Malcolm Reed is my hero!Malcolm Reed had a piece years ago where he cut the sausage but not completely through and spread it open to hit it with seasoning, I have done mine like that ever since and it is fantastic.View attachment 786232
Malcolm Reed is my hero!Malcolm Reed had a piece years ago where he cut the sausage but not completely through and spread it open to hit it with seasoning, I have done mine like that ever since and it is fantastic.View attachment 786232
I don't have any specific tips, but if you're looking for some experts that do a really good job of putting a lot of good bbq through consistently that people love, you could do worse than checking out these guys: Mash HerePlaying with BBQ in my pub a couple of days a week this summer. Going to go traditional Texas BBQ on 1 day every week. Brisket, ribs, and sausage. White meat is not going to be on the menu, because it ain't. Going simple with the sides, pit beans (that recipe I shared on here from the State Fair of Texas), potato salad, and a cucumber salad that I had at Bar A BBQ a few weeks ago.
The 2nd day is when we are going to have fun. Will probably do pulled pork consistently, but other proteins and sides will rotate and include fun stuff. Here's what I have so far:
Proteins
Sides I have dialed in the following
- smoked meatloaf
- pork belly burnt ends
- tri-tip,
- texas twinkies
- turkey breast
- smoked bacon and ranch mac and cheese
- brisket elotes
- salsa
- smoked queso
- pineapple & jalapeño cole slaw
We are gone run this for about 10 weeks and I want to rotate this stuff around almost every week. Give me your best ideas. I don't want to interfere with my pizza business so all of this is being done on a smoker... easy bake style so basically an outdoor oven. Looking for a few more sides and proteins. And for the record, the pineapple and jalapeno cole slaw on a fried halibut taco is maybe the best bite of food I have had in my life.
There's 2' of snow on the ground as I type this... I have a better shot of hiring a 6' natural dd Brazilian supermodel to run the smoker.
Ran into him at Walmart in Hernando a couple months ago. I just recognized him from his YouTube stuff but it was funny how he seemed surprised that he was recognized. Seemed like a real good dude just like on his show. I told him I was a huge fan and followed him and Matt at Meat Church. He said him and Matt were good friends.Malcolm Reed is my hero!
It's different in a touristy place even with pizza. On Friday an Saturday nights in July and August we are usually booked out for the night by 5:30 or 6 PM. We can only make so much dough and cook so many pizzas on a given day and when our population in town swells from 4K to 40K on a summer weekend there's no keeping up. Our dough is almost like a sourdough, it rises in a proofing cabinet throughout the day. After about 6-8 hours it falls flat and needs to be thrown out. So our goal is to sell out or get very close and chunk a few dough skins everynight if necessary.BBQ joints have to be so nerve wracking. Pizza, burgers, wings, etc. you catch a rush it may slow service but you can cook all of that. If you are not an established steady Q joint where you know what your volume will be,how do you plan for it? Either run out of food or try and pull off leftovers the next day.
Agreed. If I go to a BBQ place and they are closed an hour early because they ran out, i understand. Now if they do that a bunch, they need to forecast better.It's different in a touristy place even with pizza. On Friday an Saturday nights in July and August we are usually booked out for the night by 5:30 or 6 PM. We can only make so much dough and cook so many pizzas on a given day and when our population in town swells from 4K to 40K on a summer weekend there's no keeping up. Our dough is almost like a sourdough, it rises in a proofing cabinet throughout the day. After about 6-8 hours it falls flat and needs to be thrown out. So our goal is to sell out or get very close and chunk a few dough skins everynight if necessary.
What that has taught me is that similar to those top BBQ joints that are willing to run out. Quality and freshness are more important than maximizing those last few sales by "never running out." You can repurpose some BBQ items (turn brisket from yesterday into chopped brisket today sorta thing) but generally speaking leftover BBQ is crappy.
So we are going to cook 2 briskets, 12 slabs of ribs, and a couple dozen sausages on day 1. We'll probably run out by 1 pm. If we do, we'll cook a little more the next time and tell folks to get here earlier. Scarcity is something we are targeting. I have enough of a local following with my regulars that I don't even know if we'll get many tourists in the door to try it.
It's easy for me to be willing to run out since the BBQ is just incremental business bolted on to my cash cow pizza biz. Starting from scratch in its own entity would be scary as all get out to try to figure out how much to make, yet still wanting to run out.
No white meat? is the reason cause it was DEIPlaying with BBQ in my pub a couple of days a week this summer. Going to go traditional Texas BBQ on 1 day every week. Brisket, ribs, and sausage. White meat is not going to be on the menu, because it ain't. Going simple with the sides, pit beans (that recipe I shared on here from the State Fair of Texas), potato salad, and a cucumber salad that I had at Bar A BBQ a few weeks ago.
