Shopping for BBQ Gear? Start Here!

2,000+ Free Pages

2,000+ Free Pages

YOU ARE HERE >> AmazingRibs » Equipment » 2 Zone Grilling Setup: How Best To Control Temperatures On A Grill

Share On:

2 Zone Grilling Setup: How Best To Control Temperatures On A Grill

2 zone setup

Achieve cooking perfection on charcoal and gas grills with the 2 zone grilling setup.

The most essential concepts an outdoor cook needs to understand are the importance of temperature control, the differences between direct heat and indirect heat, and how to use a 2 zone grilling setup.

Whether you are cooking on an El Cheapo Charcoal Grill from Wally World, a Super Stratoliner Stainless Steel Gas Grill from Williams of Napa, or a Texas Tinkermann Iron Tube Competitor mounted on a trailer, most outdoor cooking goes best if you use a 2-zone setup. Even if you are only cooking hot dogs.

convection vs radiant heat in a charcoal grill

To cook delicious food, you need to control your cooking temperature because the compounds in foods react differently to different levels of heat. For example, meats are composed of protein, water, fat, collagen, and some sugars, and each component changes drastically at different temperatures. Fats render at one temp, water evaporates at another, collagens melt at another, sugar caramelizes at another, the Maillard reaction (a.k.a. browning) occurs at another, and carbonization (a.k.a. charring or burning) occurs at yet another temp.

On a grill, a 2 zone grilling setup is ideal because it gives you much better control over temperature. In a 2-zone setup, you have one side of the grill that is hot and producing direct radiant heat, and the other side is producing no heat and food on that side cooks by indirect convection heat. We’ll call one the direct zone and the other the indirect zone. When you shop for a grill, you must get one that allows you to configure it in 2 zones.

2 zone grilling setup, a technique for temperature control

The most common mistake we make is using too much direct heat. That’s how we make hockey pucks. If meat is exposed to very high heat for too long the proteins get their undies in a bunch and shrink, squeezing out the liquids, and the result is tough dry meat.

Using a 2 zone grilling setup allows us to control the temp applied to the food. We can gently heat a turkey in the indirect zone, get it cooked to juicy, tender, smoky perfection, and be the heroes of Thanksgiving. Using a 2-zone setup we can slowly gently bring a big prime rib to bumper to bumper medium rare with no gray meat, and a perfect crunchy crust, and be the heroes of New Year’s Eve.

We can start chickens over the indirect zone at a low temp and cook them until they are almost done. Then move them over the direct zone to crisp the skin and finish cooking. We can cook the most tender ribs with a special secret sweet dry rub and never burn a grain of sugar, and then move it over the direct zone to sizzle on the sauce and caramelize it to finger licking sticky goodness. We can even make fluffy baked potatoes with crackling skin completely free of burn marks. Here you can see the cooks at the Weber Grill restaurant in Chicago using a large charcoal grill in 2 zones.

2 zone grilling setup, a technique for different foods

A 2 zone grilling setup is especially handy if you have more than one food cooking at once where the thickness and water content of the two is significantly different so they will cook at different rates. For example, you might put lobster in the indirect zone to roast gently for about 20 minutes, and then put asparagus on the direct zone to sear quickly.

An indirect zone is particularly helpful for preventing food from burning if it is very sweet or if there is sugar in the rub or sauce. Slices of pineapple are great on the grill, but can burn quickly if put over direct heat. Start them in the indirect zone, then move them to the high heat to brown.

2 zone grilling setup, a technique for slow roasting

Roasts, like pork loin or beef roasts, or even whole chickens will burn badly before they are cooked through if put over direct heat. They need to go in the indirect zone.

2 zone grilling setup, a technique for holding

Even if your steaks are all cut to the same thickness, somehow one of them just wants to get outta there and cooks faster. With 2 zones you can move it from the direct zone to the indirect zone to hold without overcooking. This is especially useful when you have six steaks and on guest wants it rare, another well done, and the others in between. You can slide them to the safe zone at the appropriate time.

