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(Photo: Wes Siler)

Meater Plus Is the Best Wireless Meat Thermometer

With a reliable connection, helpful app, and accurate temperatures, the Meater Plus helps elevate outdoor cooking

Published:  Updated: 
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(Photo: Wes Siler)

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The secret to cooking meat? A good thermometer. And, thanks to the $100 Meater Plus鈥 165-foot range, surprisingly useful smartphone app, and accurate temperature readings, I鈥檓 cooking that meat easier, with more consistent results. Here are my takeaways.听

Meater Plus Overview

  • Cost: $100
  • Compatible with Android and iPhone
  • Maximum internal temperature up to 212掳F
  • Includes charging base
  • Pros: Simple app, generous Bluetooth range, reliable and accurate readings
  • Cons: Thick probe diameter, limited learning opportunities in the app, dubious suggested internal meat temperatures

What Is It?

Meater Plus is a wireless meat thermometer system consisting of three components: a five-and-quarter-inch-long stainless steel and ceramic probe, its magnetic bamboo base, and a smartphone app.

That probe contains two thermometers: One embedded in the steel portion reads internal temperatures, while another in the ceramic rear measures ambient temps. It communicates with its charging base via Bluetooth, which then amplifies the signal to give it that impressive 165-foot range. The smartphone app displays both readings, allows you to track progress over time, offers suggested target temperatures, and calculates cook time.

Equipped with a magnetic base, I find it convenient to keep the Meater Plus clipped under the lid of the pellet hopper on my Traeger. I’ll move it inside my kitchen once winter hits, just to protect the internal battery from sub-freezing temperatures.

Who Is It For?

I鈥檓 an experienced amateur chef, meat lover, and even enjoy butchering my own wild game. Several years ago I set out to master the art of grilling a steak, and offer my friends a standing bet: if you can cook a better one, dinner and drinks are on me. Many a professional and hobbyist have tried, but thus far my wallet has remained closed.

The is adding a lot of convenience for me. It means I can leave the grill behind to focus on sides, conversations, or dogs, and it helps me give guests a more accurate estimate on when dinner鈥檚 going to be ready. I think it鈥檒l add a similar level of convenience for virtually anyone else.

What if you鈥檙e less experienced, or worry the high-tech Meater Plus might prove too complicated? You needn鈥檛 worry. Paring the thermometer with your phone and using the Meater app are some of the easiest, most streamlined experiences I鈥檝e had with wireless gadgets. There鈥檚 not really anything you can do wrong, and you鈥檒l get accurate results every time you use the system.

The black ceramic portion of the probe is flared, like a golf tee. (Photo: Wes Siler)

Meater Plus Design

There鈥檚 some clever stuff going on here, underneath鈥檚 the system鈥檚 sleek, simple surface.

A single AAA battery installed in the rear of the charging base keeps the probe charged. The battery inside the probe itself can run for up to 24 hours, while that AAA will recharge it up to 100 times.

That base also serves as a Bluetooth signal repeater. Like most low power Bluetooth devices, the probe itself can transmit a signal only about 30 feet. So long as the base is located somewhere within that distance, it’ll read the signal, and then send that to your phone. The probe cannot connect with your phone on its own; you must use it with the base.

Made from open pore bamboo, the base complements the probe鈥檚 good looks. This setup should look at home anywhere from a picnic table to a fancy kitchen.

The probe is dishwasher safe, but can more quickly just be wiped clean with a sponge and rinsed under the tap. In camp, I鈥檝e just been wiping it clean with a paper towel just after it comes out of the meat. There鈥檚 no surfaces on it that will hang onto any food residues.

And it does work outdoors. Because the system is battery powered and uses a Bluetooth connection, there鈥檚 no need for power outlets, cell signal, or WiFi.

The maximum temperature the probe can take without damage is 212 degrees internal (the temperature of boiling water), and 527 degrees ambient. There鈥檚 a visible notch on the probe鈥檚 body that marks the minimum insertion depth, so you keep that internal thermometer safe. The app will warn you if you approach dangerous temperatures.

