Has anyone used their George Foreman Grill at WDW?

jmunguia

Earning My Ears
Joined
Jul 2, 2002
Messages
40
I wondered if the small g forman grills that cook like two hamburgers at a time, are they good for making grilled cheese sandwiches? I don't have one but I would buy one if grilled cheese sandwiches come out good on them. That would be our breakfast every morning. Just me and my sister so it would work out good. Please let me know. And if you have one and are not sure, could you please check your paperwork that came with it for me, I would really appreciate it. I think the paperwork tells you what you can cook on it and how long it takes. Thanks again.

:bounce: :bounce: :bounce:
 
We have a GF grill and make grilled cheese sandwiches all the time. They turn out great..nice and toasty on the outside and cheesy on the inside (not greasy at all). Plus another thing we do is add some ham with the cheese and have a hot ham and cheese sandwich. We're taking ours when we go in Sept.

I have even heard that you can heat up bar-b-que in it and cleans up easy since it is non stick coating. Haven't tested that one out though
 
When I'm on vacation...

I let someone else do the cooking, cleaning, etc. and I relax and enjoy!

:rolleyes:
 
I would be hesitant to use one in a hotel room that wasn't equipped for cooking (proper surface to place it on, ventillation, etc...)
 
Thanks for the input. I didn't think about a cooking surface. I thought they had little rubber pegs or something that raises it off of the counter? This would be great. Can anyone else tell us what they would use their grill for, breakfast wise. And we are staying at a hotel where we won't have a refrigerator but we are trying to bring a cooler. Anyone else have input... Thanks again...

:bounce: :bounce: :bounce: :bounce: :bounce:
 
The foreman is on little pegs that hold it off the countertop... If you bring it, just plan on using it in the bathroom, or someplace with a tile floor... It doesn't emit that much in the way of smoke or anything like that... I'd go so far & say you could probably cook eggs in the thing, but you don't have a fridge... we've toasted bread, chicken, hot dogs & vegetables in ours while on vacation in Hawaii, it turned out really great... We choose not to eat out three times a day while we're on vacation & the foreman worked out great in Hawaii like I said...
 
We've never brought one on vacation, but we use ours a lot at home. The back of the grill is a little higher than the front of the grill so that grease or fat will flow out the front of the grill to a little drip pan. The items in the recipe book that comes with the grill are all for firm things, like meat, fish, chicken, vegetables. I don't think eggs would stay on the grill to cook and if you close the lid, the eggs would squish and start oozing out the front.
 
I used my grill when I was staying at OKW in a studio. It was great! Grilled chicked, and also the Ham and cheese sandwiches. I love it.

Many people cook in their rooms. It is the same as cooking in the dorm room, which I was allowed to do when I was in college. My girlfriends made chili using a element buffet range, and every other thing you could imagine. I am sure if you do it near the sink area it should be fine.

I think the difference in using a cooking appliance in an OKW studio and in a standard hotel room is the fact that in OKW they have fire extinguishers in the room. So maybe you shouldn't. I do not know.
 
Disnee Dad Says............................Go for it. We use a hot pot on every trip, mostly for soups and ramen., but also for chili and canned ravioli, that we constantly stir so it heats evenly. Have a GF grill at home, and it works great, and will not take it on our next trip as we have a kitchen!! It will go with us on the first trip without a kitchen
 
I think I'm going to buy one, sounds like it will save us money!! I normally do stay in a timeshare or vacation home with a kitchen but its just me and my sister this time and we are trying our best to cut costs. I know someone said something about cooking and cleaning on vacation, but it seems to me like knowing that we are saving money and its not really cooking, just making grilled cheese sandwiches would please me more than using all of our spending money on food. I guess it really all depends on your normal habits and budget. Thank you all for your input. I also plan to bring an insultated colapsable cooler with frozen water as a carry on. I called southwest and they said it should be fine.

I can't wait we are leaving on Wednesday :bounce:
 
(Using a George Foreman Grill in a hotel room)...
is the same as cooking in the dorm room, which I was allowed to do when I was in college.

George Foreman grills are not allowed in dorm rooms at the majority of colleges. There must be a good reason why...
 
Originally posted by jk1
(Using a George Foreman Grill in a hotel room)...

George Foreman grills are not allowed in dorm rooms at the majority of colleges. There must be a good reason why...

Yup, there is, insurance costs would go up if it was publicly posted that it was okay... At least that's the official story we got at college, but yet everyone had HOT PLATES, those are way more dangerous than George Foreman Grills...
 
I still would be really hesitant to use any cooking devices in my room that were not already placed for use by the hotel. I recall reading on another thread (search is down) that you could be held accountable if there was a fire or damage due to a mishap.
 
