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We put the Traeger and Big Green Egg head-to-head to see which worked best.
We put the Traeger and Big Green Egg head-to-head to see which worked best.
Indefinitely Wild

Traeger vs. Big Green Egg: Which Is Better for Grilling Meat?

We threw a slice of venison on the two fanciest grills around to find out which cooks best

Published:  Updated: 
We put the Traeger and Big Green Egg head-to-head to see which worked best.

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Both propane and charcoal briquets pollute the taste of your meat. That鈥檚 why serious barbecuers use either pellets made from select hardwoods听or natural lump charcoal, containing only hardwood. Those two approaches are epitomized by Traeger and Big Green Egg, respectively. But, is one better than the other? The answer surprised us.听

is a wood pellet grill. In it, pellets are drawn from a side-mounted hopper into a central burn chamber by an auger, then ignited by a hot metal rod. Those mechanisms run on electricity, so you鈥檝e got to plug it in. It offers precise, digital temperature control integrated with meat thermometers. To operate it, all you have to do is fill the hopper with pellets, turn it on, and dial in whatever temperature you want鈥攁nything from 鈥渟moke鈥 to 450 degrees Fahrenheit.听

In contrast, the is a strictly analog experience. The Japanese Kamado-style grill is a big, egg-shaped ceramic box that facilitates exact temperature control via adjustable airflow. Its shape and materials both distribute heat evenly and hold in moisture. The听Egg is more听capable of hitting听both extremely low temperatures (150-degree听smokes are possible) and extremely high ones than a typical charcoal grill. My regular steak cooking method on it involves 1,200-degree听sears. It鈥檚 also capable of holding whatever temperature you want for extended periods. Once you鈥檝e started it and stabilized the temperature, it鈥檚 easy to set it at 200 degrees and walk away for eight hours while your brisket smokes. It鈥檒l hold that temperature evenly for that much time or longer.听

For this test, I wanted to try a side-by-side comparison on the same cut of a difficult-to-perfect meat: venison backstrap. I鈥檝e owned the Egg for two years now,听and Traeger sent over this Lil Tex Pro for the test in December. I鈥檝e used both extensively for grilling everything from to to , and even , smoking, searing, and or just meals for me and Wiley. Once or twice, I鈥檝e even cooked veggies on them. So, while we鈥檒l be comparing both grills鈥 on that piece of venison, this review will also be drawn from wider long-term experience on both products.听

The Meat

Not the most cleanly-cut backstrap, but I guess some user error is the price you pay to do it yourself.
Not the most cleanly-cut backstrap, but I guess some user error is the price you pay to do it yourself.

I one day last fall just before dark, gutted it, then carried the deer off the mountain with a few friends, before butchering it that night with the aid of a 13-year-old girl. I was rusty and screwed up the first six inches of the first five-foot backstrap I pulled out of it. As luck would have it, that also happened to be the piece of meat I pulled out of the freezer the night before the test. So not the prettiest presentation, but still a great tasting hunk of venison utterly free from the gaminess that results from non-immediate kills and tardy meat processing.听

For a marinade, I riffed on , adding some lemon juice and skewing heavy on the wine.听

Like other wild game, venison is incredibly lean and, as a result,听very sensitive to cooking temperature and time. It takes much more careful attention to temperature than you鈥檙e used to from making chicken or steak, and typically lower temperatures for less time. Overcook it by even a few degrees听and it鈥檚 ruined.听

I cut this hunk of backstrap in half, evenly, and set out to achieve a perfect 130-degree听medium rare on both grills.听

The Cooking Process

A simple hairdryer is the cheapest, simplest way to force air into the Big Green Egg to achieve higher temperatures and quicker starts.
A simple hairdryer is the cheapest, simplest way to force air into the Big Green Egg to achieve higher temperatures and quicker starts.

