| Finding
the grill of your dreams |
| By Dana
Dratch Bankrate.com |
|
What's the totally tricked-out grill wearing
for Memorial Day this year? Think stainless steel, a few side burners, a rotisserie,
a smoker and a little infrared technology.
From a basic $20 patio model to an outdoor dream
kitchen with a price that rivals the down payment on a house, there
really is a grill for everyone. The trick to getting the perfect
model is deciding what features you want and how you want to cook,
then shop specifics.
"The first big trend, I think, is all the stainless
steel," says Mark Connelly, senior director of testing for appliances
at Consumer Reports. The good news for consumers is that manufacturers have
"been doing that without the price getting too crazy."
The abundance of stainless steel is
a reflection of what's going on in the high-end
kitchen market, he says. "The more stainless
steel, the more expensive," he says, but, it's
popularity has made the sleek, shiny look more affordable
for everyone over the past year.
The
other hot grill item? Plenty of side burners with heat "equivalent to what
you have in your own kitchen," Connelly says.
Rotisseries are big, too, says Karen Adler, co-author
of "The
BBQ Queens' Big Book of Barbecue." "Over the past
few years this has been the most popular add-on," she says.
And "there seem to be more smokers," says
Lynn Blanchard, test kitchen director for Meredith Corp., issuers of the Better
Homes and Gardens publications.
If you're going to spend big
bucks on a grill, get a test drive first. Some specialty retailers will fire them
up on the weekends so that you can try them out first. Some things to watch:
"Don't
be enamored with the high BTUs per hour they advertise," says Connelly. Quality
"has to do with how well they distribute heat. It's no horsepower race. And
unfortunately that's what a lot of manufacturers tout."
How
evenly does it heat the grate? Will burgers in different corners cook at the same
rate, or will one burn while the other stays pink inside?
Does it flare up? This is important to most people,
says Connelly. And it has a lot to do with the construction underneath
the grate -- the part few people see. One feature to look for in
gas grills is metal pyramids beneath the grate surface. The construction
serves to give grease a way to drip down while allowing flames to
rise unhindered at the same time, he says.
Can it handle low-temperature grilling? That's important
if you want to cook something such as salmon, says Connelly.
Another feature to examine on a gas grill: the number
of controls. Does each burner have its own control? "Generally
speaking, the more burner controls you have, the more flexibility
it gives you as a chef," Connelly says. His recommendation
after shopping grills is to look for at least three burner knobs.
Check how easy it will be
to clean, too, says Blanchard.
And ask about assembly. "It
can be an eight-hour nightmare on a Saturday," says Connelly. "It's
probably worth the money" to have the store do it.
How to shop smartly
Before you get in the car, ask yourself (and whoever else
might be using the grill) a few questions. The hardest one first: gas or charcoal?
Charcoal tends to be less expensive, gets hot enough
and creates that traditional "cook-out" flavor. You don't
have to worry about filling or returning propane tanks. (And it's
easy to tell if you have enough charcoal for the big day.) |