Spring!

Spring is amazing. The smells. The birds chirping again. The sun is getting stronger every day.

And the garage transforms from its winter slumber.

One of the things in my garage last winter was my 28″ Blackstone Griddle. We had done a few winter cooks with it, searing some steaks, making a few batches of pancakes. In the winter it does still work, but it’s not quite the same experience when gridding at zero degree temps in the garage.

Next fall I’m going to think real hard about coming up for a better winter home for it.

When spring hit, we decided it was time to move it out to the deck. Moving it wasn’t hard. I disconnected the propane tank, removed the steel top, and walked it through the house with my six year old carrying the lighter half. Then I was able to bring the top, and then the tank, both on my own. Score another win for the griddle. That was so easy.

As I put all eight burgers, then a pile of chicken, and a pile of potatoes on the griddle, I was once again mesmerized by the raw efficiency of the cooking process, and the deliciousness of the results.

It’s so good!

Camping & Griddles

Camping with a large propane griddle is downright magical.

We spent a week last summer camping with four other families. By mid-week they were bringing their foods over to our site to cook on the griddle I had brought with me for the first time. 

Heres why they came:

Dishes

One of the true pains of camping is the meal prep. There is never enough space. Sand and dirt are unavoidable. There is wind involved. Water is a limited resource. It’s real life.

When my friends came over with the food, I didn’t have to break out a pot. We just dumped it all on the griddle. Some steamed under the steaming dome. Some seared golden on the open surface. A single utensil for all things.

Cleanup

When the meal is done, cleanup is simple, requires little water, and no scrubbing. I squirt a bit of water onto any spots encrusted with food, let it sizzle for a moment, and then start scraping with the spatula. This typically takes less than a minute, and all of the food goes into the grease trap with the other trash. Keep a liner in your grease trap, and you just throw it away when it fills up. Brilliant.

Given the choice between dish washing, or scraping down a griddle, I choose the griddle every time.

Large quantities

My friends would look over and see me cooking an entire meal, veggies, meat, potatoes, buns, on a single surface. That’s magical. When. you can feed your whole family without the fuss of multiple cooking utensils, you can see all the time you’ve saved. Just throw it all on the griddle. It easily fits a whole (large) family’s worth of food. In fact, the larger the family, the more this is a big deal.

Steam

This is an interesting point. You can cook veggies perfectly by steaming them, while at the same time getting some nice char on a griddle. That’s a game changer. It’s a power combo. The first time I showed up at a camping meal with a huge bowl of griddled veggies, people wondered how I had done it. Steam is the answer. Put a massive pile of veggies on the griddle, push them into a pile, and cover with a steaming cover. Good things come of this.

Multi-food cooking

You can sear a delectable burger side by side with the steaming veggies. Let that sink in. Same surface, totally different applications. It’s good to have this tool at the ready.

Speed

The food cooks at a rapid rate because the surface can get so hot. It’s such an efficient cook surface, with the ability to be extremely hot, with huge heat retention because there is so much steel involved. You can cook that meal faster than any other option, including the open grill. It’s just fast. so fast. It’s hard to describe how good that feels when you’re camping.

Breakfast

You know breakfast is a big deal while camping. The first meal, kids waking up to the smell of coffee, bacon and pancakes. That’s a memory maker right there. Try doing that on an electric skillet, or a few pans over the propane stove, and you’ll be cooking for a good long time. A real long time. And oh the cleanup. Think of the horror you’re feeling right now. The pressure. The kids running off while you’re still making pancakes, and then afterwards when you’re cleaning the dishes. If you’ve never been there, believe me, it’s tough.

Imagine if you could get all the memories, and remove all of the pain. Would you do it? Bring that griddle, and you’re there. Pancakes in one or two batches, cooked in the grease of the bacon you just cooked. Sitting drinking the coffee waiting for the kids to wake up and seeing the smiles on their faces. Griddle is cleaned, pancakes on the table.

It’s so good

I could tell there was a lot of potential for it to go very well camping with a griddle. A giant plate of steel to cook on. Easy cleanup. All the benefits of a solid cooking surface. And you could even prep the food on it. Camping was the first time I made smash burgers. It eliminates one of my most despised steps in food prep – dealing with raw meat (mostly eliminates)

One of the big questions I had about the 28” Blackstone was how easy it would be to transport to the campground.  We pack light. By light, I mean we bring only what’s essential, because by the time we get everything in the minivan and car top carrier for our family of 7, it’s busting at the seams.  So if this griddle was coming along something else wasn’t going to make it.  It had better be worth it. Either small enough to have no impact, or so amazing that the impact was worth it. 

