, hot and fast. Barbecue means low and slow, and smoking means cooking something with smoke (also low and slow). ... It's the low temperatures and long cooking times that help big, tough cuts of meat turn meltingly tender, and express their full flavors."

Not arguing pros/cons of any method or heating fuel.
 

RCW

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Why I'm here and not there... just say'in.
That made me put this one on the short list.....:geek::)

 

Daren Todd

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That made me put this one on the short list.....:geek::)

Is your wife gonna be ok with that one????? Or are you gonna have to turn the tractor bucket into a cot?

If I spent that much on a grill, I would also be adding that much in bells and whistles to my wifes Jeep 😱😱😱😱
 
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RCW

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A new grill will be much less than that!

Just pokin' fun to make sure Flip won't show up, after his comment to skeets about propane....

I saw a $12,000 grill I wanted to link, but realized it also could do wood or charcoal in addtion to propane.....don't want to chance anything...... :oops:

Flip - all meant in good jest...
 
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lmpres

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I WAS a propane grill guy until last year. I kept looking at the pellet grills and was soooo tempted. I bought a Pit Boss Pellet grill/smoker last August. I couldn't be happier. Will never go back to propane!. Talked my wifes uncle into trying it a couple months ago. He is the same!!!!!!
 

bearbait

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All this talk about BBQ's, grills and steaks but not one mention of beer, what's the world coming too. 🙄 😁
 

SidecarFlip

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Root beer for me. I don't consume alcohol. A&W is top shelf, so is IBC in the bottle.
 
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PaulR

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Happy with my Weber Genesis. A step down from your Summit I do believe, $800.
I researched the Napoleans, read a bunch of bad reviews, decided to stick with the Weber as my
last Genensis Silver B was 15 years old before I retired it.
 
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lugbolt

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best thing I ever done is go to a pellet grill

Had (still have but never use) a cheap gas grill. Also have (and occasionally use) a Weber kettle, and it's nice for certain foods. I like to grill fish, and charcoal just does it better, but the problem is you cannot control the heat very well.

On both the charcoal grill AND the pellet grill, I invested in GrillGrates. Game changer!

I grill about 3 to 4 days a week year round, unless it's hailing or tornado-ing. That's about the only time I do not use the grill(s).

pellet grill has been awesome. Bag of pellets lasts me weeks, up to a month. I am not grilling for 10 people, just me and the cat eats some of the scraps if there's anything left over-very rare. GF eats with me when she's here (travels a lot). 3 or 4 days a week. This summer, every day of the week with the rare exception that I just didn't feel like it, usually on a Sunday (day of rest).

The pellets make the food taste completely different than gas or even charcoal. I have not done a lot of fish with the pellet grill. Have done scallops, and that was very good. Shrimp too. Did some crappie a while back but used the "blend" pellets and it wasn't great, it was very good but just not great. I use the charcoal grill for crappie (on the halfshell) as well as walleye when I can find it, snapper, catfish, and mackerel-when I can find that. 99% of the time crappie because I have a freezer full of them. Steaks? Here's you a cheap recipe. Grab any cheap steak. Pull it outta the fridge, put you some steak rub on it whatever your favorite flavor (I like RecTec's heffer dust). Preheat the pellet grill to 225. Throw your steaks on the grill until the internal temp is about 120. Pull them off the grill at 120-ish, put them in the house. Now, turn the grill up to the highest heat you can get, on mine about 600. While it's preheating, douse the steaks with a little bit of olive oil and in my case heffer dust (just a little rub/seasoning). When the grill's hot, throw your steaks on the GrillGrate a couple minutes, flip, pull 'em off when they are about 145 or so depending on how well done you like them. 145 is about my preference. Let them sit a minute on the plate before cutting into them. I use the blended pellets from the local store but hickory is very good too. Fruitwood pellets give it a hint of a sweeter test if you like that, I presonally do not (on steaks). If you do it right, you will not touch any steak seasoning...no A-1, Heinz 57, nothing...you don't need it, the steaks are delicious.

Similarly baked potatoes. Easiest thing you can grill. Poke a bunch of holes in the taters, coat 'em in salt & pepper (and I like to use a little garlic salt too), then coat with olive oil. Throw them on the grill using blended pellets, about 2 hours at 225 degrees. There is no better way to eat baked potatoes that I know of. Super easy, cheap, and absolutely delicious. I have done them at work for the guys in the shop and they all rave about grilled baked potatoes. Now that y'all know how to do it, get busy. I tried it on the gas grill. Nope. Real bland, kinda taste the fuel, etc. Not a fan.

