Check the Garage Before You Fire Up the Grill

Cedar Valley News
Wednesday, April 8, 2026
Check the Garage Before You Fire Up the Grill
Practical Truths
By Lars Olson

A customer I have known for years came into the store last week to pick up charcoal. I am going to call her Carol, which is not her name. In a town like Cedar Valley, I do not need to use her name. Most of you will not need me to either. We talked for a few minutes the way you do at the counter. Then she mentioned, almost as an aside: her son had spent two days in the hospital in March.

Stomach pain. Severe enough for an ER visit. Severe enough for imaging. They found it eventually — a small wire bristle, the kind from a metal grill brush, working its way through his digestive tract.

He recovered. But she stood there at my counter, describing the days before they knew what it was. The pain. The confusion. The tests. Nobody thought to ask what he had eaten at the cookout two days before.

Nobody ever does.

The bristle does not announce itself. It does not have a taste. It is thinner than a toothpick and shorter than your thumbnail. It sticks to the grill grate, it sticks to the food, and it goes down with the first bite. The meal was good. The family was together. Nothing seemed wrong.

Two days later, something is very wrong. And by then, the connection to the cookout is gone.

I have been in this business for thirty years. I have stocked and sold wire grill brushes and never once thought much about them. They work. People buy them every spring. Nobody complains.

Nobody complains because most people never make the connection. A bristle injury looks like a dozen other things before it looks like a bristle injury.

I am writing this today because two major recalls have gone largely unnoticed while the rest of the news cycle is elsewhere.

Nexgrill has recalled 10.2 million wire bristle grill brushes sold at Home Depot from 2015 through this year. If your brush is a Nexgrill, check the packaging for model numbers 530-0024, 530-0024G, 530-0034, 530-0039, 530-0041, or 530-0042. If you have one, stop using it. Register for a full refund at nexgrill.mktpoint.com/recall or call 800-942-1498.

Weber has recalled 3.2 million wire bristle brushes sold at Lowe’s, Home Depot, Ace Hardware, Target, and Amazon from 2011 through this year. Weber model numbers 6277, 6278, 6463, 6464, 6493, and 6494 are included. Stop using it. Weber will send you a free nylon replacement at weberbrushrecall.expertinquiry.com or 877-597-9588.

If your brush is a different brand but has metal wire bristles, consider replacing it. The problem is the design, not just these two companies. Metal wire bristles work loose. These two companies issued formal recalls. Not every company has.

You may have used the same brush for years without incident. I understand. The odds are on your side. Most people who own these brushes will never know anything went wrong.

Carol thought the same thing. She had used her brush for eight years.

Grilling season in Cedar Valley means families in the backyard. It means kids running around while someone tends the grill. It means a good meal at the end of a warm day. I want all of it for everyone in this town.

All I am asking is two minutes in the garage first.

Check the model number. Check the bristles. If anything looks worn or loose, replace the brush regardless of the recall. Safe alternatives are easy to find — nylon bristle brushes, grill stones, scraper tools. None of them ends up in the emergency room.

The news will tell you about Iran today. I am telling you about the brush next to your grill.

One of these is something you can do something about before noon.

Cedar Valley News has a Facebook group. If you have comments and want to join the conversation, you are welcome. https://bit.ly/40p8jKy

This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series, written by Evan Swensen, Publisher, Publication Consultants, and Claude Marshall, AI Developmental Editor. While the people and town are fictional, the recall of Nexgrill and Weber grill brushes by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission is real. Model numbers and contact information are accurate as of April 8, 2026.

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