This was posted 2 years 7 months 30 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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CasusGrill Disposable Grill $10 + Delivery ($0 C&C) @ Mitre 10

63

Good for the lockdown, 1/2 price

Specs;

Thermal insulation, reduce the outside temperature.
Sustainable and eco friendly.
No fossil fuels needed for ignition.
60 minutes cooking time in total.
No iron or aluminium.

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Mitre 10
Mitre 10

closed Comments

  • +1

    Is that a cardboard BBQ?

    • +1

      No iron or aluminium… thank god

    • +1

      '… a cardboard BBQ?'

      LMAO …

      What could possibly go wrong?!?

  • recycled boxes from olympics

  • +2

    Looks like kindling for a real barbie .

  • I legitimately had assumed mitre 10 had died off in the great Bunnings v masters wars years ago..

    • funnily enough i just did a mitre 10 order cause bunnings won't do click and collect on potting mix but mitre 10 are doing free delivery (over $100, under 40kg) for locked down states.

      p sure mitre 10 and home timber and hardware merged tho

      • That would explain it, I also had assumed home timber and hardware was a casualty of the war.

      • +2

        Bunnings are annoying me so much.

        Can’t click and collect wood. Dressed wood.

        Go in there and grab me a damn plank. Geez.

  • +1

    looks like the soccer table game thing

    • +3

      Foosball but with kebabs on skewers lol.

  • Thermal insulation, reduce the outside temperature.

    Good for global warming

    • +1

      Eat as much beef as possible to reduce the number of cows farting is good for global warming. Lol

  • +2

    Bamboo charcoal??!!?? A cardboard bbq/grill made out of cardboard in China - no thanks!

    I wouldn't want to waste my meat and veggies on this.

  • +2

    Do you dispose it before or after you put it on fire?

    • +1

      Just let it burn overnight and it will dispose of itself…😅

  • +5

    How is this thing sustainable or 'eco friendly' if it single use?
    It hopefully goes in the bin after one use!

    • I'd assume the entire thing is biodegradable?

    • +1

      It's made from a renewable resource, so the amount of stock in the world holds carbon until its burnt and released back into the atmosphere

      • It's intended use is for a single use that is not sustainable. It does not grow into new trees to replace the ones used.

        It will be left where it was used by selfish turds.

        It is not even 'eco friendly' sitting on shelves. A considerable amount of CO2 is produced in the production of charcoal.

        The description of the product is in no way honest.

        The production of this involves significant emissions of CO2 so even sitting on shelves this has already contributed to atmospheric pollution.

        • I am not advocating for the thing, just saying what the reason is for people to claim its sustainable. If you don't agree with that claim, fair enough, but what about all the other rubbish that's made e.g toilet freshener, the stuff that makes your toilet blue. It's just chemicals we buy to flush down a toilet and into the environment. You could say any product has carbon attached to it

          • +1

            @Jackson: They don't make these claims. This product's marketing is focused on that and is just BS

          • @Jackson: Yeah we are a wasteful consumer society. BUT, what you spend you money on has more impact that a wasted vote for a politician. There is more money in peoples wallets to change the world than any democracy every will.

  • +1

    OP, why is it 'good for lockdown'? I associate that comment with 'stock up on toilet paper for lockdown' - makes zero sense - before lockdown you didn't have a stove?

    • +1

      I think OP means perfect for those illegal picnics people constantly seem to be having..

      Self destroying BBQ

  • For $10, would be small & clean, easy to carry, for a local, weekend camping trip.

  • kinda wanna get one and see what the (profanity) this this thing does to food

  • there is a video on youtube of a guy cooking wagyu using one of these puppies

  • +2

    Sustainable and eco friendly

    No it's not. What a waste transporting something like this to Australia for one (ordinary) BBQ and then in the bin.

    • That's true… but it's saying it's using recycled materials instead of something like this.

      https://www.bunnings.com.au/grate-chef-bar-b-in-a-box_p31700…

      Which is no less wasteful, and most likely is not using anything recycled. So isn't a specific negative reason against the above product.

      • +1

        False claims/misleading description are grounds. Fully valid neg

      • +1

        That's true… but it's saying it's using recycled materials instead of something like this.

        No they're not. Their marketing team are trying to fool consumers into believing that this product is doing good things for the environment which is a load of rubbish. Who knows how many thousands of these have been shipped around the world to be used once for a crappy BBQ and thrown away. How much fossil fuel do you think that's taken.

        There are plenty of compact BBQs available which not only produce a better result in terms of food but are reusable and last years rather than end up in landfill after cooking a few tofu and mung bean patties.

        Anyone who's used extruded coconut briquettes knows they're not easy to light so on top of a crappy product you're ingesting whatever's been added to light this with "no fossil fuels".

        So isn't a specific negative reason against the above product.

        False and misleading claims. How's that champ!

  • "Sustainable and eco friendly."

    What a load of rubbish.

  • I'm curious to know what 'No fossil fuels needed for ignition' is supposed to mean. Do they mean that if you fashion a 'bow drill' out of a green stick and some twine, then find or generate some dry kindling 'Naked and Afraid'-style, you can spark this bad-boy up?

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