I use both.
I prefer the taste of food cooked with charcoal and therefore I have a charcoal grill/smoker that I use. However, for convenience sake I have a propane grill that I use on a more regular basis.
Scoreboard (10 pts max for each category, higher scores are better)
TASTE:
Charcoal 10
Propane 6
COST:
Charcoal 7
Propane 7
EASE OF USE:
Charcoal 6
Propane 9
TOTAL:
Charcoal 23
Propane 22
I concur lain:
Cows that come pre-cooked. :cow:10 is max and he only gave propane 9 in "ease of use".
What's easier to use?
Cows that come pre-cooked. :cow:
Well, if you want to go cheap, you're better off buying charcoal. A good gas grill will run you into the $500+ range depending on cooking area and quality. Mine was over twice that much, but I do a lot of cooking for family gatherings (not to mention I grill three to four days a week year round.) Weber is really the top of the line and they make a Genesis model that you can get for around that $500 mark, but it's pretty small. Ducane generally comes a bit less expensive and is now owned by Weber (you just don't pay for the name).
Anything much cheaper than that and you will wind up replacing it in a short time after it warps and cracks.
For charcoal, nothing beats a Big Green Egg, but they're pretty pricey too. Weber makes a charcoal grill that's pretty nice or you can even fall back on the trusty Brinkman -- they perform well and they're inexpensive enough that replacing them isn't a big deal.
Thanks for the info. :up: I wasn't even looking to spend $500.
Every now and then we skip the propane and the charcoal and place the steaks directly on the fire. The flavor is AWESOME!!!! :chew:
Absolutely!Have you ever Pittsburghed a steak, that way?
Absolutely!
Although, I hate that term.
I don't know... anything but that, I suppose.Hate the term? It's just a term... What would you call it?
Then let us call it Fred.I don't know... anything but that, I suppose.