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#1
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![]() I'm only an occasional "griller," and I'll be the first to admit my knowledge of the care and keeping of a barbecue grill is minimal. To wit, the problem is keeping the grill spiffy enough to satisfy even my minimal non-OCD male standards of cleanliness. Even though I brush down the grill grates per all the instructions before using the grill, they and the pieces and parts underneath them still accumulate mass quantities of the bits and pieces that fall off and drip off when I fire up the mammalian cooker. I've tried a few "grill cleaning" chemicals, products from Easy Off and Weber, for example, but none I've tried so far do what I want - and that is to literally dissolve the "remains" that stick on the grates and grill innards. I'm still left with the messy job of scraping and scrubbing, and since our grill is large and on a deck, there's another mess to clean up after trying to clean the grill. I haven't tried putting the grates in our self-cleaning oven, but I understand that might work. It seems pretty drastic, though. So, my droogs (a top of the hat to Anthony Burgess), have you discovered any grill cleaner formula that really works, and dissolves the nasty leftovers without having to spend an entire day scrubbing? And what think you of the self-cleaning oven technique for the grates? |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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On 6/20/2013 7:56 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
I'm only an occasional "griller," and I'll be the first to admit my knowledge of the care and keeping of a barbecue grill is minimal. To wit, the problem is keeping the grill spiffy enough to satisfy even my minimal non-OCD male standards of cleanliness. Even though I brush down the grill grates per all the instructions before using the grill, they and the pieces and parts underneath them still accumulate mass quantities of the bits and pieces that fall off and drip off when I fire up the mammalian cooker. I've tried a few "grill cleaning" chemicals, products from Easy Off and Weber, for example, but none I've tried so far do what I want - and that is to literally dissolve the "remains" that stick on the grates and grill innards. I'm still left with the messy job of scraping and scrubbing, and since our grill is large and on a deck, there's another mess to clean up after trying to clean the grill. I haven't tried putting the grates in our self-cleaning oven, but I understand that might work. It seems pretty drastic, though. So, my droogs (a top of the hat to Anthony Burgess), have you discovered any grill cleaner formula that really works, and dissolves the nasty leftovers without having to spend an entire day scrubbing? And what think you of the self-cleaning oven technique for the grates? Put a piece of tin foil or a cookie sheet on top of the grill surface to hold the heat and turn the grill to high. Check every 10 minutes or so to see how it's doing. A light scrubbing should be all that's needed after that. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Hank©" wrote in message b.com... On 6/20/2013 7:56 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: I'm only an occasional "griller," and I'll be the first to admit my knowledge of the care and keeping of a barbecue grill is minimal. To wit, the problem is keeping the grill spiffy enough to satisfy even my minimal non-OCD male standards of cleanliness. Even though I brush down the grill grates per all the instructions before using the grill, they and the pieces and parts underneath them still accumulate mass quantities of the bits and pieces that fall off and drip off when I fire up the mammalian cooker. I've tried a few "grill cleaning" chemicals, products from Easy Off and Weber, for example, but none I've tried so far do what I want - and that is to literally dissolve the "remains" that stick on the grates and grill innards. I'm still left with the messy job of scraping and scrubbing, and since our grill is large and on a deck, there's another mess to clean up after trying to clean the grill. I haven't tried putting the grates in our self-cleaning oven, but I understand that might work. It seems pretty drastic, though. So, my droogs (a top of the hat to Anthony Burgess), have you discovered any grill cleaner formula that really works, and dissolves the nasty leftovers without having to spend an entire day scrubbing? And what think you of the self-cleaning oven technique for the grates? Put a piece of tin foil or a cookie sheet on top of the grill surface to hold the heat and turn the grill to high. Check every 10 minutes or so to see how it's doing. A light scrubbing should be all that's needed after that. -------------------------- Fwd'd since Harry has Hank in the Bozo bin .... |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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On 6/20/13 8:51 AM, Eisboch wrote:
