Two Open Fire Traditions, One Goal: Perfect Grilled Meat
If you've been researching open fire grills, you've probably come across two dominant styles: the Santa Maria grill and the Argentine parrilla grill. Both use real wood or charcoal, both produce incredible flavor, and both have passionate followings. But they're built on different philosophies — and understanding those differences will help you choose the right grill for your cooking style.
What Is a Santa Maria Grill?
The Santa Maria grill originated in California's Santa Maria Valley in the mid-1800s. It's defined by one key feature: a crank-operated adjustable grate that moves up and down over a stationary fire pit. The cook controls heat by raising or lowering the grate — closer to the coals for searing, higher for slow cooking.
Traditional Santa Maria grills are typically built as permanent installations, often made from brick or heavy steel, with a large rectangular cooking surface suspended by chains or a crank mechanism. The classic Santa Maria tri-tip is cooked over red oak coals, seasoned simply with salt, pepper, and garlic.
Key Features of Santa Maria Grills
- Adjustable height grate — The signature feature. A hand crank or wheel raises and lowers the entire grill surface.
- Stationary fire — The fire stays in a fixed pit below. You adjust the grate, not the fire.
- Red oak fuel — Traditional Santa Maria cooking uses red oak, which burns hot and clean with a mild smoke flavor.
- Large cooking surface — Built to cook for crowds, often 4–6 feet wide.
- Simple seasoning — The focus is on the quality of the fire and the meat, not elaborate rubs or sauces.
What Is an Argentine Grill (Parrilla)?
The Argentine parrilla takes the opposite approach to heat control. Instead of moving the grate, you move the fire. An Argentine grill typically has a fixed-height V-shaped grate and a separate firebox (brasero) where you burn wood down to embers. You shovel those embers under the grate, controlling heat by managing the amount and placement of coals.
This is the method used across Argentina, Uruguay, and southern Brazil — countries where asado (the social ritual of grilling) is a way of life, not just a cooking technique.
Key Features of Argentine Parrilla Grills
- Separate firebox — Burn wood to embers in a brasero, then transfer coals under the grate. This gives you cleaner, more controllable heat.
- V-shaped grill bars — Channels drippings away from the fire, reducing flare-ups and keeping the smoke clean.
- Fixed grate, adjustable fire — Instead of moving the cooking surface, you manage heat by adding or removing embers.
- Multi-zone cooking — Pile more coals on one side for searing, fewer on the other for slow cooking.
- Portable options available — Unlike most Santa Maria grills, Argentine grills come in portable, freestanding designs like the Tromen Gaucha or Kankay BBQ.
Santa Maria Grill vs Argentine Grill: Head-to-Head
| Feature | Santa Maria Grill | Argentine Grill |
|---|---|---|
| Heat control method | Raise/lower the grate | Add/remove embers under fixed grate |
| Fire management | Stationary fire pit | Separate firebox (brasero) |
| Typical fuel | Red oak | Quebracho Colorado, hardwood, charcoal |
| Grate design | Flat bars | V-shaped bars (drip channels) |
| Portability | Usually permanent | Portable and freestanding options |
| Cooking style | Direct heat, fast searing | Ember cooking, slow and fast |
| Learning curve | Moderate | Moderate to high |
| Best for | Tri-tip, steaks, burgers | Full asado (ribs, chorizo, whole animals) |
Which Style Is Better?
Neither is objectively better — they're built for different philosophies. The Santa Maria grill excels at straightforward, high-heat cooking where the crank mechanism gives you quick, precise height adjustments. It's intuitive and great for cooks who want a simple, powerful fire setup.
The Argentine grill gives you more flexibility and a deeper connection to the fire. Managing your own embers teaches you to read heat, and the separate firebox means you always have fresh coals ready. If you want to cook for hours — a full asado with multiple courses — the Argentine method is built for exactly that.
Can You Get Both in One Grill?
Some modern grills blend elements from both traditions. Several freestanding open fire grills in our collection feature adjustable grates AND work with separate fireboxes, giving you the best of both worlds. Check out our Freestanding Open Fire Grills collection to see options that combine Santa Maria-style height adjustment with Argentine ember management.
The Wood Makes the Flavor
Regardless of which style you choose, the wood you burn matters more than the grill itself. Santa Maria tradition calls for red oak. Argentine tradition uses Quebracho Colorado — one of the densest hardwoods on earth, imported directly from Argentina. Quebracho burns hotter, longer, and with a distinctive smoky sweetness that defines authentic asado flavor.
Ready to Start?
Whether you lean toward Santa Maria style or full Argentine asado, the best place to start is with a quality grill and real wood. Browse our Argentine Charcoal Grills collection to find grills from Tromen, A La Cruz, and Kankay — all imported directly from Argentina with factory-direct pricing. Free shipping available on select items.