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I'm not a fan. It seems to combine the worst of both types of cooking, and costs $850 to boot. It's a motor-fed pellet smoker, which means more to break on the firebox AND you have to buy special fuel for that side. As for the propane, there's nothing wrong with it, except use by the other side means you'll be cleaning those surfaces more often.Had to leave my grill with the old house so I’m in the market and considering this:
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I like that I can smoke but also just gas grill when I want a quick burger or something.
I will add that I have had two Pit Boss vertical smokers and am not at all sold on their quality. First one died after about a year of periodic use. Current one I’ve had for about six months and it’s generally ok, but I’ve had a couple of times where it just - for lack of a better explanation - goes crazy. It just keeps feeding fuel to the burn chamber until the temperature pegs and it errors out. One time I was able to unplug it and let it cool down and it was fine. The other time it was jacked up all day, but a week later it was fine. Overall, not a fan.I'm not a fan. It seems to combine the worst of both types of cooking, and costs $850 to boot. It's a motor-fed pellet smoker, which means more to break on the firebox AND you have to buy special fuel for that side. As for the propane, there's nothing wrong with it, except use by the other side means you'll be cleaning those surfaces more often.
In general, smoking & grilling should follow the KISS principle, and sometimes, I think that means two machines. The same amount of money will buy you a Kamado / Traeger and a decent propane grill.
I like that I can smoke but also just gas grill when I want a quick burger or something.
I pulled the trigger but bought basically the same grill at Academy just without the side burner for $699. With my daughters military discount I got it $630 plus free assembly.I'm not a fan. It seems to combine the worst of both types of cooking, and costs $850 to boot. It's a motor-fed pellet smoker, which means more to break on the firebox AND you have to buy special fuel for that side. As for the propane, there's nothing wrong with it, except use by the other side means you'll be cleaning those surfaces more often.
In general, smoking & grilling should follow the KISS principle, and sometimes, I think that means two machines. The same amount of money will buy you a Kamado / Traeger and a decent propane grill.
When will you break it in- weekend?I pulled the trigger but bought basically the same grill at Academy just without the side burner for $699. With my daughters military discount I got it $630 plus free assembly.
I can’t buy both for that price so we’ll see how it goes.
Maybe.When will you break it in- weekend?
My wife's cousin had a regular Pit Boss. The pellets worked fine and fast for high temp cooking. The one thing that I don't like about pellet cookers in general is that they need a power source. One potential benefit of a grill is you have someplace to cook in case your power is out, and you lose that with a pellet hopper.Had to leave my grill with the old house so I’m in the market and considering this:
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I like that I can smoke but also just gas grill when I want a quick burger or something.
Well, have fun. As I get older, I realize they're among the most practical and fun of my adult toys.Maybe.
Have to get it level where I’m putting it and you have to do a dry run to season everything. With Father’s Day I might not get it all done but will be smoking soon.
I’ve got an educational curve to get overall as well. Lots of YouTube in my future.
We'll see I like the idea of not having to smoke if I don't want to and have a cooking option with no power. I've got $700 bucks in this unit so if I get 4 years out of it I'm good and will upgrade.My wife's cousin had a regular Pit Boss. The pellets worked fine and fast for high temp cooking. The one thing that I don't like about pellet cookers in general is that they need a power source. One potential benefit of a grill is you have someplace to cook in case your power is out, and you lose that with a pellet hopper.
My brother-in-law has a combo charcoal smoker/grill and propane grill, and he hardly ever used the propane side, used the charcoal grill for regular grilling and recently went with a vertical smoker.
I think there might be like a 5-10 minute difference between being ready to cook with propane and being ready to cook with charcoal if you use a chimney starter. The biggest difference at this point is how evenly the heat distributes, which propane has an advantage.
I've done beef ribs once. Other than presentation, I see zero reasons to stray from pork ribs.Anyone smoke any beef ribs lately ???
Beef short ribs are amazing.I've done beef ribs once. Other than presentation, I see zero reasons to stray from pork ribs.
Charcoal gives a better flavor.My wife's cousin had a regular Pit Boss. The pellets worked fine and fast for high temp cooking. The one thing that I don't like about pellet cookers in general is that they need a power source. One potential benefit of a grill is you have someplace to cook in case your power is out, and you lose that with a pellet hopper.
My brother-in-law has a combo charcoal smoker/grill and propane grill, and he hardly ever used the propane side, used the charcoal grill for regular grilling and recently went with a vertical smoker.
I think there might be like a 5-10 minute difference between being ready to cook with propane and being ready to cook with charcoal if you use a chimney starter. The biggest difference at this point is how evenly the heat distributes, which propane has an advantage.
I don't consider short ribs "ribs"Beef short ribs are amazing.
Well that's an odd take.I don't consider short ribs "ribs"
I talked myself into a Pit Barrel Cooker a couple of years ago. I had an offset smoker that I liked but could cause me problems with long smokes (I once smoked a brisket for 13 hours and still had to put it in the oven for like 3 hours), so I would only use it for stuff I knew wouldn't take a long time to smoke, like ribs and chicken.We'll see I like the idea of not having to smoke if I don't want to and have a cooking option with no power. I've got $700 bucks in this unit so if I get 4 years out of it I'm good and will upgrade.