How to Care for Your Weber Gas Grill
If you have a
Weber Gas Grill, Weber has transitioned all Weber brand
grill brushes to be made with stainless steel bristles.
These brushes are soft enough to use on all porcelain
surfaces, yet tough enough for cleaning
burners.
Be sure to use a different brush for cleaning
burners than the one used to clean the inside of the grill to
avoid adding debris into the burner ports. We do not advise the
use of stainless steel brushes on porcelain unless they are the
Weber brand.
Gas Griller's
Toolbox
Store the following tools near your grill for quick, easy,
regular cleanups:
Stainless steel wire brush
Soap-embedded, fine steel wool pads (0 to 000 grade)
Mild dish soap
Sponge or dishcloth
Plastic or Teflon scraper
1" putty knife
Fitted foil Catch Pan Liners
Every time you
grill:
Clean the cooking grate. Before or after grilling, burn
off any residue by simply turning the grill on high until the
smoke stops, then brush the cooking grates with a wire grill
brush. Easy! (Note: Cast iron cooking grates require slightly
different care.)
As
needed:
Change the Catch Pan Liner. You can buy replacement Drip
Pans from your local Weber dealer. These pans are made to fit
your catch pan under the bottom tray of your Weber gas grill.
Regularly changing the liner also discourages animals from
visiting your grill for a midnight
snack.
Remove smoke stains
from the grill lid and side burner cover. Carefully
remove any smoke stains from the grill lid with a soapy, fine
steel wool pad and a very light touch. For the stainless steel
side burner cover, use only warm, soapy water and a sponge or
dishcloth even fine steel wool will scratch it. Smoke stains
are most likely to occur when your Weber gas grill is new, at
the seams of the lid where the porcelain-enameled hood meets
the endcaps. They can also accumulate around the thermometer
holder. These stains will stop appearing after your grill has
built up a natural seal from accumulated cooking
vapors.
Clean the Flavorizer
Bars. You really don't ever need to remove the Flavorizer
Bars from your grill to clean them, since preheating the grill
and burning off residue by turning the grill on "high" is
enough to turn any accumulated debris to ashes. Occasionally
brushing the bars off with a wire grill brush or scraping them
with a nylon, plastic or Teflon-putty knife should be
sufficient maintenance. Just be careful not to gouge the
porcelain-enamel finish.
Clean the warming racks
and control panel.A soapy, fine steel wool pad will keep the
warming racks clean and free of smoke stains and debris. It
will also remove grease spots and stains from the control
panel, but use a very light touch so as to not scratch the
porcelain. Rinse thoroughly.
Clean the outside of
the endcaps and cookbox. You should clean up grease
drippings on these exterior surfaces as soon as possible.
Grease is toxic to painted surfaces. Use mild, soapy water and
rinse thoroughly. Harsh or lemon-based cleaners can ruin the
paint finish on the endcaps and
cookbox.
If you need to touch up
the paint on the endcaps and cookbox, use high heat-resistant
(up to 700F) Barbecue Black or Fireplace Black spray paint.
(Please note that this paint is only for the outside of the
endcaps and cookbox, not for any porcelain-enameled finishes.)
First wash the surface to be painted and rough up any bare
spots with fine sandpaper. Then cover the porcelain hood with
paper or cardboard to prevent over-spraying onto the porcelain
finish. Spray only the outside of the lid endcaps. For the
cookbox, first cover any other parts of the grill with paper or
cardboard, then use the spray to touch up bare
spots.
Clean the bottom
tray. Remove the cool (never hot!) bottom tray from under
the grill and place over a trash can. Carefully scrape the
inside with a 1" putty knife or other straight, flat object.
Push the residue out through the bottom hole into the trash
can. To deep clean the tray, use warm, soapy water and a soapy,
fine steel wool pad, being careful not to scratch the porcelain
finish. (NEVER line the bottom tray with foil, as grease can
accumulate in the creases in the foil and cause a grease
fire.)
Never:
Wax or paint the lid. The finish on your grill is
baked-on porcelain enamel, so you never have to wax or paint
it. This finish is glossier and much more durable than paint,
and wax will only streak when the grill gets hot. So just wipe
the lid down with warm, soapy water when it gets dusty or
dirty. Easy!
NEVER use oven cleaner on
your gas grill. Oven cleaner is not friendly to the
painted surfaces of your grill, it can remove the paint.
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