For the Traeger, I followed their own recipe exactly. To start, you plug the grill in, open the lid, turn it to smoke,听and wait five minutes for the grill to warm up. Then you dial in whatever temperature you want. You don鈥檛 have to futz with a lighter or vents or anything like that, there鈥檚 just a switch, a dial,听and a digital temperature display. For venison, Traeger calls for a 20 minute cook time at 450 degrees. You 鈥渟ear鈥 the meat for a few minutes on each side, then听stick the thermometer probe in it and wait for 130-degree听to display.听

I put quotes around 鈥渟ear鈥 because this is a big limitation on this grill. With a maximum achievable temperature of only 450 degrees, you鈥檙e not getting the kind of quick, high temperature effect you鈥檇 achieve on the Egg听or with a cast iron pan on a stove top. For a dinner party the other night, I used that cast iron to put a more significant sear on two antelope shoulders before roasting them in the Traeger for an hour at 300 degrees. Those results on thicker cuts of meat were absolute perfection, but with a thinner slice of meat, I wanted to follow Traeger鈥檚 directions exactly for this test.听

Because the Traeger is combusting unburnt wood, it produces a significant amount of smoke throughout its cooking cycle. This is the reason why different varieties of wood are available鈥攖he smoke plays a big role in the flavor of the meat.听

To start the Egg, I first cleared out all the ash in its trap to ensure best-possible results, then loosely stacked large lumps of natural charcoal in its fire pit. As I went, I听put听six Vaseline-coated cotton balls where they could听best ignite the charcoal.听I touched those off with a long barbecue lighter, then left the lid open and the bottom intake vent wide until the charcoal was strongly lit. It鈥檚 not until that point that you can close the lid and begin manipulating temperature via the adjustable intake and exhaust.听

Because airflow is your only tool to adjust temperature on the Egg, forced induction can be a major help in more quickly varying temperature or achieving extremely high temperatures. A huge variety of accessories are available for Big Green Eggs, but most are very expensive. Instead of a purpose-made, clip-on fan, I simply employ a $9 hair dryer for blowing extra air into the grill.听

This aids with startup, helping you achieve a complete burn earlier on, but it鈥檚 also how I quickly bring the Egg up to very high temperatures for searing. To cook the venison, I used the same method I use for a good ribeye: a quick sear on both sides at 1,200 degrees, then pull the meat off and allow it to decompress while I shut the vents on the Egg and bring it down to 300 degrees. There, I stabilize the temperature and cook the meat for about an additional 10 minutes per side, inserting a meat thermometer and checking its temperature until desired results are achieved.听

You can use wood chips to flavor meat on the Egg, but I typically only do that for smoking. You听buy those separately, soak them in water overnight, then put them on the coals just before you鈥檙e ready to cook, so it takes some additional听planning.听

Cooking Times

Official IndefinitelyWild meat taster, Wiley, hard at work. I trade him wild game for complete home security.
Official IndefinitelyWild meat taster, Wiley, hard at work. I trade him wild game for complete home security.

It takes the Traeger about 20 minutes to come up to 450 degrees听and the venison needed about 20 minutes of cooking time. So figure 40 minutes minimum鈥攁 few more if you鈥檙e not standing right there, turning the dial up to 450 as soon as the pellets start smoking.听

Giving the Egg a little TLC before starting it (cleaning ash, carefully听stacking charcoal) takes a minute or two, but is a big help in helping it rapidly light and achieve high temperatures. Figure 10 minutes from putting the lighter down to reaching 1,200 degrees, if you鈥檙e using that hair dryer or another, less redneck method of forcing air in. From there, it鈥檚 30 seconds per听side for searing, then a20-minutee wait for temps to come down with vents closed. Then 10 minutes a side. Total: also about 45 minutes.听

You could use a similar method to Traeger鈥檚 with听the Egg and simply bring it to,听and keep听it at,听450 degrees.That鈥檇 knock off both that 20 minute wait time and a few minutes from the startup. The ability to quickly get going and get up to temperature is a big advantage the Egg can have, depending on how you use it.听

Results

Venison backstrap cooked on the Big Green Egg (left) and Traeger Lil Texan Pro (right).
Venison backstrap cooked on the Big Green Egg (left) and Traeger Lil Texan Pro (right).

