greenlight
Flashlight Enthusiast
I bought the rotisserie at a garage sale for $20 (new). It cooks a 4.5lb chicken in 65 minutes. Like they advertise, the meat is done perfectly and is juicy and delicious. The timer makes it easy- it turns off before the meat gets burned. Some practice is needed to learn the timing in order to not overcook the food. I placed it outside on a steel cabinet where I keep my gardening tools. That way the house doesn't smell like meat.
I think that some people buy them but don't have room in their kitchen for an appliance like this. It's pretty big.
I bought another rotisserie for backup/gift(15$). It is the smaller model which uses less electricity. It sits in it's box. I have seen others for sale, but I had to stop buying them. How many do I need?
I would never have bought one for full retail, but for 20$ I had to try it out. I highly recommend it. If you see one for a good price, don't pass it up.
You really do just 'set it and forget it'. (I'm usually thinking about the meat the whole time). I haven't tried the solid food injector yet (should be cool), but I did use the basket for roasting chicken breasts several times, and it worked perfectly.
I think that some people buy them but don't have room in their kitchen for an appliance like this. It's pretty big.
I bought another rotisserie for backup/gift(15$). It is the smaller model which uses less electricity. It sits in it's box. I have seen others for sale, but I had to stop buying them. How many do I need?
I would never have bought one for full retail, but for 20$ I had to try it out. I highly recommend it. If you see one for a good price, don't pass it up.
You really do just 'set it and forget it'. (I'm usually thinking about the meat the whole time). I haven't tried the solid food injector yet (should be cool), but I did use the basket for roasting chicken breasts several times, and it worked perfectly.