The 2nd day is when we are going to have fun. Will probably do pulled pork consistently, but other proteins and sides will rotate and include fun stuff. Here's what I have so far:
Proteins
Sides I have dialed in the following
- smoked meatloaf
- pork belly burnt ends
- tri-tip,
- texas twinkies
- turkey breast
- smoked bacon and ranch mac and cheese
- brisket elotes
- salsa
- smoked queso
- pineapple & jalapeño cole slaw
We are gone run this for about 10 weeks and I want to rotate this stuff around almost every week. Give me your best ideas. I don't want to interfere with my pizza business so all of this is being done on a smoker... easy bake style so basically an outdoor oven. Looking for a few more sides and proteins. And for the record, the pineapple and jalapeno cole slaw on a fried halibut taco is maybe the best bite of food I have had in my life.
Not to refined to respond to this...I don't know how refined them mountain folks are but I do a Blooming Bologna that's always a big hit. Get a 4-6 inch piece of a whole chub. Stand on end and slice down to about 3/4 inch from the bottom making about 1/2 inch fries. I seasoning with Cajun seasoning and then pack with brown sugar. Put it in a disposable pan because the sugar makes a mess. Smoke until the brown sugar starts to crystallize. You can drizzle with BBQ sauce or honey near the end. It's a perfect finger food and they don't last more than a few minutes.
Damn, I was going to volunteer, but I'm out!There's 2' of snow on the ground
I'm in Las Vegas and it's 92 at 6:42 pm so pick your poison.Damn, I was going to volunteer, but I'm out!
I'll take 92, 1,000,000 times out of 100. I hate cold, anything under 80 is cold to me. Jxn, MS is too cold for me. I've survived summers in Kuwait and Qatar.I'm in Las Vegas and it's 92 at 6:42 pm so pick your poison.
Work on scarcity, food cost loss is what kills bbq restaurantsIt's different in a touristy place even with pizza. On Friday an Saturday nights in July and August we are usually booked out for the night by 5:30 or 6 PM. We can only make so much dough and cook so many pizzas on a given day and when our population in town swells from 4K to 40K on a summer weekend there's no keeping up. Our dough is almost like a sourdough, it rises in a proofing cabinet throughout the day. After about 6-8 hours it falls flat and needs to be thrown out. So our goal is to sell out or get very close and chunk a few dough skins everynight if necessary.
What that has taught me is that similar to those top BBQ joints that are willing to run out. Quality and freshness are more important than maximizing those last few sales by "never running out." You can repurpose some BBQ items (turn brisket from yesterday into chopped brisket today sorta thing) but generally speaking leftover BBQ is crappy.
So we are going to cook 2 briskets, 12 slabs of ribs, and a couple dozen sausages on day 1. We'll probably run out by 1 pm. If we do, we'll cook a little more the next time and tell folks to get here earlier. Scarcity is something we are targeting. I have enough of a local following with my regulars that I don't even know if we'll get many tourists in the door to try it.
It's easy for me to be willing to run out since the BBQ is just incremental business bolted on to my cash cow pizza biz. Starting from scratch in its own entity would be scary as all get out to try to figure out how much to make, yet still wanting to run out.
Kenova, the happening BBQ in Flowood, runs out all the time.Agreed. If I go to a BBQ place and they are closed an hour early because they ran out, i understand. Now if they do that a bunch, they need to forecast better.
I see Malcolm in his store from time to time. Heath Riles is who usually see in the wild at the butcher in Southaven, or Kroger in OB.Ran into him at Walmart in Hernando a couple months ago. I just recognized him from his YouTube stuff but it was funny how he seemed surprised that he was recognized. Seemed like a real good dude just like on his show. I told him I was a huge fan and followed him and Matt at Meat Church. He said him and Matt were good friends.
Heath Riles garlic jalepeno rub is my favorite base rub.I see Malcolm in his store from time to time. Heath Riles is who usually see in the wild at the butcher in Southaven, or Kroger in OB.
I have been vac sealing and using sous vide for my BBQ leftovers at home for 4-5 years now. Not quite the same as freshly smoked, but very close The problem is now with all the red tape from health departments. As soon as you say vac seal you have to come up with what's called a HACCP plan in most jurisdictions. Its apparently a turd to get them approved.I used to competition BBQ and made friends with a guy who owned a restaurant. One night I asked him how he serves something in 15 minutes that takes 10 hours to cook and it still taste fresh. He invited me to his place so I went. He smokes everything and then vacuum packs it in serving size portions. When you go in and order a sandwich he pulls out a sandwich size portion pack and throws it in a big pot of boiling water for ten to fifteen minutes, cuts the pack open and you have fresh bbq. Ribs he quarters, halves, and packs whole. Brisket and chicken quarters are done the same. You honestly can't tell its not fresh off the smoker. I now do the same and freeze it, it just takes about thirty minutes in the boil pot to be ready from frozen. My freezer stays full of ready made meals and my smoker is always full when I cook.
