Sale me on which one you use…
I have personally never used either one.
not my pictures
👊🏻💨💨💨

by KCs_BBQ

13 Comments

  1. diddlinderek

    I let the grease drip so the ashes all have a nice chicken flavour.

  2. cuhnewist

    If you’re going to use one, foil. Why? Ball it up and throw it away.

  3. Jeep_Boat_BBQ

    Maybe I am too OCD but as someone obsessed with gear I like the idea of the “smoke and sizzle” accessory to enable two zone cooking while also catching grease drips for easier cleaning. But foil works and doesn’t cost $70!!!

  4. goodfella_2014

    I mean it’s up to you. Ive done both but usually what im in the mood for….

  5. Status-Guide2722

    I use em both! Drip pan to direct air flow to the coal side and covered in foil with a foil pan for effortless cleanup… especially after a few beers 😂

  6. Foil…It also directs the airflow towards the coals.

    I only use those pans to put some water in. Not sure if it’s really helpful since most of my cooks want things dry.

    Still a novice!

  7. dahuckinator

    Ok so I have a drip cast iron pan from SNS. I have hardly ever used it. It was pretty terrible to clean and I won’t use it for catching grease again I’ll only use it to cook on. Lesson learned. If I’m going to smoke a pork butt or something I put a pan under it to catch grease to keep it clean. If I’m just doing burgers or some chicken thighs, I don’t use anything.

  8. WhileTrueTrueIsTrue

    Neither. I didn’t really know this was a thing. I’ve never put anything down on the cool side of my Weber going on like 9 years now.

  9. LetsGetMeshy

    For extended smoking of meats, I only bother with a foil pan with hot water in it (no foil surrounding it as pictured).

    For grilling, I don’t bother with anything to catch drips. Stuff mostly renders over the hot side, and any drippings get burned off in future cooks or cleaned out when the grill needs a clean.

  10. I_Want_A_Ribeye

    I use disposable cookie sheets. They fit nearly perfectly in the indirect side next to the slow n sear. You just need to bend up the corners a little bit. Works great, then chuck it if needed.