Think of your grill as an oven

I know you don’t think of your grill this way, but if it has a lid, it really is an oven. Since temperature control is critical to all cooking, the major differences between your outdoor and indoor ovens are crucial:

(1) The heat source in your indoor oven is probably under a metal plate so the food is not directly over the heat source. It is indirect.

(2) Controlling the temperature is not as easy outdoors as it is in your kitchen because your indoor oven has a thermostat that regulates the oven heat. The thermostat is often off (often by as much as 25°F), but at least it holds the temperature constant. Outdoors, at the moment, only pellet smokers have thermostats, and there is a battle with sun, wind, and rain, hopefully absent in your kitchen.

(3) Temperature control is especially hard outdoors because the thermometer on your grill is probably worthless, regardless of the price you paid for your fancy stainless steel grill. Most grills have cheap bi-metal thermometers and they can be off by as much as 50°F, especially because the probe is often nowhere near the meat.

How to control temperature on your grill

Every grill is different, but when using a 2 zone grilling setup try to get your indirect zone down into the 225°F range. That’s a magic number at which a lot of foods cook best. On a charcoal grill you push the coals to one side of the charcoal grate. On a gas grill you turn off all the burners except one or two. You will need to fiddle with your system. You may find that you can hit the 225°F mark with a three burner gas grill by turning one burner on medium and the other two off. Or maybe it needs to be on low. But then you have no hot zone. No problem.

When it is time to move the the food to the hot zone, you can put it on a platter and then crank the hot side. When it maxes, put the food back on. You need to get to know your instrument and master the concept.

A good way to do this is do some dry runs with a good thermometer and without food. You cannot trust your grills thermometer. You absolutely must get a good digital thermometer for your grill. Please read my buyer’s guide to thermometers. You should also read my articles on the thermodynamics of cooking and meat science.

Sometimes you will want to add a water pan or two, especially if you are smoking

charcoal grill set up for smoking using the 2-zone smoking method

If you add a water pan under the meat while using a 2 zone grilling setup, you are adding moisture to the atmosphere. And if the water pan is above the heat source you are further protecting the meat from direct heat — the water absorbs heat helping to keep the temperature down. Smoking, which is usually done at low temperatures for a long time can dry out the meat, so putting humidity into the atmosphere can help keep the meat moist. In addition, moisture mixes with the combustion gases, even on a gas grill, and creates desirable flavors. Some smokers, like the Weber Smokey Mountain, come with a water pan. That’s it in the picture below on the right just beneath the ham and above the charcoal.

Just one thing: The pan can emit a little steam, but don’t let it boil. Don’t worry, it won’t boil if the air in the cooker is 225°F even though that is higher than the boiling point. Evaporation takes energy away from the water and that cools it too quickly so it can take many hours to hit 212°F if ever. Use a digital thermometer to make sure the air temp is at or near 225°F.

All you need in the water pan is water. Don’t waste money on wine, juices, beer, whatever. They will not flavor your food. Click here for more on the subject of what to put in the water pan. Here are some ways to set up for indirect cooking with a water pan.

2-zone, indirect setup for BBQ ribs on a charcoal grill

On a charcoal grill, fill up a chimney, wait til the coals are white, dump the coals all on one side of the bottom rack, and put a water pan on the other.

Put the top rack on, put the meat on the top rack above the water pan, and another water pan on the top rack above the coals.

Here’s another article on how to set up a charcoal grill for moist smoke roasting. Follow the same concept on other charcoal grills.

smokenator setup on a charcoal grill using the indirect method

The metal insert on the right side of this Weber Kettle grill is called a Smokenator and it keeps the coals off to one side so, as in the photo, you can put your food on other side for low and slow indirect smoke roasting, and you can put more meat below on the bottom rack, or, as in this photo, a pan of beans under the ribs to catch the drippings. If you have a Weber Kettle, you need one of these handy attachments. Click the link above for more about setting up a Smokenator.

