Pellet Fan
All Things Considered => General Discussion--Food Related => Topic started by: MN-Smoker on September 25, 2017, 04:05:26 PM
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For Father's Day my wife purchased me a wood scraper "BBQ brush".
My wife then told me that several friends of hers had said they read online how wire brushes are bad. They will shed metal, which will get caught in your food, then you'll eat it, it will get lodged in your stomach or intestine and then either require painful surgery or cause death.
I'm sure I'm not the only one who has seen these.
So what say everyone here?
On a related note, since acquiring this scraper, one of my brushes with a "spiral" wire brush top started shedding wires like crazy on my grill which I have since tossed.
Thoughts?
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I had a wire brush with replacement bristle pads and all of them shed stainless steel wires onto the grill. In at least two instances, the metal ended up in food. I'll personally not purchase wire brushes any longer.
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Don't swallow gum or watermelon seeds either...
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I'm still old school, use bass bristle brushes, I look before I cook. My current brush shed a few bristles at first but has stopped... it's about a year old an is so greasy it makes the grates dirtier when I'm done, so I guess I should replace it... or at least soak it in degreaser and clean it.
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I've used stainless brushes for years and never saw any signs of shedding. Still, I'll probably consider something like this when it's time to replace:
https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B01MYC1C2D (https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B01MYC1C2D)
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I do not see a problem however i always wipe down my grates before using
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I've used stainless brushes for years and never saw any signs of shedding. Still, I'll probably consider something like this when it's time to replace :https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B01MYC1C2D
I have one like that. Doesn't work all that well. The coils are very stiff and don't do much.
Sent from my ONEPLUS A5000 using Tapatalk
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I've used stainless brushes for years and never saw any signs of shedding. Still, I'll probably consider something like this when it's time to replace :https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B01MYC1C2D
I have one like that. Doesn't work all that well. The coils are very stiff and don't do much.
Sent from my ONEPLUS A5000 using Tapatalk
Thanks, I was worried that might be the case.
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I will say, I am not impressed by the wood thingy my wife paid too much money for.
It scratches just the very top flat surface of each round bar of the grill, and leaves everything else filthy.
The grates eventually just turn into a wide layer of gunk if something else isn't used.
I hate to say this, but grabbing a broken branch off one of my back trees would do a better job of cleaning the grill.
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I used them all the time and started hearing stories about people getting them jammed up in the gums. I always checked after scraping down to make sure that none were left behind. Now I use the steel wool brush just so I do not have to worry.
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MN-Smoker - I have never used one, but was under the impression they get better as time goes because they wear and form to your grill....is that not the case?
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MN-Smoker - I have never used one, but was under the impression they get better as time goes because they wear and form to your grill....is that not the case?
I've heard it's supposed to wear, but I'm not sure what the expectation is on how long. If I use it for enough to have it wear down, that's a lot of sawdust, and to be frank, I doubt that it will really wear that much. It's made of a harder wood. It might wear some, but hardly enough to wear down around the sides.
Mine has been good at turning gunky and it's starting to look like a faded piece of wood with gunk stuck to the end.
I'm thinking of opting for one of those plastic pad ones instead.
Wire is still the best for cleaning and it's not close in my experience.
I'll just get to hear it if there is ever a splinter in food.
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My cleaner is a pc of stainless flat bar with a couple different notches in it.
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Don't swallow gum or watermelon seeds either...
:clap:
I have a brass brush that I just started using.
Not worried here
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I use the wire ones, but I buy decent ones. The Weber brand in general is usually overpriced stuff, but this is a case of getting what you pay for. Never had an issue with the more expensive types. Also replace regularly. Couple times a season.
A really good super cheap alternative is wadded up foil. Probably works the best out of anything I've ever used.
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A really good super cheap alternative is wadded up foil. Probably works the best out of anything I've ever used.
Now why didn't I think of that??
I have grillgrates and just invested in their plastic brush with plastic bristles. Sounds suspicious but they claim to be able to take 450° surfaces. I just got it so haven't tried it out yet.
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A really good super cheap alternative is wadded up foil. Probably works the best out of anything I've ever used.
Now why didn't I think of that??
I have grillgrates and just invested in their plastic brush with plastic bristles. Sounds suspicious but they claim to be able to take 450° surfaces. I just got it so haven't tried it out yet.