With a stronger sear and meat that appears to be juicier, I initially thought the Egg had taken a solid victory. But, largely due to my听own incompetent butchering, the Traeger ended up cooking an end of the backstrap that was, well, messy. So, it doesn鈥檛 look as impressive but it actually听tasted better. While both grills produced meat that was moist听and well cooked, it surprises me to say that the Traeger produced notably more tender results. Both pieces of meat were good, but the Traeger’s was tastier.听

Price, Ease of Use, and Other Considerations

There's nothing dramatic or dangerous going on inside the Traeger, it's just getting on with the job of producing tasty meat.
There's nothing dramatic or dangerous going on inside the Traeger, it's just getting on with the job of producing tasty meat.

The grills featured here are not equivalent in size. This doesn鈥檛 impact their ability to make great meat, but it does affect the price. The pictured Big Green Egg is the $559 small and has only 133 square inches of cooking real estate. 听has a 22-by-19-inch听main grilling surface (let鈥檚 discount the second, smaller top rack for now) for 418 square inches to cook on. That makes it loosely equivalent, in terms of the amount of meat you can get on there, to the .听

While the Egg can use any natural lump charcoal, Traeger strongly recommends that you stick to its own brand pellets. Neither fuel source is quite as universally available as propane canisters or charcoal briquets, but neither is terribly hard to find, either. Both are available at my local hardware store and you can buy both from Amazon Prime, with free delivery. I haven鈥檛 noticed more cost in fuel for either grill鈥攜ou can be pretty economical with both if you鈥檙e good about only lighting them when you鈥檙e ready to cook, then shutting them down immediately when you鈥檙e finished.听

You don’t听need to clean ash out of the Traeger with the same regularity as the Big Green Egg, but it does still collect it. You鈥檒l never need to clean any grease out of the Egg as residual heat burns it off, but you will need to regularly clean grease from the plate under the grill of the Traeger. Both are made from corrosion-resistant materials and show no signs of wear or tear from living outside for extended periods, but both also benefit from being covered, if only to keep them clean.

You鈥檒l need an outdoor outlet or long, three-prong extension cord for the Traeger. With the egg, you only need to be able to reach it with that hair dryer.听

The Traeger is ready to smoke, grill,听or roast out of the box. To smoke on the Egg, you鈥檒l need the , a metal dog bowl to hold water under the grill,听and a separate .听

If you鈥檙e using the Egg at high temperatures, you鈥檒l go through lid gaskets with disappointing regularity. I fitted a to mine, but after three months, it鈥檚 already shot.听

I haven鈥檛 burned myself once on the Traeger. Using the Egg, I鈥檇 advise a hefty set of leather work gloves. The height of flames and amount of sparks I get to come out of the top of the Egg with that hair dryer (or leaf blower!) routinely reach dangerous levels. I wear my Egg scars with pride.听

Which Grill Is Right for You?听

On the Big Green Egg, you are definitely cooking with fire. This is what the grill looks like at 1,000掳F+.
On the Big Green Egg, you are definitely cooking with fire. This is what the grill looks like at 1,000掳F+.

If you want to reliably grill meat to perfection with little effort, then you鈥檒l want the Traeger. It produces consistent, reliable, great results, every single time. While it uses wood as a fuel source, it provides digital control, simplifying the grilling process and making it positively foolproof.听

You could tackle a smoked brisket鈥攁 notoriously difficult thing to barbecue, and an expensive hunk of meat鈥攆or the first time on a Traeger with near a 100 percent expectation of success. On the Egg, I got lucky and produced , created a second one that wasn鈥檛 quite as good, and totally ruined my third. But the challenge is a big part of the Big Green Egg鈥檚 appeal.听

A Big Green Egg requires a significant learning curve just to cook simple things, but encourages experimentation and artistic expression with your cooking. While the tenderness of the venison it cooked may have fallen behind the Traeger, this time, that鈥檚 simply encouraged me to develop and try new grilling processes until I nail it. That might cost me a few pieces of meat, but that benefits Wiley. As an analog experience, the Egg is fun to use, will often burn you,听and offers unlimited cooking possibilities. If you treat cooking as an art form, and enjoy playing with fire,听you鈥檒l want the Big Green Egg.听

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