How to Turn Your Barbecue Grill into a Baking Oven
If you have an outdoor barbecue grill with a cover that closes over the top of the grill, you can turn it into an outdoor oven. Why would you want to do that? I can think of a few reasons!
- To have another baking oven on holidays or other occasions when you really use it.
- To have an alternative on days you don’t want to heat the kitchen
- To expand your camping-out cooking repertoire
- To have a way to cook and bake during power outages.
- To have an alternative appliance as electricity rates spike.
General
Experiment
You can bake nearly anything with a covered grill. There are no hard and fast rules. I’ve discovered a few things that work better on my particular grill, but your grill may be completely different with equally different outcomes. Being willing to experiment is the key to making an outdoor grill, a second oven, and cooking appliance.
Location
I use my outdoor grill year-round—and yes, during winter here in Northern Colorado. The grill sits on our patio near the kitchen entrance. That makes it super convenient. Location is super important. Determine how to make your grill as convenient as possible, and you’ll be more likely to see it as a viable option.
Cover
If your grill doesn’t have a cover, improvise with a large pot to invert over the item you will be “baking.” The heat rises and circulates in the covered area as in your oven. The heat source can be charcoal, gas, or wood. However, gas is preferable because it is easier to control and does not transfer a smoked taste to baked items.
Temperature
This is the challenge. Temperature control is the hardest part of using a gas grill as an oven. A built-in accessory thermometer can be useful, but these can easily be off by more than 50°F, which can really interfere with whether you’re baking a great meatloaf, a whole chicken, or homemade bread.
If your grill has a temperature gauge installed, you’re in luck. If not, you’ll need to get a small oven thermometer to more accurately regulate the inside temperature of your grill when it is closed or the inverted pot.
Pre-heat
Always fire up the grill for a few minutes to set the temperature before baking.
Use a buffer
Never set the baking pan directly on an outdoor grill when baking on an outdoor grill. It would help if you had something heatproof to act as a buffer so that your baking pan it’s not sitting directly on your grill rack. I’ve used an inverted cast iron pan or a couple of bricks to keep the baking pan well above the heat source so air can freely circulate.
Peek infrequently
It’s okay to do a little peeking, but try to limit it. Every time you open the grill, you’re allowing the equivalent of an arctic storm to blow through. As you gain experience, your need to peek will lessen. Adjust the heat if your baked items are browning too fast or slow.
I cannot instruct you on specific grill temperature settings because every grill will be different. Permit yourself to practice, then improvise as necessary until you achieve success!
Pizza on the grill
Unlike baking cookies, casseroles, etc., on a pan that is elevated from the grill itself, you really can make pizza on your grill, provided you follow these instructions:
- Roll out the pizza dough to your desired thickness.
- Transfer the rolled crust to a pizza peel on which you have sprinkled cornmeal to act as a release agent. Or you can use a cookie sheet with no lip on at least one side. This will allow you to easily transfer the dough to your hot grill by allowing it to slide off the sheet or peel. Cornmeal acts as tiny ball bearings to help that dough slide off your baking surface.
- Heat the grill.
- Moisten a paper towel with oil and rub the grates.
- Slide the dough onto the grill. Observe it and turn the dough to grill the other side when the bottom browns.
- Now you can add your sauce of choice, toppings, and cheese.
- Close the cover (or use your inverted pot) to allow the toppings to cook and melt.
Bake bread
Yes, you can learn to bake bread in your grill-turned-outdoor oven. Think about it: All you need to bake bread is an enclosed heated space. A Â grill works perfectly to do that. Flatbread is super easy, but so are breads that require rising times to turn out well. Remember that grills can get much hotter than a kitchen oven, so temperature control is mandatory, albeit not as precise.
Start with grill-baked flatbread. Once you’ve perfected that, you’ll be ready to take on more delicate breads. A few tips will help guide you toward grill-baked bread perfection.
- While you can back any bread recipe on the grill, getting the best results will likely require trial and error. Consider starting with pre-made frozen rolls or dough from the supermarket to get the hang of the heat. Try placing frozen loaves or rolls directly on a preheated grill at 475-500F. Watch to make sure they don’t burn, and remove them from the grill when they are a nice golden brown.
- A good next step is to test baking no-knead Artisan Bread on the grill. You’ll improve your success rate when you “bake” the dough in a covered Dutch oven set on a couple of bricks sitting directly on the grill.
- Consider grilling with indirect heat since direct heat can cause the bottom of the bread to burn. If your gas grill has multiple burners, light those on the sides, leaving the center burner(s)unlit. Allow the grill to come to 475-500F. Now set the covered Dutch oven in the middle and close the grill lid. Now you have replicated a baking oven.
Pro Tip
If you have a pizza stone (unglazed terra cotta tile works well and is much cheaper than a commercial pizza stone), you can lay this directly on the grill. Allow it to heat on Low heat to avoid cracking the stone. Once it is good and hot, slide the pizza or flatbread dough onto the stone. Once browned, turn the crust over and proceed as above.
Get help
The folks at Weber make great outdoor grills and have compiled A Recipe for Every Type of Griller on the Weber website. Check it out—especially this flatbread pizza! You’ll build confidence quickly and bake outdoors in no time!
Cleaning tip
Here’s a slick way to create a self-cleaning feature on any barbecue grill. Place a few sheets of aluminum foil over the grill, so you have several thicknesses. Crank up the heat to the hottest possible settings, close the cover, and allow to heat for 30 minutes. Like the self-cleaning setting on your traditional over, this turns everything on the grill to ash.
Caution
Before attempting this, check your barbecue warranty to make sure this will not do anything to void a warranty that is still in effect.
Photo credit: BlackBirdCD
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At 9000ft, the wind can suck the heat away. A friend suggested using a welding blanket over the grill! It holds the heat in and it wasn’t very expensive on Amazon.
Thanks for these suggestions! I also use my grill year-round.
For easy cleaning, I have a grill brush and a spray bottle of plain water. After pre-heating the grill, I spray the racks with water and scrub any stuck-on crud with the brush. This literally steam-cleans the racks. Works like a charm!
Regarding baking stones, Julia Childs once recommended going to the hardware store to get tiles. She was chagrined when someone pointed out that those tiles are not food safe as they might well contain heavy metals and other contaminants. I’d stick with baking stones that are sold specifically for food just to be safe. Otherwise, it sounds like a fun challenge to break the tedium of lockdown.
I’ve been using our gas grill as an oven for over 30 years. Started one HOT summer and I had a whole turkey to cook. Certainly did not want the oven on all day inside! Prepared it in a roasting pan as if it were going in the oven with foil over it, too. It turned out so well, that’s the only way we do it now, especially for Thanksgiving (no matter how cold & snowy it is; just shovel a path). And then as an added bonus, I have a full oven available for everything else, no waiting. Then one year our oven quit. Back to the grill, for meatballs, breads, stews, you name it. . . Very handy indeed. However, I do use thicker pots and pans like cast iron or broiler pans. And indirect heat at times. Great article, as always, Mary! Thanks!
We use our grill a great deal of the year too, even in Minnesota! If we are lucky, the gas canister lasts the year. However, if I am taking the time to bake something, I want it done right! Also, gas is expensive to use. Seems to me that this is an expensive option for baking, and fiddly.
This was a super fantastic tip! Thank you. We use our grill during snow times too! We use the grill as an oven as well. I guess we just didn’t “think” about it for use during the summer, except for the meats and veggies.
Mary, you are a treasure indeed!