Grillgrates : not sure I'm understanding the value in them...
So, recently I acquired some Grillgrates... I've been curious about them for a while, but in part because I own a PG500 and can pretty much grill anything I'd ever want to without any need for more 'heat', I just didn't know if they would add anything to my ability to grill. But anyway, I did obtain some recently... and have had a chance to use them a couple times now. First was as part of a reverse sear of some boneless pork chops, the next was to 'grill' some burgers... In both cases, I was using a conventional pellet grill, with the heat shield and drip tray removed...
I've never been the kinda guy who thinks those dark lines on grilled food do much for the flavor of the food, I choose to go with the flat side of the Grillgrates for both of these cooks...
So, the reverse sear on my pork was good, but I caused a bit more 'burning' than I intended, probably due to lack of experience with the grill grates. Also, likely because of the sugar content of the rub that I used to season them. All in all the flavor was actually quite good... they had smoked for at least 1.5 hours, so that really was the key to the flavor. I don't cook or eat pork chops very often, so even though these were a bit over cooked ( IT was like 175F by the time I got them off the grill ), they were still VERY good... I think with a bit more practice, I could probably get the 'sear' to be nice and brown , rather then black... So, mostly I'll chalk this up to inexperience.
Next, I got a hankering for some burgers... I was feeling lazy, and didn't think burgers really needed reverse searing, so I just set out to grill some burgers outside. After charring the entire surface of my pork chops, I decided I'd try to pay a bit more attention to the temperature of the grill grates before I put the burgers on... I did some testing in my house with a frying pan, getting it up to about the temperature I would use if I was cooking burgers in a pan, I determined that about 450F to maybe 500F was more than sufficient to cook burgers. So, I figured that if I set the pellet grill to about 300F, or maybe 350F , and hoped the Grillgrates would get up to 450F or so. I apparently got pretty lucky on my guess and found the surface of the grill grates near the outer edges was about 450F, with the center part that sat directly above the firepot was running a bit above 500F. I figured I could easily work with that temperature range. ( temperature readings determined with IR gun ). Armed with a Thermopop to check internal temperature , the burgers went on... waited a few minutes while one side cooked... flipped the burgers, pretty decent 'sear' on that side, so I'm moving along happily... So, as my hood was open on the grill, the controller started dumping more pellets in the firepot, the fire got hotter, the grill grates got hotter... Closed the lid, the temperature reading shot up over 450F before it started to level off... Fearing that my burgers were going to get blackened like my chops did, I opened the grill again... of course that made the controller think it needed to stoke the fire again, so the firepot continued to burn hotter and hotter. I eventually decided I needed to turn the controller down to keep the fire from getting too hot. I managed to flip the burger and pull them off when they reached a nice 165F ( I don't like rare burgers, never did ). The burgers looked great... nice light little crust to the surface, etc... However, to me, they tasted virtually no different then if I'd grilled them on a frying pan in my house, so I'm left thinking to myself, that I could have cooked these burgers in the house in half the time, with a lot less fiddling around.
So, I'm on the fence about these Grillgrates. I like how they got pretty hot pretty fast when I went from 'smoking' the pork chops to 'searing' them... and I loved the flavor I got with my reverse sear chops. However, with the burgers, I just could not taste anything resembling outdoor cooked burgers, so I'm not sure there was any value to me in cooking the burgers that way, vs what I could do on a frying pan, or flat top griddle. Also... I found that the lacke of control for the firepot made using them pretty tricky. I think the lack of precise temperature control was the biggest thing that has me scratching my head. I mean, how can I manage to get the temperature at the grill grates at something close to perfect and then keep it there on a conventional pellet grill???
Now, bare in mind, that I do have a PG500, and it's controller has features, that allow me to limit the high output of the firepot, and I've come to really understand how to control temperature using it's controller, adjusting the HHT setting , so that it doesn't rage out of control when the doors are open on the grill. I can't help but think all pellet grills should have such a feature, for times when your doing something like the grilling I was trying to do with the Grillgrates. With conventional pellet grill controller, I can't think of a good way to limit the high output when the lid is open, making it seem like the only way to control the temperature of the grill grates is by doing some kind of elaborate dance of opening and closing the grill lid just the right amount and/or timing... But all in all, I'm not sure I really understand just what all the fuss is about in regard to Grillgrates.
To be fair, I haven't yet tried them right side up... so, maybe that's the magic bullet???