Have you looked under the grills of different gas barbeques? Many think that you cook with the flame of the fire, but this isn’t so. You are actually cooking with the heat generated by the dispersing material that is between the cooking grill and the flame producing burner.
Have you looked under the grills of different gas barbeques? Many think
that you cook with the flame of the fire, but this isn’t so. You are
actually cooking with the heat generated by the dispersing material
that is between the cooking grill and the flame producing burner.
The flame heats up the dispersers and the heat produced then cook the
food. The juices and grease that drip on to the heat dispersers
vaporize and the smoke generated flavors the food.
Gas barbecues have changed over the years. The first generation of gas grill used lava rock as their heat disperser. This
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worked great, but lava rock is very porous so a lot of the grease was
trapped in the rock rather than burning off. This caused a lot of
flare-up which could burn your food if you weren’t careful.
After lava rock came what is known as ceramic briquettes. Shaped like
your typical charcoal briquette these stones were made of compressed
pumice or ceramic material. Being less porous than the lava rock the
result was fewer flare-ups when cooking. However, they still produce
some flare-up.
Some people like flare-up so this isn’t a problem for everyone.
You can even find different sizes and shapes of the briquettes. They
don’t have to look like a charcoal briquette to do their job. You’ll
find rods, squares, pyramids and even ceramic plates that look like
dominos. They all do the same job. They just look different. I’ll call
them all briquettes to make it simpler.
Over years of use briquettes break down from the heat and start to
crumble. This is where the difference lies. While you can buy a bag or
box of some briquettes for about $20 some of the fancy shapes cost
quite a bit more. Some are even sold individually. When you have 60 or
more of these fancy briquettes in a grill it could become expensive to
replace them when priced individually.
Enter Weber as a manufacturer of gas grills. Weber made charcoal
barbeques for years when they entered the gas grill market.
Webers don’t use any type of porous material for heat dispersers in
their grills. Weber uses metal plates or Flavor Bars as they call them.
They do the exact same job as the lava rock or ceramic briquettes.
Because they are not porous there is virtually no flare-up at all.
Because of the success of the Weber some of the other manufacturers
moved to the metal heat dispersers. You can find them in your entry
level gas grill or in your professional, restaurant quality gas grill.
These metal plates also deteriorate over the years. The metal loses
tempering from the flames and become brittle. It doesn’t matter if they
are made of steel or stainless steel. Eventually a hole will develop
and these, too will need replacing.
If all manufacturers used the same materials in creating their
barbecues you’d have nothing to compare to make your choice of grill
purchase easier. Difference is needed so you can pick the right one for
you.
The choice is yours.
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| About the author |
RobertHoward consults in custom fireplace design for Wilshire Fireplace Shops in Sandiego California selling fireplace inserts, fireplace accessories, mailboxes fireside entrances/doors, fires creens, chenets, antique andiron, tool sets, natural gas, fenders that come handy for innovative contemporary, traditional, antique fireplaces. |
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