"Hank©" wrote in message b.com... On 6/20/2013 7:56 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: I'm only an occasional "griller," and I'll be the first to admit my knowledge of the care and keeping of a barbecue grill is minimal. To wit, the problem is keeping the grill spiffy enough to satisfy even my minimal non-OCD male standards of cleanliness. Even though I brush down the grill grates per all the instructions before using the grill, they and the pieces and parts underneath them still accumulate mass quantities of the bits and pieces that fall off and drip off when I fire up the mammalian cooker. I've tried a few "grill cleaning" chemicals, products from Easy Off and Weber, for example, but none I've tried so far do what I want - and that is to literally dissolve the "remains" that stick on the grates and grill innards. I'm still left with the messy job of scraping and scrubbing, and since our grill is large and on a deck, there's another mess to clean up after trying to clean the grill. I haven't tried putting the grates in our self-cleaning oven, but I understand that might work. It seems pretty drastic, though. So, my droogs (a top of the hat to Anthony Burgess), have you discovered any grill cleaner formula that really works, and dissolves the nasty leftovers without having to spend an entire day scrubbing? And what think you of the self-cleaning oven technique for the grates? Put a piece of tin foil or a cookie sheet on top of the grill surface to hold the heat and turn the grill to high. Check every 10 minutes or so to see how it's doing. A light scrubbing should be all that's needed after that. -------------------------- Fwd'd since Harry has Hank in the Bozo bin .... Ahh, thanks, but somehow I think any "advice" coming to me from "Hank" on this subject would result in a fire, an explosion, or global thermonuclear war. ![]() As it turns out, I've found several cites on line for the self-cleaning oven technique, so I am giving it a try with the stainless steel grills and flame bar covers, which are heavy gauge stainless. There are a couple of other major pieces inside the grip (the drip panel, for example), that I can easily remove and take onto the lawn for a good scrubbing. Still, there must be some sort of spray-on cleaner that *really* works on greasy grills. Somewhere. Alternatively, Weber ought to make a self-cleaning barbecue grill...flick a switch and voila! ![]() |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "F.O.A.D." wrote in message m... On 6/20/13 8:51 AM, Eisboch wrote: "Hank©" wrote in message b.com... On 6/20/2013 7:56 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: I'm only an occasional "griller," and I'll be the first to admit my knowledge of the care and keeping of a barbecue grill is minimal. To wit, the problem is keeping the grill spiffy enough to satisfy even my minimal non-OCD male standards of cleanliness. Even though I brush down the grill grates per all the instructions before using the grill, they and the pieces and parts underneath them still accumulate mass quantities of the bits and pieces that fall off and drip off when I fire up the mammalian cooker. I've tried a few "grill cleaning" chemicals, products from Easy Off and Weber, for example, but none I've tried so far do what I want - and that is to literally dissolve the "remains" that stick on the grates and grill innards. I'm still left with the messy job of scraping and scrubbing, and since our grill is large and on a deck, there's another mess to clean up after trying to clean the grill. I haven't tried putting the grates in our self-cleaning oven, but I understand that might work. It seems pretty drastic, though. So, my droogs (a top of the hat to Anthony Burgess), have you discovered any grill cleaner formula that really works, and dissolves the nasty leftovers without having to spend an entire day scrubbing? And what think you of the self-cleaning oven technique for the grates? Put a piece of tin foil or a cookie sheet on top of the grill surface to hold the heat and turn the grill to high. Check every 10 minutes or so to see how it's doing. A light scrubbing should be all that's needed after that. -------------------------- Fwd'd since Harry has Hank in the Bozo bin .... Ahh, thanks, but somehow I think any "advice" coming to me from "Hank" on this subject would result in a fire, an explosion, or global thermonuclear war. ![]() As it turns out, I've found several cites on line for the self-cleaning oven technique, so I am giving it a try with the stainless steel grills and flame bar covers, which are heavy gauge stainless. There are a couple of other major pieces inside the grip (the drip panel, for example), that I can easily remove and take onto the lawn for a good scrubbing. Still, there must be some sort of spray-on cleaner that *really* works on greasy grills. Somewhere. Alternatively, Weber ought to make a self-cleaning barbecue grill...flick a switch and voila! ![]() ------------------------------------------- We just close the top, crank up all the burners to full and wait until it stops smoking. Once it cools off any residue left easily brushes off. You don't want to super clean it. A grill is like an old fashioned cast iron frying pan. Needs to be "seasoned". The high temperatures reached in the "cleaning mode" described above will kill any bacteria. |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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On Thursday, 20 June 2013 11:31:39 UTC-3, Eisboch wrote:
