
-Use a grill brush to keep your surfaces clean. Choose a brush according to your grill’s surface. For porcelain-coated grills, brass-bristle brushes are excellent and won’t damage that porcelain.
-To clean cast iron--use a stainless steel brush
-Clean your grease pan with a steel brush and a scraper. This is important because excessive debris buildup in grease pans is unsanitary and can become a fire hazard!
- Condition your grates with cooking oil spray to help prevent rust, and prepare your surface for your next grilling adventure.
-Are the lava rocks in your grill starting to crack and collect grease residue? If yes, it’s time for you to replace them with new lava rocks or porcelain briquettes. Because porcelain briquettes are less porous than lava rocks, they are easier to clean and are more efficient in the heat-radiating department--believe me, I’ve been there many times.
-Clean your burner assemblies (gas valves, venturis, and burners) on your grill from time to time. They are a nesting place for creepy crawlers, insects, spiders, and things that go bump in the night, and the openings can clog up. It’s not a fun picture. With a venture brush, you can clean the venturis’ openings and pathways. When you’re not in the “grillin’ mode” or do not plan on using your grill for a while, use venture covers to keep insects and debris out.
-Is the inside of your grill already rusty? You can repaint it. Spray paint your grill with high temperature grill paint—head on over to your local home/ department store to the grill supply department
- You want to keep the gas outlets on your burners open and debris free so the gas delivers to your entire burner surface for even heating.
-Don’t forget the grill cover! Grill covers are important and help keep the appearance of your grill in tiptop shape. When your cover becomes worn out or stained with residue, replace it.





Stumble It!
0 comments:
Post a Comment