It was my first time camping with the griddle. I was interested enough with the tool to be happy about this friend-brings-uncooked-food situation. Turns out it was so easy for me and so helpful to them that it was a delight to contribute to the group in this way.


Why this steel? Cold Rolled Steel and Griddles

Who uses it?

You will often see “Cold Rolled Steel” in the marketing of various griddle makers. For example, at the Blackstone homepage, they write:

Forged with the sturdiest cold-rolled steel to last a lifetime

blackstoneproducts.com

Camp Chef merely mentions it in the “features” of their griddle offerings, like the Flat Top Grill 900.

Cold rolled steel griddle

Camp Chef

Interestingly, the Blue Rhino marketing is devoid of the claim of cold rolled steel. https://www.bluerhino.com/products/grills/razor. Nor do they suggest that it’s a stainless steel. Blue Rhino leaves that question unanswered. Even at the Lowes listing for the Blue Rhino Razor, it merely says “Rolled Steel”. Only in the “Specifications” section on the Lowes page does it say cold rolled steel. Who knows.

Before researching for this article, I assumed all griddles were made of cold-rolled steel. That is not the case!

What is Cold Rolled Steel?

Cold rolled steel is different because of the extra processing done to it rather than the actual chemical composition or grade of the material. Various steel manufacturers websites like “Metal Supermarkets“, explain this process for us. Cold rolled steel is worked a second time at room temperature in order to produce desirable characteristics.

Cold rolled steel is essentially hot rolled steel that has had further processing

Metal Supermarkets

The outcome of that extra processing is a finished product that has tighter dimensional tolerances, slightly higher strength, and more options for surface finish.

Why should we care what our griddles are made of?

It’s the surface we’re interested in.

On a griddle, we need the smoothest surface possible so that food doesn’t get embedded and stuck while cooking. The seasoning process can mitigate these surface imperfections to some extent, because minor imperfections can be filled in by the oil that is heated to the polymerization point. That oil sticks in those holes, and creates a smoother surface.

The seasoning process can only do so much for us though. Cold rolled steel brings us the rest of the way to the finish line.

We also get the side benefits of a very durable, long lasting pice of steel. Along with that comes a slightly higher price tag for the steel, in order to do that extra processing.

Are there other suitable materials for a griddle top?

Alternatives to cold rolled steel are:

  • Stainless steel (Sometimes used on flat-tops in restaurants. This is an even smoother surface, but requires more attention to cleanup. A backyard example is the Blue Rhino Grill Griddle)
  • Hot Rolled steel (Cheaper, rougher unless they’ve done other post-processing)
  • Cast Iron.

Side note on Cast Iron: Anyone who has used the budget friendly modern cast iron knows the process leaves significant roughness on the surface. If you need more evidence, watch this video by Cowboy Kent Rollins. The more expensive brands will do surface finishing of various kinds to create a machined, or sanded smooth surface. This can be a good option, but is more costly, especially at the surface size we’re looking for in a griddle.

What should you do about with this cold rolled steel knowledge?

Look for cold rolled steel in any griddle you’re considering. If you don’t see it in the marketing material, just take a closer look at the surface, and thickness of the griddle top. You might still really like the griddle!

Lastly, let’s all take a moment, and be glad for the Griddle makers who are not just making a very useful piece of equipment, but also one made out of quality materials.

Griddled Sourdough Pesto Turkey: A Special Grilled Cheese

This sandwich is amazing

This is easily one of the best sandwiches I’ve ever had. It’s something we stumbled upon this summer while combining stuff we had in the fridge. There’s something special about the crispy sour bread and the soft melted cheese inside combined with delicious contrasting flavors of a strong earthy pesto and stone ground mustard sharpness. I love this sandwich.

Recipe:

Ingredients

  1. Sourdough bread (we get ours from aldi or Costco.)
  2. Oven roasted turkey breast. Costco has some delicious thick cut turkey.
  3. Cheese. I’ve done both Colby and Havarti. Equally delicious. Pre-sliced havarti made it quicker to assemble, for obvious reasons.
  4. Pesto. Again, Costco has an amazing jar of pesto that works magnificently for this.
  5. Stone ground mustard.
  6. Butter, real.

