Griddle Me This...

gary_in_neenah

Super Moderator
Staff member
I've been considering adding a griddle to our outdoor patio area and I'm curious to the pros and cons of having one. What's the advantage of a griddle outdoors? Less mess? Taste? An excuse to drink beer at all hours of the day? Currently we have the family of a Weber Gas Grill and Charcoal Smoker, what am I missing?

 

russholio

Well-known member
We love our griddle! It can do just about everything a grill can do. Anything you can cook in a frying pan, you can do on a griddle (breakfast!) with the benefit of not splattering grease in your kitchen and on your stove. One down side is, cleanup is a little more involved, so we don't use it often in the winter (used our grill much more in the winter when we had it).
I would say a griddle is more versatile - - you can do more with it (even popcorn!).
 

skiroule

Well-known member
Can't answer your question Gary but I can tell you from my experience at the hardware store, they're becoming hugely popular. Used to have maybe one or two on display, in addition to the grills, now half our display models are griddles. Seems like it would be a nice option to have both. You could have a "bar burger" and a beer right in your backyard.
 

wiscrev

Well-known member
I love my Blackstone. It's really great when you have a lot of family in. Basically you can cook a full breakfast for 8-12 in ten minutes. Gives you more time for family stuff.
 

fishcrib

Active member
Have Blackstone griddle, really happy I bought it. Smash burgers, tacos (can heat all tortillas at once) ,ect.

Need to keep it oiled or it will rust.

I hear the weber griddles don't rust, not sure though
 

russholio

Well-known member
Have Blackstone griddle, really happy I bought it. Smash burgers, tacos (can heat all tortillas at once) ,ect.

Need to keep it oiled or it will rust.

I hear the weber griddles don't rust, not sue though
Some griddles in the Blackstone lineup use aluminum, maybe that's the case here? I don't know. Personally, we're trying to get away from using aluminum.
 

russholio

Well-known member
I have the larger Blackstone and it's cast iron. Heavy.
Ours are steel. But their portable camping models (they pack up similar to a Coleman stove) use aluminum with a non-stick surface, which helped me decide to not get one.

EDIT: They are also cold-rolled steel, but they do have a non-stick surface.
 
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