
Reviewed by Valery Grin · · updated June 10, 2026
GEEKHOM – Waterproof Silicone Gloves for BBQ and Oven
Waterproof silicone with a cotton lining: the glove you can actually get wet.
From€34
Price verified on Amazon on June 10, 2026 · may change
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GEEKHOM food-grade silicone gloves with an inner cotton lining and a long cuff that covers the forearm. Waterproof, non-slip and washable: the glove for steam, hot liquids and wet handles.
Silicone is the material that beats the great enemy of knitted gloves: water. These GEEKHOM are waterproof, so you can pull a steaming Dutch oven, handle a pot of hot liquid or work with wet hands without heat suddenly punching through — exactly what ruins a damp aramid glove. They add two welcome details: an inner cotton lining that makes them more comfortable than bare silicone, and a long cuff (about 8 cm extra, 35 cm total) that protects the forearm when reaching into a hot kamado. The non-slip honeycomb relief grips metal and glass well, and being non-porous they clean with a rinse — the maker even rates them machine washable. The honest trade-off: silicone gives less fine dexterity than fabric, and the claimed 230 °C ceiling is not for holding red-hot metal — Kevlar protects more there. Think of them as the perfect complement: keep a knitted glove for dry heat and these silicone ones for anything with steam, liquid or moisture.
Specifications
- Material: Food-grade silicone with inner cotton lining
- Key advantage: Waterproof: steam, hot liquids and wet hands
- Protection: Long cuff covering the forearm (~35 cm total)
- Temperature: Up to a claimed 230 °C (446 °F)
- Limit: Worse than fabric for extreme dry heat / red-hot metal
- Cleaning: Non-porous: rinse or machine wash
- Units: Pair (2 gloves), black
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FAQ
Where do they beat Kevlar gloves?
On moisture. They're waterproof, so with steam or hot liquid they protect far better than a fabric that gets wet and lets heat through.
Good for grabbing a red-hot grate?
That's their weak point. For extreme dry heat and red-hot metal an aramid glove protects more; use silicone for steam and liquids.
Less feel than a knitted glove?
Yes, a little. Silicone is stiffer than thin knit, but the cotton lining adds comfort and the relief makes up for it with very secure grip.
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