 Weber Smokey Mountain smoker setup for indirect  cooking

The very popular and inexpensive Weber Smokey Mountain (WSM) and other “bullet” shaped smokers have a water pan between the coals and the food. Leave it in and you are cooking indirect. Take it out and you are cooking direct.

The water pan helps stabilize and lower oven temp and adds humidity to the oven. It can also catch drips for sauce. Here’s an article on how to set up a WSM for moist smoke roasting.

indirect setup for BBQ turkey on a gas grill using wood chips

The gas grill above is set up with a water pan under the meat for indirect cooking and to collect drippings. The pan is filled with wine, fruit, herbs, onions, and more goodies to make a flavorful stock for gravy (they do not flavor the food above in any way).

To the left is a small pan with wood chips for smoke. It is resting on a hot burner so the chips will smolder. Click here for more on how to make the ultimate smoked turkey, even on a gas grill. Here’s an article on how to set up a gas grill for moist smoke roasting.

For some foods you do not want a water pan. If you are cooking something that finishes quickly, like steaks or chicken parts, the pan has little or no impact, so you can skip it.

Seasoning and calibrating your grill or smoker with dry runs

The first thing to do after you assemble your new grill or smoker is to season it and calibrate it by doing a few dry runs without food. This will burn off any manufacturer’s grease, and give you a sense for how to set it up to hit the two important target temps that almost all my recipes use: 225°F and 325°F.

