Weber 124 Barbecue Apron | 
enlarge | Brand: Weber Category: Lawn & Patio
This item is no longer available
Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 82209
Fragile: No Batteries Included: No Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 35 x 25 x 0.1
MPN: 16126 Model: 124 UPC: 077924001246 EAN: 0077924001246 ASIN: B00004U9V6
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| Features:
| • | 100% cotton twill | | • | Weber logo on pocket | | • | Protects your clothes | | • | 25-inch-wide by 35-inch extra long body |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Dress to grill with a sturdy, 100 cotton twill apron; logo on pocket. Black only; one size fits all. DOES NOT INCLUDE MITT!!
Amazon.com Review If you're a down-to-business griller, you need a sturdy apron, not one of those silly "Kiss the Cook" bibs. You want something tough, something that will endure the rigors of burning coals, boiling grease, and fingers swimming in marinade. Weber comes to the rescue with this thick, black cotton apron. Measuring 25 inches wide by 35 inches long, it features the Weber logo on the pocket, so you'll stand tall, proud, and protected at your next barbecue.
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| Customer Reviews:
Perfect for grilling May 21, 2007 Donald L. Fry (Georgia USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I highly recommend the Weber apron for grilling. It is large enough to cover up your clothes and has plenty of pockets.
solid value May 16, 2007 D. Cuccolo (NJ) pleasantly suprised with the construction and generous size of this apron. fits my 6'2" husband comfortably. good buy!
great apron for the price! January 16, 2007 R. Hagenow (Cedar Falls, IA United States) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I ordered 3 of these aprons for use on the KCBS BBQ circuit, and would have preferred a slightly heavier fabric. However, for the price, these aprons are great.
It's as Easy as 1..2..4! April 26, 2001 20 out of 41 found this review helpful
Once again the time had come. August of every year, the month when Mr.Bits must defend his crown: The 2000 National Lentil Festival Cook-Off Grand Champion. You'd be surprised at the conniving and politics that surrounds an event of such caliber. The solitary fact that as Grand Champion I get free lentils for the entire year attracts a great number of fair weather friends. Location: Pullman, Washington. I had already spent a great deal of time collecting my thoughts on a rock steady new recipe to sustain my 1999 title. Sure, it all started out as a fun little social commentary about the injustice of the banana industry claiming to be the kings of good nutrition and potassium (did you know that a serving of lentils provides 360mg of potassium?), but now this has grown into battle to uphold my honor. I didn't want to stand on that Festival Parade Grand Champion float unless I had done my best. This year posed a completely new set of challenges. The estimated advertising revenue the festival was projected to make was staggering. The National Bean and Lentil Coalition must have done some to serious bargaining to lure this year's judges away from sunny Burbank, CA and their backset "Jeopardy!" jobs. Talk about strict, when these people say mashed lentils, they mean mashed lentils! Last year, contender, Patrico Rea was disqualified because of an insulting submission of lentil clumps. All these pressures combined with the hopes and dreams of local Lentil farmers placed a great deal of pressure on me. Failure was not an option; I needed the perfect ingredients, perfect equipment, and the perfect recipe. On a routine daily visit to ..., I noticed the Weber 124 BBQ Apron in the ... Recommendations Section. I like the fact that Weber named it The 124 Barbecue Apron. You see, people expect 3 to follow 2, (1,2,3), but they don't expect 4. Something unexpected, unpredictable, it embodied all I wanted to say with my lentil recipe. This was a much-needed stroke of luck, due to the intense heat and danger created by my patent-pending procedure of cooking my lentils with super-heated steam; the dense twill fiber really saved the day. When the decisive moment came, The Judges came to try my "Mango Home Jamaican Me Crazy Lentil Chili". As they lifted their bowls, I flipped my Weber 124 Apron backwards as though it was a cape. The Judges chewed, paused, and looked at each other for what seems an eon. Silence... Next, they looked at each other, swallowed, and then smiled and exhaled in a choir of MMMMMs (that's right five "M"s!). The crowd loved my apron/cape trick and subsequently went wild! I cannot give the cape all the credit, after all, it was my recipe, but the apron did make me feel like a winner, or should I say Grand Champion. I would like to the fine folks at Weber and ... -Meesta Bits 2001
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