George Foreman GR59A Baby George Rotisserie

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George Foreman GR59A Baby George Rotisserie
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Product Description

Another Great Way to Knock out the Fat with your Baby George Rotisserie. Great for poulty, burgers, veggies, kabobs and so much more! Roast up to a 5 Lb. chicken. Meats self-baste in their own juices. Easy to use spit assembly. 3 hour countdown cooking timer with bell signal and auto shut off. 950 watts of power. Roll Top door for easy viewing and access. Slide out Drip tray to capture run off fats. Includes adjustable flat basket, 4 kabob skewers and spit assembly remover.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #7897 in Kitchen & Housewares
  • Color: White
  • Brand: George Foreman
  • Model: GR59A
  • Dimensions: 13.00" h x 13.00" w x 18.00" l, 6.80 pounds

Features

  • Meats self baste In their own juices
  • Roasts up to a 5 lb chicken
  • 3hour countdown timer with bell and auto shut off
  • Handle tool for easy removal of hot food
  • Includes: flat basket and four kabab skewers

Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews

125 of 126 people found the following review helpful.
4Grocery-store rotisserie chicken at home, your way
By Joanna Daneman
This is a nice compact rotisserie, carrying that Foreman name and cachet, meaning good low-fat grilling or roasting. A rotisserie has an advantage over ovens and contact grills in that it uses radiant heat to evenly roast your food. The results are juicy and tender, with that wonderful crust that only air and radiant heat can produce. But is the Baby George all it's advertised to be?

Yes and no is the ambivalent answer. The Baby George is advertised to hold a five-pound roast or bird, and this is really NOT true, in my experience. Unless your five pound roast is very compact and not terribly WIDE, it will strike the front of the oven cover as it turns on the spit. That prevents the motor from turning the roast, and since the heating element (a simple exposed coil in back) is only on the back side, your roast can't cook properly.

For under five pound roasts, the rotisserie works well. To roast a pork roast or chicken, you use the spit. The spit is in two parts: a spi ke and plate on which you place the meat, and a top plate with a wing nut to hold the plate onto the spike. This unit is then placed into the roaster and it meshes with the cogs of the motor on the side. The lid is closed and you turn on the timer. There is no choice of temperature: the glowing element heats to about 325 degrees F and the meat rolls past it, roasting a 4 pound boneless pork roast in about 75 minutes.

There is a basket for roasting flat or odd shaped foods, and this unit is surprisingly useful. You can do fish like salmon, but I use it for chicken parts (leg and thigh) or for small boneless roasts that are too small for the spit. You open the metal basket, place the food inside, and close the basket top through the basket wires--rather like closing the door on a bird cage(!), pressing it down to hold the food in firmly (it will SHRINK on cooking, remember.) If you have trouble spitting a roast, remember the basket is a good option to get the same result. T he basket fits into the roaster the same way as the spit--it meshes onto the cogs of the motor and flips around and around. Since it is a defined size, as long as the food can be held inside the basket, it will fit into the roaster and cook evenly.

I have not tried the shish-kabob brochettes. They are wire skewers that fit onto the outside of the spit unit, into slots that hold the skewers across the end plates. It looks flimsy to me, and I am not a fan of shish-kabob--if I were making skewered food, I'd do it on the outside grill.

The spit unit is dangerous to unload when the food is cooked. It is hot as can be, and you have to manipulate that wing nut off with a hot pad while holding the spit on a heat-proof and slip-proof surface. A clean damp dishtowel over a cutting board is what I use. The spit unit is lifted out of the rotisserie with a metal lifting holder, and you should have the rotisserie near where the meat will end up, because you are going to be carrying that metal holder with the spit unit and meat on it, dripping hot juices, over to where it ends up for carving.

The spit is also SHARP and if you press down the meat to load it, have your hand well away from the top of the spike so as not to jab yourself. There are two side spikes that line up at 90 degrees from each other on each plate, holding the meat on the center spike and then with the four surrounding smaller spikes. These can jab you, too. Putting the meat on takes some care.

The cleanup is not too bad: drip tray beneath is metal, cleans out easily with a bit of soaking. Behind the element inside the rotisserie you can pull out a metal reflecting plate. This plate gets spattered with meat juice or food juices and needs cleaning and soaking. Eventually it spots up, like a broiler pan, with tiny burnt-on bits that won't come off. If you like everything completely spotless, this may annoy you. The lid lifts off the unit by lining up some arrows. That allows you to take the lid to the sink and clean the clear window inside and out. The re-assembly is easy enough; push the metal reflecting sheet behind the element and seat it properly. Wipe out the rest of the inside, put the lid back on, replace the drip tray.

We got our unit on sale, and I do like it for roast chicken and roast pork. I liked it less for roast beef. Small pieces of fish and meat cooked well in the basket. If you need big roasts, the bigger unit is advisable. I don't mind the cleanup. My biggest problem is with the spit--not all the foods want to stay on it, and removing it from the roaster is a bit difficult.

67 of 67 people found the following review helpful.
5Great deal in a Rotisserie
By A Customer
I have been watching the infomercial on the Showtime Rotisserie for months and almost bought one.

I have recently read many complaints and problems with the Showtime Rotisserie on the Internet such as some fires in the unit , improper cooking of the food and many mechanical breakdowns and cleaning difficulties, and decided against it. Then I found the George Foreman Model and since I already own a George Foreman Grilling Maching that I constantly use and that has been trouble free after years of constant use, I decided to buy the George Foreman Rotisserie. Since I am single and have a small kitchen, this Baby model is the perfect size. I was worried about the heat, on my small counter due to many comments about the Showtime Rotisserie requiring a big area due to the excessive heat it develops. I cooked a 4 pound chicken in the Baby Rotisserie and had no problem with excessive heat. It is very well designed and vents out the top. The chicken was fantastic an d the unit was very easy to clean. I put some water in the bottom pan on the recommendation of a friend that owns one, and it made it very easy to clean. The top cover comes right off for wiping the class front from the inside and the back shield slips right out also. The only problem I had was finding some "cooking" twine to tie the chicken up. I used unwaxed dental floss, but will go twine shopping today.

Very well designed product, well made, and for [X] , it is half the price of the Showtime with the shipping ..

Way to go, George and Salton.

94 of 98 people found the following review helpful.
4Yummy food, but a pain in the neck to clean
By BaldCats
I definitely have not used the oven since I got the rotisserie, food with a lot of fat or skin comes out amazingly delicious. Dont bother with fat free foods, you'll just dry them out and waste money. Dont do pork chops either. The unit comes apart easily for cleaning, but its a pain to scrub the wire basket - take out stock in Brillo pads! Also, the metal back wall that slides out gets stains like watermarks even when it is clean, it never will look shiny new again no matter how clean. The white on the unit is yellowing from the heat, and my turn knob broke off from the heat as well - I had the unit about 2 inches from my toaster oven on the right side and it contained too much heat outside the unit. It is also difficult to clean the upper insides of the unit, since you cannot remove it. Did I mention it makes a mean chicken wings dinner (just dont put them on top of eachother in the basket). Also, dont cook meat as long as the time recommended in the booklet, th e small size of the unit cooks it much faster and everything comes out well done if you dont keep checking.

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