I agree, but I probably like slaw more than most. It’s gotta have more vinegar than mayo, though. I don’t like “goopy” slaw.I've always thought good slaw is a more important part of a memorable BBQ meal than many give it credit. The spicier the better for me.
I think @dorndawg found it online somewhere too. I probably modified it a bit. But it's legit. Supposedly won best at the State Fair of Texas some years back.Where is your pit beans recipe
I’ve seen in a few places using a warmer at 150 on brisket is a big secret to nailing it every time. Take it to 195. Wrap. Place in a pan. Add a little water. Cover with foil. Keep warm at 150 for about 12 hours. All the fat renders out, and the meat is always tender and juicy.I have been vac sealing and using sous vide for my BBQ leftovers at home for 4-5 years now. Not quite the same as freshly smoked, but very close The problem is now with all the red tape from health departments. As soon as you say vac seal you have to come up with what's called a HACCP plan in most jurisdictions. Its apparently a turd to get them approved.
What most of the top joints are doing now is hot holding above 140° in a commercial food warmer. This is above the danger zone and allows you to wrap your proteins during the cook and let them rest indefinitely. I'm using this method since I have a couple of pizza warmers laying around.
Smoked sausage is always an easy addition for me. I also like adding stuffed jalapeños.Playing with BBQ in my pub a couple of days a week this summer. Going to go traditional Texas BBQ on 1 day every week. Brisket, ribs, and sausage. White meat is not going to be on the menu, because it ain't. Going simple with the sides, pit beans (that recipe I shared on here from the State Fair of Texas), potato salad, and a cucumber salad that I had at Bar A BBQ a few weeks ago.
The 2nd day is when we are going to have fun. Will probably do pulled pork consistently, but other proteins and sides will rotate and include fun stuff. Here's what I have so far:
Proteins
Sides I have dialed in the following
- smoked meatloaf
- pork belly burnt ends
- tri-tip,
- texas twinkies
- turkey breast
- smoked bacon and ranch mac and cheese
- brisket elotes
- salsa
- smoked queso
- pineapple & jalapeño cole slaw
We are gone run this for about 10 weeks and I want to rotate this stuff around almost every week. Give me your best ideas. I don't want to interfere with my pizza business so all of this is being done on a smoker... easy bake style so basically an outdoor oven. Looking for a few more sides and proteins. And for the record, the pineapple and jalapeno cole slaw on a fried halibut taco is maybe the best bite of food I have had in my life.
Did this Thursday. Went in my warmer at 11:30PM. Cut into it at 11:30 am the next day. This was the result.... Completely rendered fat.I’ve seen in a few places using a warmer at 150 on brisket is a big secret to nailing it every time. Take it to 195. Wrap. Place in a pan. Add a little water. Cover with foil. Keep warm at 150 for about 12 hours. All the fat renders out, and the meat is always tender and juicy.
Pineapple and Jalapeno slaw is a game changer.I agree, but I probably like slaw more than most. It’s gotta have more vinegar than mayo, though. I don’t like “goopy” slaw.
I can eat fifty eggsBoiled eggs, cabbage, and sauerkraut.
Stink up the joint.
I’ve chosen the 92 degree Vegas poison many a timeI'm in Las Vegas and it's 92 at 6:42 pm so pick your poison.
Nobody can eat 50 eggsI can eat fifty eggs
I did it in the crockpot with a hunk of brisket*View attachment 786910
I think @dorndawg found it online somewhere too. I probably modified it a bit. But it's legit. Supposedly won best at the State Fair of Texas some years back.
I bet that’s the best brisket in a 500 mile radius. So that’s out of like, what, a few thousand folks?***Did this Thursday. Went in my warmer at 11:30PM. Cut into it at 11:30 am the next day. This was the result.... Completely rendered fat.
View attachment 787188
Good smoke ring, can't really tell how juicy without tastovision.Did this Thursday. Went in my warmer at 11:30PM. Cut into it at 11:30 am the next day. This was the result.... Completely rendered fat.
View attachment 787188
Boy, when you start pushing 60 staying up til 3am is the equivalent of drinking a fifth of tequila when you're 25.I’ve chosen the 92 degree Vegas poison many a time
Here too. This is a winner.Malcolm Reed had a piece years ago where he cut the sausage but not completely through and spread it open to hit it with seasoning, I have done mine like that ever since and it is fantastic.View attachment 786232