7 Foods You Should Never Grill [CNET]

View Article on CNET

CNET logo Why You Can Trust CNET

Our expert, award-winning staff selects the products we cover and rigorously researches and tests our top picks. If you buy through our links, we may get a commission. Reviews ethics statement

These versatile outdoor cookers can do a lot but I don’t recommend grilling these seven things.

David Watsky Senior Editor / Home and Kitchen

David lives in Brooklyn where he’s spent more than a decade covering all things edible, including meal kit services, food subscriptions, kitchen tools and cooking tips. David earned his BA from Northeastern and has toiled in nearly every aspect of the food business, including as a line cook in Rhode Island where he once made a steak sandwich for Lamar Odom. Right now he’s likely somewhere stress-testing a blender or tinkering with a toaster. Anything with sesame is his all-time favorite food this week.

Expertise Kitchen tools | Appliances | Food science | Subscriptions | Meal kits

home tips logo
CNET

Grilling during July and August is peak summer joy, not to mention a great way to keep the temperature down in your home. The grill is as versatile a cooking tool as any, perfect for making steak, burgers, chicken, veggies and many types of seafood, but some foods just don’t work as well when laid out over the grates. 

A traditional grill with slatted grates is able to put food in direct contact with the flames for a charred summer kiss, but those penetrable grates can also making cooking certain foods a tricky business. 

Some things, including flaky fish, scallops and smaller vegetables aren’t good candidates for the grill. . If you do plan to grill them, secure the food with special grilling equipment to keep them from falling through.

Here are seven foods to avoid cooking directly on a grill.

Flaky fish

cod in a frying pan with greens.

Cod and halibut aren’t great candidates for cooking on the grill.

David Watsky/CNET

If you’ve ever slapped a filet of flaky fish like tilapia, cod or halibut over an open flame, you probably know why it’s not the best idea. Flaky fish tends to fall through the grates to a firey death once it starts cooking. 

Instead, try grilling any one of these firm fish that seafood chef Akira Beck recommends. If you simply must grill flaky fish over the grates, get yourself a fish grilling basket to keep those filets in tact. 

Peeled shrimp

brizzle basting shrimp on grill

If you’re going to grill shrimp, I suggest leaving the shell on until it’s cooked.

Dreamfarm

Grilling shrimp over a hot grill isn’t a bad idea, but if you’re going to do it, keep the shrimp in its shell until after it’s done cooking. Peeled shrimp cooks quickly and can dry out in the blink of an eye. Since you can’t cook in oil or sauce on a grill, you’re better off not peeling it to protect the meat from intense heat. 

Scallops

scallops

Special skills include searing scallops. 

David Watsky/CNET

Scallops are another seafood that in theory is great when grilled, but the potential for disaster just isn’t worth it. Even large scallops are liable to fall through. Instead, cook them in a stainless-steel skillet over the grates to give them a proper seer and caramelized crust that slatted grates just won’t give you.

Small or thinly sliced vegetables

pile of button mushrooms

If you’re planning to cook button or baby bella mushrooms on the grill, be prepared to lose many of them through the grates.

Patrick Holland/CNET

Certain vegetables were made for the grill, while others were made to fall right through to the flames below. Small vegetables such as green beans, snow peas, button mushrooms and broccoli florets should never be flung onto a bare grill. 

To outdoor stir-fry or cook smaller, sliced veggies on the grill, use skewers or cook them in a sauté pan on the grill or over a grill mat to keep them safely away from the fire.

Read more: Before You Fire Up Your Grill, Here’s How to Make It Shine

Bacon

Sausage, potatoes, and bacon cooking on a griddle.

An outdoor griddle can handle strips of bacon, but a traditional grill isn’t the place to cook them.

James Bricknell/CNET

Bacon, even thick slabs of it, is another poor choice for the grill. Thinner bacon will be impossible to manage, but even thick-cut bacon is so fatty that grease will through to the fire below and cause annoying, and possibly dangerous, splatters and explosions. 

Worse yet, you’ll have a seriously disgusting grill to clean up after. Instead, try this cleaner method for making bacon.

Breaded meat

Chicken cutlet cooked in Instant Pot

Breaded food just doesn’t work on the grill.

David Watsky/CNET

You might be tempted to make grilled chicken or pork cutlets, but save that breaded meat for the air fryer, oven or sauté pan. Much of that coating will shake free from the food, and you’ll end up with a pile of burnt breading at the bottom of your grill. 

Calzones

calzone oozing with fillings

Making grilled pizza is a fine idea but calzones are a trickier business.

Ooni

Pizza on the grill is an excellent idea, but the pie’s puffier cousin won’t work quite as well. Because of a calzone’s thickness and round shape, it’s difficult to get the inside cooked without burning the doughy shell. The innards are also likely to spill out and leak down into the grates, creating a greasy, cheesy mess to clean up later.

Instead, use a pizza oven to cook perfect calzones in mere minutes and save yourself from carb-related heartbreak.

For more kitchen tips, read our guide to the best cheap steak cuts and the seven surprising foods I only make in the air fryer and the