Barbeque crew

Soldato
Joined
17 Oct 2002
Posts
13,426
Location
UK
I wanna start cooking more often and im fed up with having to wait 30 mins for the charcoal bbq to heat up..so im thinking about a gas burner..

Can anyone reccomend a decent unit? I know nothing about gas bbqs...is one of the small 2 burner things gonna be good enough to cook fast?
 
Don't bother, may as well use the cooker indoors. We have a gas one and it's rubbish, completely misses the point of a BBQ.
 
I have an outback 3 burner, which I'm just about to upgrade for a 6 burner from....

http://www.flamingbarbecues.co.uk/

Find one with a propane regulator, do not use one that uses Butane only.

Find one with Lava Rock.

Obviously a lot depends on your budget. My first outback cost me £300 and has been worth every penny.

No doubt this thread will now be spoilt with loads of people claiming wrongly that food tastes better on charcoal.
 
Don't bother, may as well use the cooker indoors. We have a gas one and it's rubbish, completely misses the point of a BBQ.

Rubbish in what sense? The taste? Charcoal is great for once a week but when you wanna bbq a couple of times a day, it gets a hassle..
 
I have an outback 3 burner, which I'm just about to upgrade for a 6 burner from....

http://www.flamingbarbecues.co.uk/

Find one with a propane regulator, do not use one that uses Butane only.

Find one with Lava Rock.

Obviously a lot depends on your budget. My first outback cost me £300 and has been worth every penny.

No doubt this thread will now be spoilt with loads of people claiming wrongly that food tastes better on charcoal.

Lava rock? :o whats that?
Is there a big difference in heat and cooking speed between the big burners and the small ones? or is it just a matter of cooking area?
 
Lava rock? :o whats that?
Is there a big difference in heat and cooking speed between the big burners and the small ones? or is it just a matter of cooking area?

Lava rock is what the fat drips onto to create the smoke.

Cooking area mainly, you can look at the heat output as a guide. You will not really want to cook at a faster speed on a high heat anyway. You will just burn everything and not cook it through properly. On propane I use mine at a low heat and it's still fast. Unless I'm doing a leg of lamb when I whack the heat right up for 15 minutes to get the heat all the way through to the bone and then turn it down.

I've always liked the versatility of mine. I've done BBQ's, Roast pototoes, Roast dinner and even crumbles on mine. I use it atleast once or twice a week 52 weeks a year.
 
Lava rock is what the fat drips onto to create the smoke.

Cooking area mainly, you can look at the heat output as a guide. You will not really want to cook at a faster speed on a high heat anyway. You will just burn everything and not cook it through properly. On propane I use mine at a low heat and it's still fast. Unless I'm doing a leg of lamb when I whack the heat right up for 15 minutes to get the heat all the way through to the bone and then turn it down.

I've always liked the versatility of mine. I've done BBQ's, Roast pototoes, Roast dinner and even crumbles on mine. I use it atleast once or twice a week 52 weeks a year.

Sounds good.
So would you recommend a 3 burner as a good start for a newb?
Which outback did you start with?
 
No doubt this thread will now be spoilt with loads of people claiming wrongly that food tastes better on charcoal.

How can an opinion on something completely subjective possibly be wrong?

Rubbish in what sense? The taste? Charcoal is great for once a week but when you wanna bbq a couple of times a day, it gets a hassle..

Well, in that case a gas may be better suited however... who cooks breakfast/lunch/dinner on a BBQ?

Particularly with the weather of late, it may be better where you are but it's just been wind and rain here.
 
Don't see the point, half the fun is charcoal and it's just as easy. Light the charcoal. Then go prep the meat/veg or what ever. By the time you have prepped the coals will be hot.
 
Don't see the point, half the fun is charcoal and it's just as easy. Light the charcoal. Then go prep the meat/veg or what ever. By the time you have prepped the coals will be hot.

As I said, this is for regular use...charcoal is fun if youre doing it once in a while..Its not fun twice a day
 
Well, in that case a gas may be better suited however... who cooks breakfast/lunch/dinner on a BBQ?

Particularly with the weather of late, it may be better where you are but it's just been wind and rain here.

I eat about 6 meals a day and also wanting to practice and learn..and it will be in a covered area.
 
Gas bbqs amazing, I didn't know what I'd been missing out on till I got mine, tis only a little 2 burner but is really good n not too bad on the ole gas :D
 
Back
Top Bottom