We just close the top, crank up all the burners to full and wait until it stops smoking. Once it cools off any residue left easily brushes off. You don't want to super clean it. A grill is like an old fashioned cast iron frying pan. Needs to be "seasoned". The high temperatures reached in the "cleaning mode" described above will kill any bacteria. This is what our instruction said and I follow them, although our BBQ has ceramic coated grill panels. Each spring I do a proper cleaning of dismantling everything I can and scooping up all the crud that drops down to the bottom. |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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Eisboch wrote:
"F.O.A.D." wrote in message m... On 6/20/13 8:51 AM, Eisboch wrote: "Hank©" wrote in message b.com... On 6/20/2013 7:56 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: I'm only an occasional "griller," and I'll be the first to admit my knowledge of the care and keeping of a barbecue grill is minimal. To wit, the problem is keeping the grill spiffy enough to satisfy even my minimal non-OCD male standards of cleanliness. Even though I brush down the grill grates per all the instructions before using the grill, they and the pieces and parts underneath them still accumulate mass quantities of the bits and pieces that fall off and drip off when I fire up the mammalian cooker. I've tried a few "grill cleaning" chemicals, products from Easy Off and Weber, for example, but none I've tried so far do what I want - and that is to literally dissolve the "remains" that stick on the grates and grill innards. I'm still left with the messy job of scraping and scrubbing, and since our grill is large and on a deck, there's another mess to clean up after trying to clean the grill. I haven't tried putting the grates in our self-cleaning oven, but I understand that might work. It seems pretty drastic, though. So, my droogs (a top of the hat to Anthony Burgess), have you discovered any grill cleaner formula that really works, and dissolves the nasty leftovers without having to spend an entire day scrubbing? And what think you of the self-cleaning oven technique for the grates? Put a piece of tin foil or a cookie sheet on top of the grill surface to hold the heat and turn the grill to high. Check every 10 minutes or so to see how it's doing. A light scrubbing should be all that's needed after that. -------------------------- Fwd'd since Harry has Hank in the Bozo bin .... Ahh, thanks, but somehow I think any "advice" coming to me from "Hank" on this subject would result in a fire, an explosion, or global thermonuclear war. ![]() As it turns out, I've found several cites on line for the self-cleaning oven technique, so I am giving it a try with the stainless steel grills and flame bar covers, which are heavy gauge stainless. There are a couple of other major pieces inside the grip (the drip panel, for example), that I can easily remove and take onto the lawn for a good scrubbing. Still, there must be some sort of spray-on cleaner that *really* works on greasy grills. Somewhere. Alternatively, Weber ought to make a self-cleaning barbecue grill...flick a switch and voila! ![]() ------------------------------------------- We just close the top, crank up all the burners to full and wait until it stops smoking. Once it cools off any residue left easily brushes off. You don't want to super clean it. A grill is like an old fashioned cast iron frying pan. Needs to be "seasoned". The high temperatures reached in the "cleaning mode" described above will kill any bacteria. Exactly. Food from a new grill is never as good as a well-used grill. Mine has a small tray that collects the excess grease from the large tray that is under the entire cooking surface. I replace the small foil tray when it is full and slide out the large tray to scrape out the residue. I never clean it completely. That coating of grease probably keeps it from corroding prematurely, too! |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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On 6/20/2013 9:06 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 6/20/13 8:51 AM, Eisboch wrote: "Hank©" wrote in message b.com... On 6/20/2013 7:56 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: I'm only an occasional "griller," and I'll be the first to admit my knowledge of the care and keeping of a barbecue grill is minimal. To wit, the problem is keeping the grill spiffy enough to satisfy even my minimal non-OCD male standards of cleanliness. Even though I brush down the grill grates per all the instructions