toasting bread on a new grill to calibrate it
If you are new to BBQ and grilling, start here. These articles will give you a solid foundation on BBQ
Learn about thermodynamics: the basis of all cooking! Find out how heat transference works by conduction, convection, radiation, induction, and
What is meat and how does cooking alter it? Discover the science of what meat is made of, including water,
How to use our comprehensive buying guide and reviews of thermometers for barbecue, for cooking, for food, for the oven,
Get the most out of your charcoal grill by setting up 2 heat zones, direct and indirect. This set up
What is the right cooking temperature for barbecue? It depends. Not all food should be cooked low and slow or
Here's how to use the two vents to control temperature in a charcoal or wood grill or smoker.
You can set up a gas grill to get excellent smoke roasted barbecue if you know how. Here's how gas
Find out how to setup and modify inexpensive offset smokers such as the Brinkmann Pitmaster, Brinkmann Smoke'N Pit Professional (a.k.a.
Why are exact cooking times so hard to predict? Because the actual time it takes meats and other barbecued foods
Barbecue was not invented in America. Here is the true story of where barbecue came from and how it evolved,
Barbecue is a hotly debated topic. Read here about a new definition of BBQ that is distinct from its legal
Romance is in full bloom with this mouthwatering take on traditional surf-and-turf. Delectable lobster tails are poached in butter then
BBQ cooks are some of the most inventive cooks around. Live fire, hot coals, grill grates, heavy hunks of raw
What influences cooking time? So many variables, such as the total volume of meat in your cooker. Are you using
Beef jerky, chipotle chilies, and smoke-dried tomatoes taste fantastic. To make them, you need to dehydrate them. Learn about which
Conventional wisdom says you should keep the grill lid closed at all times. What do precise measurements tell us? It
What is the difference between a drip pan and a water pan? And why do I need some humidity when
January is National Meat Month and Americans are eating more meat, looking to get more protein and fewer carbs in
Stop trying to get perfect grill marks! Yes, grill marks make us drool, but they are a sign of lost
Stop worrying about resting meat after it is cooked. Serve it hot. We bust this myth with a review of
If you’re like me, you likely fancy yourself quite the steak griller. But the true test of one’s talent is
Pastrami is the ultimate expression of beef brisket, and it is at its best if you start with sous vide.
Rack of lamb is incredibly rich and succulent, especially when cooked medium rare. Here are tips and tricks for grilling
Create the ultimate bowl of chili with this recipe for Texas-style chili con carne. Starting on the grill for a
Create succulent ribs on the smoker or grill by marrying water and fire in this recipe for sous-vide-que St. Louis
Grilling Buffalo wings may sound like blasphemy but the results from this non-deep fried twist are simply amazing. By cooking
This easy pulled pork recipe skips the slow cooker to create authentic low and slow smoked pulled pork on a
How do you avoid the worst BBQ mistakes? Undercooked chicken? Burnt chicken? Burned outside and raw inside? We ran a
Impress guests at your next BBQ and grilling cookout for this sweet and savory rib recipe starring a glaze of
Rich and full of flavor, smoked venison ribs are a great change of pace from pork ribs. This mouthwatering recipe
In Memphis it is common for barbecue joints to offer their ribs "dry", without sauce, just a liberal sprinkling of
Create the best ham you've ever tasted with this ultimate double smoked ham recipe. Ordinary store bought ham is taken
Make breakfast even better with this recipe for grilled breakfast bread bowls with candied bacon, egg, and cheese. Crusty rolls
Create perfect pork loins every time with this recipe for sous vide and smoked (sous-vide-que) pork loin. Lean pork loin
There are some tricks to learning how to cook a perfect prime rib, tenderloin, round, rump, and other beef roasts
Chuck roast becomes as moist, tender, and flavorful as traditional Texas brisket in this recipe that smokes and then slices
Chuck roast has never tasted better. By using a low and slow barbecue technique, this already flavorful cut of beef
Smoked barbecue beef ribs are taken to a new level of deliciousness in this recipe for sous-vide-que beef ribs with
Grilled bison steaks have never tasted better thanks to the sous-vide-que cooking method, combining the moistness and tenderness of sous
A specialty of Santa Maria in California, this recipe for grilled tri-tip steak is sure to impress your guests. Tri-tip
Sous-vide-que bottom round roast makes an inexpensive and extremely lean cut of beef mouthwateringly tender by combining the sous vide
Perfect your competition ribs with these simple tips and a competition rib recipe. Trimmed ribs are seasoned with a flavorful
This simple smoked rib tips recipe makes the perfect snack, appetizer, or main course. The rib tip (a.k.a. brisket, costal
Crunchy bruleed sugar adds an unexpected twist to traditional low and slow smoked spare ribs in this recipe for sweet
This item is for members only
Grilled calcots, similar to green onions or scallions, with romesco sauce, are a delicious rite of spring in Spain. As
Put a little south in your mouth with this delicious recipe for a smoked pimento cheese burger. Smoky home made
Looking for the perfect side dish for your next cookout? Nothing screams BBQ more than a sticky and smoky bowl
Buying guides to hundreds of grills, smokers, thermometers, BBQ accessories and much more, all tested by our team of experts,
Here is the ultimate guide to the various online sources for buying grilling wood logs, chunks, chips, and pellets.
What's the best way to set up your grill and smoker? The secret is to have temperature control, and for
In search of the "best of the best" BBQ and grilling gear? The AmazingRibs.com staff unveils its top picks from
The Monument Denali 605 Pro is a big 6-burner gasser with two ceramic sear burners. It's loaded with features and
Ninja claims their FlexFlame does it all, After some hand wringing, we give this wild looking, multi-function gasser our AmazingRibs.com
Published On: August 21, 2012
Last Modified On: August 21, 2012

On This Page

Up Your BBQ IQ By Joining The Pitmaster Club

Get a free trial of the AmazingRibs.com Pitmaster Club and experience everything that the world’s largest membership-based BBQ and grilling community has to offer. No credit card required!

New Recipes, Reviews, and Science Sent To Your Inbox!

Subscribe to receive our FREE weekly newsletter, Smoke Signals, and never miss a new recipe!

Jump To Top