Cottage Life

A grill for every need, budget, and circumstance

WHY IS IT THAT ARTICLES about buying a new outdoor cooking device must read like motivational jock-talk from an armchair coach? It seems all but pre-ordained that they are full of urgent advice that is both competitive and status-seeking, where readers will “up their grilling game” and “own summer” if they just buy a grill that is bigger and faster and hotter thanks to a patented “Ionizing Plasma Scorch Plate.” Want to be the envy of your neighbours or the best dad ever? Pick up a “Pecos Bill Ranchero XL” and show them this ain’t your first rodeo. Everyone knows this is a bunch of baloney, directed mostly at men because we seem to be highly susceptible to such talk. And everyone also knows that not a single one of their neighbours gives a sweet damn about the kind of grill they own.

So why bother? Wouldn’t it be better to acknowledge that there are many different kinds of cottage cooks, from early adopters who want the latest and greatest to the most reluctant meal providers who are happy to warm up frozen burgers and chicken wieners? At home, I own three grills (see “How Many Grills is Too Many?” opposite), which I feel to be the bare minimum for my sort of activities. But at the cottage, where I’d rather be swimming than prepping porchetta, I have an inherited gas grill that is almost ready for the scrap pile. But it cooks dogs and burgers and chicken and chops just fine, so it serves my particular cottage needs.

Maybe you don’t need a grill at all. In which case, you have saved some money and need not read further. For the rest of us, things get more complicated: with the exception of dedicated smokers (wood, gas, or electric), most outdoor cookers claim to be all things to everyone, the one true grail for direct grilling, slow-smoking, and hot-roasting, even acting as an oven replacement for pizza, bread, and baked beans. The (barbecue) rub is that these declarations are both true and false because while just about any grill can pull off standard cooking operations, certain machines excel at one or two styles. Like Mom would say: “You can’t be good at everything.” The trick is to find the grill or smoker that’s really good at making the food you like best.

THE UTILITY PLAYER

GAS GRILLS

There’s a reason just about everyone owns at least one gas grill. It’s the all-around workhorse for most cottage cooking chores because it’s simple to operate and doesn’t require any special techniques to get good results. Gassers are great at direct-heat cooking for most of our sear-and-flip favourites like steaks, chops, and burgers, and they can also hot-roast with indirect heat provided the cooking surface is big enough to keep the meat away from the

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Cottage Life

Cottage Life2 min read
We Revamped An Old Woodstove, And It Works Like New Again
AT NIGHT, WE WATCH the moon rise through the white pines surrounding our little trailer in Lunenburg County, N.S. We’re nestled between Christmas tree farms, there are sheep nearby, and it’s a short drive to Rissers Beach (where a great white shark w
Cottage Life4 min read
Quonsets Are The New Mighty-strong, Energy-efficient Rural Residences Of The Future
WHAT’S SEMI-CYLINDRICAL, made of steel, and is changing the way we think about building homes and cottages? Quonset huts. While their futuristic appearance may seem ultra-modern, they’ve actually been around since the 1940s. The structures were devel
Cottage Life2 min read
An In-floor Heating System That Saves On Electricity
IF YOU’VE EVER warmed your toes with a hot-water bottle, you know the principle behind Michael Salter’s cottage heating system. Except this “bottle” holds 4,500 litres, it’s way too big to fill from a kettle, and you’ll never fit it beneath the cover

Related