I like the wadded aluminum foil when it is hot, and the plastic scrub pads when it is cooled down. I never worry about the underside, but when is gets too gunky, I just place the grates in my oven and turn on the "clean" mode. That is rare, but it does breaks it down to ash.
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I use wadded up foil or a grill brick. The grill brick molds to the grates and cleans the sides of the rods. Works well for me.
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I use commercial brass fryer brushes, they work great and about the only thing I notice them shedding is grease come time to toss it for a new one.
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Those bristles are no joke. People end up in the ER if they get stuck in the esophagus, and sometimes they can't be removed without surgery. I switched over to using this:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01NB9XBRI/
Some reviewers said the pads shredded quickly, but that has not been my experience. The pads are made by 3M and I've found some off-brand replacements that commercial kitchens use which are much cheaper than the ones the maker wants to sell you. I'll be trying those when the time comes, but I've been using it for all of 2017 so far and I'm still on the first pad that came with the brush (I think it came with two or three pads).
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I am another who uses a wad of foil, simply held in a grill mitt. It works fine for me.
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Those bristles are no joke. People end up in the ER if they get stuck in the esophagus, and sometimes they can't be removed without surgery. I switched over to using this:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01NB9XBRI/
Some reviewers said the pads shredded quickly, but that has not been my experience. The pads are made by 3M and I've found some off-brand replacements that commercial kitchens use which are much cheaper than the ones the maker wants to sell you. I'll be trying those when the time comes, but I've been using it for all of 2017 so far and I'm still on the first pad that came with the brush (I think it came with two or three pads).
I think the significance of the injury is legit.
I often wonder about the frequency of the occurrence that:
1. One gets in the food
2. It gets into someones mouth
3. They don't notice it while chewing
4. it gets into someone's digestive system - esophagus.
I've read the report of it happening and someone needing surgery, but has it happened more than once, or is this occurring at the same rate of birds flying into your face, breaking your nose?
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I find wood plastic and aluminum foil just do not work for me...I always brush my grates using a bristle brush or metallic scrub pad;HOT right after the food comes off, then wipe the top and sides using a paper towel..The grates stay clean this way..The trick is the paper towel and making sure to do the sides as this gets the top 2/3 of each bar clean....I cook almost daily and have been for decades...
The bottoms do get a caked on grunge on them that I remove by using a 1/2 round concave metal scraper that matches the grate diameter. Depending on what I cook This may be done 2 to 4 times a year.
SO:Not sure? Want to be safe? Just think of how you clean-up. In a hurry on not always 100% clean when done?? Play it safe!
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I have always used wire brushes and will continue to do so.
I also believe in Darwin's law of natural selection. Some people will find a way to do harm to themselves in the most unusual ways.
With that being said, I do look over the grates to make sure there are no bristles left behind before cooking.
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And I have no doubt that they can cause issues. But I guess all mine fall through to the grease tray! And I use .89 cent ones from Harbor Freight, so I am sure they do it!
(https://shop.harborfreight.com/media/catalog/product/cache/1/image/9df78eab33525d08d6e5fb8d27136e95/i/m/image_6521.jpg)
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Like FMT I just replace often and watch the grill and brush
Just common sense will go a long way on this on
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Just a note on "brass" bristles. Some brass contains lead. It may be a concern to some.
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MY biggest question is;
WHAT CHANGED!?!???
Wire brushes have/had been the standard for cleaning grills for many decades. Never did we hear about people ingesting bristles, getting sick, etc. Now suddenly in the last 1-2yrs the news, bbq forums and FB are flooded with stories of it. I even had one of my customers find a bristle on one of his cooks. So it is a change in Mfg process, the new brushes are just not made like they used to be? I find it extremely hard to believe that this has been a problem since the begining and nobody heard about it....
I have an old brush I have used forever, never dropped a bristle, but it is worn out. I am trying one of those new wood paddle things and just not impressed with how it does the job.
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A really good super cheap alternative is wadded up foil. Probably works the best out of anything I've ever used.
Now why didn't I think of that??
I have grillgrates and just invested in their plastic brush with plastic bristles. Sounds suspicious but they claim to be able to take 450° surfaces. I just got it so haven't tried it out yet.
I have one with the scouring pad on the other side of it. I used to have bristles after using it on a hot grill. Hard to remember about the plastic bristles. It does have the scraper that has the curved sides it so you can clean one rod of the grill grate at at time.