before using the grill, they and the pieces and parts underneath them still accumulate mass quantities of the bits and pieces that fall off and drip off when I fire up the mammalian cooker. I've tried a few "grill cleaning" chemicals, products from Easy Off and Weber, for example, but none I've tried so far do what I want - and that is to literally dissolve the "remains" that stick on the grates and grill innards. I'm still left with the messy job of scraping and scrubbing, and since our grill is large and on a deck, there's another mess to clean up after trying to clean the grill. I haven't tried putting the grates in our self-cleaning oven, but I understand that might work. It seems pretty drastic, though. So, my droogs (a top of the hat to Anthony Burgess), have you discovered any grill cleaner formula that really works, and dissolves the nasty leftovers without having to spend an entire day scrubbing? And what think you of the self-cleaning oven technique for the grates? Put a piece of tin foil or a cookie sheet on top of the grill surface to hold the heat and turn the grill to high. Check every 10 minutes or so to see how it's doing. A light scrubbing should be all that's needed after that. -------------------------- Fwd'd since Harry has Hank in the Bozo bin .... Ahh, thanks, but somehow I think any "advice" coming to me from "Hank" on this subject would result in a fire, an explosion, or global thermonuclear war. ![]() As it turns out, I've found several cites on line for the self-cleaning oven technique, so I am giving it a try with the stainless steel grills and flame bar covers, which are heavy gauge stainless. There are a couple of other major pieces inside the grip (the drip panel, for example), that I can easily remove and take onto the lawn for a good scrubbing. Still, there must be some sort of spray-on cleaner that *really* works on greasy grills. Somewhere. Alternatively, Weber ought to make a self-cleaning barbecue grill...flick a switch and voila! ![]() I understand if you're scared to follow my advice. ;-) |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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"F.O.A.D." wrote in message
m... On 6/20/13 8:51 AM, Eisboch wrote: "Hank©" wrote in message b.com... On 6/20/2013 7:56 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: I'm only an occasional "griller," and I'll be the first to admit my knowledge of the care and keeping of a barbecue grill is minimal. To wit, the problem is keeping the grill spiffy enough to satisfy even my minimal non-OCD male standards of cleanliness. Even though I brush down the grill grates per all the instructions before using the grill, they and the pieces and parts underneath them still accumulate mass quantities of the bits and pieces that fall off and drip off when I fire up the mammalian cooker. I've tried a few "grill cleaning" chemicals, products from Easy Off and Weber, for example, but none I've tried so far do what I want - and that is to literally dissolve the "remains" that stick on the grates and grill innards. I'm still left with the messy job of scraping and scrubbing, and since our grill is large and on a deck, there's another mess to clean up after trying to clean the grill. I haven't tried putting the grates in our self-cleaning oven, but I understand that might work. It seems pretty drastic, though. So, my droogs (a top of the hat to Anthony Burgess), have you discovered any grill cleaner formula that really works, and dissolves the nasty leftovers without having to spend an entire day scrubbing? And what think you of the self-cleaning oven technique for the grates? Put a piece of tin foil or a cookie sheet on top of the grill surface to hold the heat and turn the grill to high. Check every 10 minutes or so to see how it's doing. A light scrubbing should be all that's needed after that. -------------------------- Fwd'd since Harry has Hank in the Bozo bin .... Ahh, thanks, but somehow I think any "advice" coming to me from "Hank" on this subject would result in a fire, an explosion, or global thermonuclear war. ![]() As it turns out, I've found several cites on line for the self-cleaning oven technique, so I am giving it a try with the stainless steel grills and flame bar covers, which are heavy gauge stainless. There are a couple of other major pieces inside the grip (the drip panel, for example), that I can easily remove and take onto the lawn for a good scrubbing. Still, there must be some sort of spray-on cleaner that *really* works on greasy grills. Somewhere. Alternatively, Weber ought to make a self-cleaning barbecue grill...flick a switch and voila! ![]() ------------ Take the grills off and put in heavy plastic bag and spray cleaner on them. Seal up and let set for the day. Or get a Treager, does not seem to burn on to the grills and the plate underneath comes out to scrape or clean as needed. Not a lot of nooks and crannies to get stuff stuck in. Also is much better than any gas grill as to flavor. |
#10
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