Mrs Mosca insisted I pick something to get for Christmas (remember Christmas? We were so innocent then), so I told her this would be nice. I grilled some chicken yesterday, and instead of doing a burn-off, I let the BGE cool down and I cleaned the grate today.


First, this thing is BIG. like, as long as your arm. It isn’t heavy, but it appears to be well made, from high quality plastic and strong metal. The cord is heavy duty and is three prong. Use is simple and intuitive, and doesn’t really need instructions: fill the reservoir with water, aim, and push the red button.

When working, the head vibrates and the machine shoots voluminous amounts of steam. It’s pretty impressive!
I worked each side of the grate for about a minute, trying a few different directions and alignments before quickly settling on the brush head aligned in the grate grooves. I used a little bit of pressure, but I didn’t bear down. I believe the result speaks for itself:

What I like best is the nooks and crannies, the little places where a regular brush doesn’t go. This is one seriously clean grill grate!
It’s a buck ten on Amazon, but I got it for an even hunnert at Williams-Sonoma. Honestly, I probably wouldn’t spent that on it, but as a gift, it’s nice that it performs. You’ll get what you paid for, definitely.
Will it hold up? Well, there’s nothing cheap-feeling about it, that’s for sure. I’d say that this will still be working 10 years from now. Let’s hope so, anyhow! That would come to $10/year, which is a deal.
First, this thing is BIG. like, as long as your arm. It isn’t heavy, but it appears to be well made, from high quality plastic and strong metal. The cord is heavy duty and is three prong. Use is simple and intuitive, and doesn’t really need instructions: fill the reservoir with water, aim, and push the red button.
When working, the head vibrates and the machine shoots voluminous amounts of steam. It’s pretty impressive!
I worked each side of the grate for about a minute, trying a few different directions and alignments before quickly settling on the brush head aligned in the grate grooves. I used a little bit of pressure, but I didn’t bear down. I believe the result speaks for itself:
What I like best is the nooks and crannies, the little places where a regular brush doesn’t go. This is one seriously clean grill grate!
It’s a buck ten on Amazon, but I got it for an even hunnert at Williams-Sonoma. Honestly, I probably wouldn’t spent that on it, but as a gift, it’s nice that it performs. You’ll get what you paid for, definitely.
Will it hold up? Well, there’s nothing cheap-feeling about it, that’s for sure. I’d say that this will still be working 10 years from now. Let’s hope so, anyhow! That would come to $10/year, which is a deal.
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