All I can afford is CostcoIf you want to eat at home I'll sell you a large buffalo chicken pizza... for $30 lol.
All I can afford is CostcoIf you want to eat at home I'll sell you a large buffalo chicken pizza... for $30 lol.
I finally had Goldee's last summer and I would put it in the top levels of the traditional BBQ category. It was all cooked excellent, but very down the middle. It's in that Franklin and Terry Black's category for me. Very traditional and great, but possibly a little on the boring side. If you haven't lived in TX and experienced Texas BBQ, traditional places like Goldee's, Franklin's, Terry Black's, and Louie Mueller's is the place to start and end the BBQ journey.I will say Goldee's was well worth the 2-hour wait in line... Love to hear about other bbq places and try them out and just because I might not like them doesn't mean someone else can't like them.
Explains a lotThe best BBQ is the place with the coldest beer- FACT!
With as much as it costs to get a half rack or a few ozs of brisket at any BBQ joint now, it's long past time to call this fine dining.
Germantown Commissary > anything in Texas
Nope. It's better and the prices are fine other than you are in Austin vs Memphis and everything is 30-40% more.
I've eaten @ Leroy and Lewis and La Barbecue. They are better than anything you have had if you think anything in the mid south compares. Iron sharpens iron and there is nothing that compares to the Austin BBQ scene over the last 15 years.
I assumed it's chimichurri. I eat it all the time on tri tip and flat iron steaks. I bet it's awesome on beef ribs that are seasoned with salt and pepper central Texas style.Having said all that, I'm not sure what they are drizzling on those beef ribs in the pic - I think that was just for the magazine?
I'm assuming none of you nancy boys never had Letha's when it was inside the levee in Foxworth. Best BBQ in the world, it would make men out of most of you and put hair on your chest. The smoke houses had been there since the war (the one we lost) manned by Letha's sons who all weighed in excess of 400 bills, with chickens and every other farm animal milling around. It was awesome. It would NOT pass any health inspection and for the city slickers who showed up in cars, if it rained you probably be "stuck" there until it dried out.
There were as many tags from LA and Bama as MS. Signed pics on the wall from celebrities, like Clint Eastwood, and politicians. It was truly a destination, other than BBQ (most known for ribs), the only other items they had, that I can remember, were sweet tea and wonder bread. I'm not sure what happened to it, I've heard that Letha died and someone bought and moved it to H'burg, but no sure about that. Fortunately Grant didn't burn down those original smokehouses.Glad to hear from anybody who ever ate at the original Letha's.
What BBQ was, should be and will eventually revert back to.
There were as many tags from LA and Bama as MS. Signed pics on the wall from celebrities, like Clint Eastwood, and politicians. It was truly a destination, other than BBQ (most known for ribs), the only other items they had, that I can remember, were sweet tea and wonder bread. I'm not sure what happened to it, I've heard that Letha died and someone bought and moved it to H'burg, but no sure about that. Fortunately Grant didn't burn down those original smokehouses.
Haha, ask for that and you'd get your *** whipped for sure! And I have no idea what this is.And chimichurri was not available with your ribs, best I can remember.
Having the shiiter right there off the dining room with a curtain (no door) is what made it good.I'm assuming none of you nancy boys never had Letha's when it was inside the levee in Foxworth. Best BBQ in the world, it would make men out of most of you and put hair on your chest. The smoke houses had been there since the war (the one we lost) manned by Letha's sons who all weighed in excess of 400 bills, with chickens and every other farm animal milling around. It was awesome. It would NOT pass any health inspection and for the city slickers who showed up in cars, if it rained you probably be "stuck" there until it dried out.
It was started as a way to encourage people to drive/travel more and visit restaurants outside their hometown.What do tires have to do with BBQ?
I seem to remember there was a hole in the floor you had to step around? This would have been 1995ishHaving the shiiter right there off the dining room with a curtain (no door) is what made it good.
I assumed it's chimichurri. I eat it all the time on tri tip and flat iron steaks. I bet it's awesome on beef ribs that are seasoned with salt and pepper central Texas style.
ETA. Yep it's chimichurri and I would love to give it a try.
I’ve heard stories about Letha’s late son, Applehead. Apparently he was slow and would walk around from table to table and sing for folks. And would stand there awkwardly until someone tipped him. He put out a 2 song album of Michael Jackson covers, Billie Jean and one other song. My old roommate had a copy. I think he died before she did.There were as many tags from LA and Bama as MS. Signed pics on the wall from celebrities, like Clint Eastwood, and politicians. It was truly a destination, other than BBQ (most known for ribs), the only other items they had, that I can remember, were sweet tea and wonder bread. I'm not sure what happened to it, I've heard that Letha died and someone bought and moved it to H'burg, but no sure about that. Fortunately Grant didn't burn down those original smokehouses.