It’s really convenient not having to worry about removing a wired probe as you pull meat off the grill. (Photo: Wes Siler)

Using the Meater Plus

I鈥檝e owned my Meater Plus for about a month now, and have been using it both at home and on camping trips in that time.

On the first camping trip, I cooked both sirloin steaks and chicken breasts for a large group, over an open campfire. While Meater Plus doesn鈥檛 claim to be an instant read thermometer, inserting it in a new piece of meat produced stable temperature readings in under 30 seconds. And moving the very hot probe around between pieces of meat was easy using tongs, thanks to the flared head.

Cooking on a campfire is inherently inconsistent. The temperature produced by the fire will vary over time, and on different areas of the grill. But, because it measures both ambient and internal temperatures, Meater Plus produces solid ballpark estimates on total cook times. It also allowed me to move back from the fire, and enjoy a beer without the need to hover over the heat.

But the ribeye I cooked myself at home last night is probably most indicative of the system鈥檚 utility. I was tired, and didn鈥檛 feel like bothering with the two grills required by my best steak in the world method. So, I just used on my Timberline. That calls first for a smoke at 225 degrees grill temperature, while the steak comes up to 120 internal. Then you rest the meat, bring the grill up to 500, and return the steak, flipping it halfway to the 130 internal target temperature.

Using Meater Plus, I set an initial target of 120 internal, plus a 60 second warning alarm. I threw the steak on the grill, then cooked sweet potatoes and prepped asparagus in my kitchen, while chatting with my wife and wrestling with my dogs. Even one external and three internal walls, and about 100 feet away from the grill, I didn鈥檛 have to worry about anything until I heard my phone chime. I brought the steak inside without having to pull a wired probe, used the app to the change the target to 130, then repeated the process 15 minutes later. The results were perfect, and the attention I had to devote was basically nothing.

Meater鈥檚 temperature-over-time graph wasn鈥檛 super useful this time, but I think that will be handy for longer smokes. With very fatty cuts of meat like a brisket, you experience what鈥檚 known as a 鈥渟tall,鈥 when the amount of fat turning to liquid actually provides enough of a cooling effect to temporarily halt cooking progress. The key to nailing a brisket or similar is taking advantage of that stall to fill the meat with moisture and flavor, and now armed with Meater Plus, I鈥檒l have more information about the the beginning, end, and duration of that phase, which will better enable me to employ tools like grill temperature and aluminum foil to take advantage of it.

One thing Meater Plus will not do is teach you how to cook. I鈥檝e read other reviews that have complained that, while the system can estimate total cook time pretty well, .

These screenshots from the app, while cooking the ribeye, show the various functions. The app is smart enough to know that pulling the ribeye at 132 will be enough to bring it up to the 135 target while resting. (Photo: Meater)

Likes

  • Simple app delivers information without hassle.
  • Tested against other thermometers and in known ambient temperatures, readings prove accurate.
  • 165-foot range is generous, and seems undiminished by internal and external walls.
  • Easy to clean.
  • Reliable connection. In the space of a month, it鈥檚 never dropped a connection on its own, or failed to reconnect immediately if I walked outside its range.

Dislikes

  • App could provide more learning opportunities with suggested flip temperatures.
  • If you plan to leave home, you鈥檒l need to pair Meater Plus with a tablet or similar that will remain behind in order for it to connect with WiFi, so you can monitor temperatures while away.
  • The probe is about twice the diameter of a normal wired thermometer. It may prove too thick for some very thin cuts of meat.
  • Meater鈥檚 suggested temperatures鈥145 for a rib-eye鈥攁re way too high to produce edible results.
A good thermometer should give you consistent results like this, every time. (Photo: Wes Siler)

Should You Buy One?

At $100, Meater Plus is around ten times the price of simple, analog meat thermometers, and three times the price of basic digital thermometers with wired probes. The app鈥檚 estimated cooking times and suggested temperatures aren鈥檛 really enough to justify that premium, but the ability to remotely monitor temperatures from basically anywhere in your home is. If you regularly cook meat in your kitchen, on a grill, or in camp, Meater Plus will make the experience a lot more convenient.

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