Procedure

  • Fire up the griddle. Get it medium hot.
  • Head to your food prep area.
  • Grab two slices of bread
  • Butter one side of both slices. I like to put one slice of bread face down, butter up. Then put the other slice on top of that, butter down, face up.
  • Pesto that thing up. It’s delicious. Make sure you put enough to taste.
  • Layer the turkey and cheese on top of the pesto.
  • Spread stone ground mustard on the top of the turkey/cheese.

At this point you should have a sandwich on a plate with one open face.

  • Bring your prepped sandwich out to the griddle (or multiple if you’re making a treat for a friend, or your whole family). Take the slice of bread with all the goods on it and put it butter down on the griddle. Your griddle should fit a bunch of these should the need arise. Put the other slice on top, butter side up!
  • Optional step: put the steaming/melting dome over the sandwich to speed the cheese melting and keep things soft inside.
  • Wait until that sandwich is a perfect golden brown on that first side. Flip it. Keep the dome on if the cheese isn’t melted yet.
Put that sammy on the griddle

Results:

Ideally you will have the crispiest thinnest layer of butter fried bread on the outside of the sourdough. Something magical happens there. The sour flavors with the butter. Yes please.

You might be asking yourself “why on a griddle?”. Because it’s awesome!!! Everything is better on the griddle. I haven’t figured out why yet. There is something right about the experience of cooking this sandwich on the griddle.

Here it is again. It’s amazing. I’m not kidding that it’s high in my top five sandwiches ever.

Griddles are just the best

There are times in life when a truly transformative tool comes along. For me, the griddle was one of those.

Mealtime

I have five young kids. On any given day my wife and I are cooking up a mess of food, and sometimes two messes at the same meal (dietary restrictions), which can result in a giant pile of dishes.

Kitchen cleanup can be touch-and go after meals, depending on how much wrangling has to be done to keep the young ones on track for the evening. And it has been HOT outside.  Seriously hot. Don’t get me started about how I feel about heating food inside the house.  

There have been many times my wife and I finish up an evening thinking “there has to be a way to make mealtime better”.

The dishes alone after a full meal prep and table service are daunting. I often find myself staring into the full sink thinking “this can wait” as we attempt to finish up the evening with parental integrity.

There has to be a way to make mealtime better

For some reason doing the dishes was THE dreaded chore in my family growing up. Repetition only served to increase that sentiment. Perhaps you can see why I say: eliminating a single regular offender from the sink is a big deal. Particularly if it has to be scrubbed, which means the sink needs to be relatively empty to get the necessary clearance to get after it. Clearly the best way to wash a dish is to not use it in the first place. 

Look at all that food

After I finished my first full meal on the griddle, I tossed some water onto the surface  to release a pieces of food, scraped it down and gave it a light coating of oil. Then it hit me

I’m done. And I don’t have to wash anything

Like… for real done. The oil would smoke for a minute, cool, and then the layer nearest the steel surface would polymerize. The remaining oil would protect the steel from moisture.

I brought the pile of food inside, set it on the table and declared “The food is ready!” It wasn’t just the meat. I had steamed and grilled veggies, toasted buns, and cooked up some burgers. So if you tally up all the dishes I avoided using that night it is significant. Bonus: it remained a nice 75 degrees in the house.

This is going to be good. Very good. 

Why Do We Love It

Consider the following about the humble Griddle: 

  • Has a very large cooking surface
  • It can reach a very high temperature, and does it fast. 
  • It is non-stick by virtue of a cast-iron like seasoned surface
  • It is cold rolled, rather than cast (aka – extra smooth)
  • It has sides.  Seriously.  This matters. 
  • Clean up is a breeze
  • It can be used for the whole meal
  • You can cut on it
  • It sounds awesome.  Like, the literal sound of using it. 

There are just some times that you need all of the right things in concert together to make a single moment that’s bigger than the parts alone would suggest. 

With that in mind, we’re going to do a series on this blog that is going to explore the world of things you can only do on a griddle.  This idea will get mulled over, written about, exercised, and experimented with.

I’m hoping this will challenge us here at Griddle Smith to think outside the box, and try new things.  I’m sure there are ways we can utilize the griddle that our grill-trained brains haven’t even considered. And I hope we can challenge you to use a griddle to its full potential, or to maybe this will be the inspiration you need to make the jump and get a griddle!