Ninja Woodfire Outdoor Grill Review: Bring the Smoke Anywhere

This portable electric grill uses wood pellets to add smoky flavor, but its real strengths lie elsewhere

Ninja Woodfire Outdoor Grill on a table with food. The grill adds a "smoking" element to food.

The Ninja Woodfire Outdoor Grill is an interesting tailgating option

By Kirk Miller

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As a co-owner of a very small NYC apartment that happens to have a deck, I’ve been interested in getting my grill game on — and my first foray into the world of outdoor electric grills was a success.

My initial non-gas/non-charcoal grill venture was more about escaping the heat of a kitchen in the summer (and abiding by the city’s restrictive fire codes, which limited my grilling options). But as the weather has cooled, my interest in outdoor cooking has remained strong.

What could I do beyond grilling meats and veggies?

Enter the Ninja Woodfire Outdoor Grill, which promised an easy way to not only grill outside, but also smoke, air fry, broil, roast, bake and even dehydrate food. You probably know Ninja from their array of small kitchen appliances (blenders, coffee makers, toasters, etc.) — Woodfire represents the brand’s first outdoor product.

But the selling point here is the “smoking” part. There’s a giant “woodfire flavor” button on the bottom left/center of the unit’s control panel. Scoop some proprietary Ninja wood-burning pellets into a small smoke box on the side, close the lid, press the woodfire flavor button (a flame icon will appear on the digital readout) and voila, near-instant smoky goodness can be added to anything you want to grill, air crisp, roast or dehydrate (but not broil).

The learning curve here is modest. The results? Your love of the grill may depend on how much you like to bring the smoke, or if you find its other uses to be the real selling point.

The specs:

What works: 

What kind of works:

What needs work:

Final thoughts:

Veteran BBQ “smokers” will probably find the Ninja limiting, but novice chefs will love that the Woodfire is on the lower price end of wood pellet grills. Add in its (semi-)portability and versatility  — you don’t have to use the smoker to use the grill — and you have an appliance that seems best suited for tailgating and camping trips, where most people will be just fine with some grilled meats and veggies…and more adventurous cooks can easily and quickly test out the Woodfire’s other wide-ranging if modestly successful abilities.

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