I attended the class in Alameda, CA which he conducts at a Hampton Inn hotel conference room and parking lot. He usually teaches out of his home in Diamond Bar, CA which is just outside of Los Angeles.
You arrive early, before 8:00am. Class is scheduled to end at 2:30pm but can run longer. Breakfast snacks and coffee are provided. Harry starts cooking at midnight, because the briskets and pork butts need that head-start to be finished during the class.
He does a section on food safety, rubs, sauces, and injections. Then he continues with trimming, seasoning, and cooking pork butt and brisket.
In the next section, he covers trimming, seasoning, and cooking spareribs and baby backs.
In the next section, he covers trimming, seasoning and cooking tri-tip, chicken, and sausage. He also prepares his baked bean recipe during this slot.
Next up is preparing ahi tuna and his coleslaw recipe.
All this is building toward lunch at around 1:00pm. Everything you've seen during class is served in large quantities, and extras are sent home in to-go boxes. Leftover rub is divided into Ziplocs and you're sent home with some. You're given a homework assignment to cook something using the rub in the coming two weeks and post the results on Harry's class Facebook page. At the end of the day, you get a certificate of participation and a class photo. Attendees also receive a SYD logo apron.
So that's sort of the structure of the class. A lot of it is lecture and up-close demonstration by Harry. For example, it's not practical for everyone to trim a whole brisket, so everyone gathers around the table and watches Harry do it and explain a basic backyard trim and then a competition trim. For something like baby back ribs, he'll demonstrate how he prepares and seasons them, then he'll have everyone try their hand at seasoning a slab. When it comes time to foil the ribs, everyone has a chance to step up and apply brown sugar, agave nectar, and juice to a slab of ribs and wrap them in foil. So it's hands-on whenever possible.
During the rub portion, Harry will discuss components of the rub and you'll sample it. Same for the sauce portion, but he'll also have some commercial sauces that you can taste and compare styles with his all-purpose version that is created in class.
You do gather around the cookers at various points to check on the status of the meats, to observe how crust forms on meat, and he does a quick segment on how to build a fire in the WSM using the Minion Method. He also discusses smoke woods and type/quantities used.
It's just a jam-packed day, and hard to summarize it all!
Harry is such an enthusiastic guy and has such passion and love for barbecue, it's hard to communicate that in words. You have to experience it first-hand. I would encourage anyone interested to try his
Backyard Pitmaster Class. It's worth the time and effort and expense, definitely a great memory for me!
I hope others will chime-in and add to my comments, correct errors, etc.
Best,
Chris