Hey Chris,

I think every dorm room had a hot plate. By the time evening rolled around every one was cooking in their rooms.

Maybe that was back in the day?????????
18 years ago.......wow!
 
If you want to know whether these items are allowed in your room, you should ask the hotel where you are staying. Some rooms in which kitchenettes are installed have the proper wiring, etc to meet fire code safety rules for the additional electrical loads these appliances would add to the circuit. Appliances that heat stuff up--require a lot of power--this would be anything like a grill, toaster, waffle iron, coffee maker, hot plate, et'c. If you are ever curious what kind of load your appliance is drawing from the circuit, it will tell you somewhere on your appliance--(sometimes the value is expressed in watts, sometimes in
Amps...Amps = Watts / 120 Volts). To give you an idea of the relative load on the circuit, bathroom and kitchen circuits are usually 20amp circuits--whereas other household circuits are often only 15 amps. Some of the above mentioned appliances draw over 15 Amps by themselves--so, you can see, you really need several circuits for a normal kitchen ( this depends on kitchen size).
Generally regular hotel rooms are not wired for the type of electrical load required to run a kitchen in addition to everything else in the room (your blow dryer, curling iron et'ct).. Because of this, if the rooms are not designed to handle the load, hotel management is not supposed to permit cooking in the rooms. This probably won't change anybody's mind about taking these appliances along, but I think you should know that they are against the rules for some very good reasons.

Of course, there are some other more obvious reasons for not cooking in a room that is not set up for it, too:

For example, residual cooking odors--a lot of rooms are non-smoking rooms. How about a non-smoking room with residual cooking smells? There is no vent provided for venting the cooking fumes when you cook in a room. In your home, you probably have a fire alarm that is at least one room away from your kitchen. What happens if you accidentally set off the fire alarm in your hotel when cooking?

Another logistical problem is with washing the pan out--there is no kitchen sink or garbage disposal in your room. It makes it a big challenge to clean out your appliance. (Although, I believe the G.F. probably does have minimal clean-up. How about the clean up from making fried chicken, or fried fish or spaghetti or eggs in an electric frying pan ). And what do you do with the grease, if there is any?

Bottom line is if you want to know whether it is permitted, you should ask before using one of these devices in your room. If they say, "Yes"--you're golden!

-DC
 
I'm going back to The World next June with three pre-teen/teen girls. They lost their mom a few years ago and now live with my cousin and his wife. One of the girls has PKU and has a very special diet. She must eat extremely low protein foods. I'm taking a hot pot in order to prepare the starch based noodles/spaghetti and veggies she eats. Don't see I have a choice. I'm not going to make her and her sisters miss out on the fun of staying at a WDW resort (one of the All-Stars as I'm footing all the bill for this trip) because we must prepare some of her food. I will carefully watch the food preparation, will use the hot pot on or even in the sink using the GFC plug. Can't see it will hurt anything.

Would love to feed her at the sit down restaurants where I'm told the chefs will prepare special food for her but simply can't afford it for every meal.

Not sure I'd try the Foreman grill. I love mine, use it often, but it does produce a lot of heat and some mess. Not so much when making grilled cheese however.
 
We have a sandwich maker we have taken with us. It is similar to the GF grill but more compact. We bring along canned goods like Roast beef hash,(it also comes in corned beef and it has little white potatoes in it.) canned beef stew, Canned corned beef, and canned cherry pie filling. We buy bread once we are there and make hot sandwiches. I took parkay(butter) with us last year in my carry on.

I have a GF grill at home but have not tryed these sandwiches on them, but I'm sure it would work the same way. I will try it tomorrow and it I see a problem I let you know.

As long as you stay in the room when your cooking and unplug the machine when your done, I don't see any harm taking one.
 
I always take a hot pot for oatmeal and soups, etc. I've not taken my foreman grill, but not a bad idea. I may this time. Have a great trip.
 
We wouldn't leave home without our GF grill. We cook BBQ, grill cheese sandwiches, hotdogs, you can even buy those precooked hamburger patties from the Swans truck or at the grocery store and heat those up really fast on the grill too. It saves SOOOO much money, plus it breaks the monotony of sandwiches all the time (for those who would rather spend their money on things besides food at WDW). Last time we went to WDW, we used our and had no problems. Just makes sure to bring a couple of washrags to clean it with.
I am sure, however, than they are not allowed in rooms. The room we had a Dixie Landings was open to the outside, so you could use a drop cord and cook outside OR in the bathroom. But as many times as we have took ours to WDW and other places (at hotels) no one has even fussed at us nor have we had any problems with it. But to each there on, its still your decision.
 












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