I have/bought a rec tec grill, and one of the many features it has is wifi connectivity and an app. You use your phone to turn the grill on. Sometimes I'll start it before I pull up the driveway (I keep it ready) and while it's preheating I'm prepping the food. Shrimp fish steaks burgers whatever. Secondly it holds temperature within 5 degrees which neither of our other pellet grills will do (one is a traeger and the other is a member's mark). They both will stay within 20 degrees and that's about all they'll do. With it holding temp like that, you can really pay more attention to what's actually going on. Meat thermometers are a nice thing to have too, makes it a lot easier to get the steaks (or whatever) at the right amount of "doneness" as my girlfriend says.

Honestly I think I like the pellet grill so much I may buy another one for my dad & mom. They like to grill but they hate running out of gas, they hate the taste of the fuel, don't have time for charcoal (plus you go through quite a bit of it), and the one time they came over to the house for some grilled steaks, they absolutely loved the taste...and dad is VERY picky about his steaks (used to work at a very high end steakhouse). Just need the funds to buy 'em one. They are expensive, but well worth it the cost in my opinion.

Grill Grates also go on the charcoal grill, makes a huge difference. I use them both ways, smooth side up and ribbed side up. Ribs up for steaks, pork, dogs, etc. Smooth side up for shrimps, crawfish, scallops, that kinda thing. Have even used the pellet grill, with grill grates smooth side up, to cook a pizza...again...game changer! Taters just go on the regular grates, no advantage to the other grate for those. With steaks and pork chops in particular, ribbed side up, you get absolutely perfect grill marks every time. Plus it just cooks a little better.
 
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skeets

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It is simple brother,, Guinness, then Black and Tan, Bass, and any good stout,, anything else is,, is,, well eer I guess,, and when you start making your own charcoal to grill with then you have a handle on it
 

SidecarFlip

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I may get a pellet grill if my Brinkman ever wears out
 

Tpack

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Here is my Weber Genesis S-330 that I rebuilt all burners and igniter on . I cleaned it up and it cooks like it did when it was new. It will easily go over 600° . This should last me a long time. Already lasted me 8 cooking seasons. Total rebuild was less than 200 bucks.



 

SidecarFlip

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Good decision and a very nice rebuild, but don't tell Flip. :rolleyes:
Not an issue with me, I'm not eating meat laced with ethyl mercaptan anyway. Terrible thing to do to good meat and who knows, it might even give you cancer because it sure as heck stinks.

One of the guys I hunt with caught his ex wife screwing around with another man who just happened to own a Corvette. My buddy followed them to a motel and while they were in there doing the dirty, he dumped a bottle of propane odorant, ethyl mercaptan, on the upholstery of the Vette. Guy had to sell the car for salvage as you cannot get the stink out no matter what you do.

Stinking car, srinking steak, same difference. :p
 

skeets

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You stop taking your meds again flip?
 
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Tpack

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To me, using propane to cook (BBQ) on is a travesty and cooking meat directly on a propane flame imparts the (yuk) odorant into the meat. Not ever for me. Cooking and smoking on chunk charcoal with say applewood added imparts a real flavor, not the stink stuff in propane.

I guess people don't appreciate the taste of real charcoal cooked food. and prefer the convenience of an instant stinky propane flame not that it takes all that long to get chunk charcoal going.. Never happen here, propane that is.
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NHSleddog

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I have a 10yo Webber Summit and I can honestly say it has been my least favorite grill I have ever owned. It was $1,500.00 at the time. My main complaints is low isn't low enough and even on low, gets blown out regularly. I honestly can't believe I have owned and complained about it for as long as I have. Just stubborn over what I paid would be my guess.

After reading Lugbolt's post I am researching pellet grills.

What pellet type do you use?
 
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RCW

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I have a 10yo Webber Summit and I can honestly say it has been my least favorite grill I have ever owned......

main complaints is low isn't low enough and even on low, gets blown out regularly.

After reading Lugbolt's post I am researching pellet grills.

What pellet type do you use?
One of my main complaints too.... don't like the grates, and just too small, but that's on me.

I got mine for $900 (October?), but list was $1,500 too ~10 years ago.

I complained less about $300 Walmart jobs that lasted 3 seasons.....

As far as pellet grills, one thing I've seen is that they don't sear well - not enough heat. No idea if true. High-heat is as important to me as low-heat.

I did finally check Vermont Castings, and their gas grill selections are no-where near what they were 20+ years ago. That one was my favorite by far.....

For what it's worth, they do have some nice looking pellet grills.

 
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RCW

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Did a little more searching/researching.

Looks like about all modern grills have grates made of steel rod. Most look like they're made by the same manufacturer.

Most premium jobs are still the same steel rod grates, but some look like closer spacing, which is good....

Cast grates are not an option anymore, which is unfortunate.
 
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