I don't get it...


 
<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Originally posted by PeterD:
<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Originally posted by paul h:
Peter, if you want to sample Competition Q then consider being a KCBS judge. You'll have all the access til your heart and belly are content.
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I'd love to...if there were any KCBS-sanctioned events near me! My wife and I are pretty well stuck in the North Jersey area due to on-call work requirements. Even getting into Manhattan is a stretch some days. If there were comps nearby, I'd have either been lined up to judge a long time ago or I'd have been cooking in them!

But to go back to the thread, the only real option around here are NYC-based Q-joints, which cater to NYC's "upscale" tastes and are at NYC prices. Two beers, 4 bones and a side worked out to $45, and it was awful.

Kevin, you bring up an interesting connundrum, and I'm interested in how others view it. If comp Q is that over-the-top and artificial ("not something one wants to eat more of") and restaurant Q is more often than not a saucy slab of poorly prepared pork products, then where is the "benchmark" barbecue to be had? Where are the real "standards" to be had?

We can ooh and ahh at the scrumptous pics on TVWBB (and I do, oh, I do--y'all make some awesome lookin' food here folks). However, where does one find ribs, brisket, pulled pork and chicken done in a way that serious barbecue fans would say " that is the best slab-o-Q I've ever et?" </div></BLOCKQUOTE>

I don't necessarily share Kevin's opinion of comp que. It has a lot to do with personal taste. Sure, some entries can be over the top, but many aren't. What you do get out of comp entries, at least the good ones, is very-well cooked barbecue. The flavors may be geared to make that one bite "pop," but that doesn't mean it's "not something one wants to eat more of." In fact, competition chicken is probably the only grilled/smoked chicken I like any more. The best brisket I've ever had came from a comp.

From my perspective, I think a lot of competitors latch on to an idea of what they think competition que has to be and the result is a lot of similar-tasting entries. I can't tell you how many pieces of chicken or ribs I've had that taste like a friggin candy apple! However, I've had plenty that were well-balanced, perfectly cooked and just amazing.

Your point about "standards" is a very sticky one. If you look at the sanctioning agencies like KCBS and MBN, you'll get different opinions. So the "standard" is subjective. If you think your que is better than any you've tasted, who can argue with you? They might not agree, but that doesn't mean you're wrong. Just reiterates the fact that there are a lot of tastes out there.
 
An interesting thread !

I haven't seen anyone mention those local, hole-in-the-wall places...are they "restaurants" ? Depends on your definition
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After moving back to FL, I notice a LOT more of that type of place than I saw in MD...maybe it's a "Lower Alabama" thing...do they "make money" off their work ? Some, but I doubt they'll ever get rich, unless some Big Corporation "discovers" them and markets their product !

My recent experience : There's a place near me that's very much like a "Sonny's BBQ", which is fairly common in the South. I have a "real" Sonny's near, too...both ARE "restaurants", by my definition....both serve passable, cheap Q when you don't feel like fixing it yourself.

A co-worker told me about a "carry-out", hole-in-the-wall place...she said "Don't go to the Red Barn or Sonny's...this place is much better than that". The Wife and I went there to try it out, so picture this : it was basically an Airstream travel trailer with carry-out window, parked under an old oak tree...with a huge, unidentified smoker out back, and a big pile of hickory. The place is open from noon to 6 PM, on Wednesday thru Saturday (hey, they DID have a phone, for those "call ahead take-out orders"
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. On the wood deck out front, they had an old fan blower motor out of an A/C unit, hard-wired into the power, for "cooling"
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...

The "menu" consisted of ribs, pulled pork, and potato salad, beans, and cole slaw sides...drinks were sweet tea (of course !) or lemonade. The Q sauce was served in those little plastic cups with lids ("How many you want ?")

We ordered a full slab of ribs, some beans, and the "tater salad"...they asked..."You want the ribs cut ?" I said yes, so they cut 'em down to individual ribs and wrapped the slab...

I gotta admit...when we got home and ate everything, the ribs, the sauce, and the sides were outstanding !!! As others noted, the "taste" and texture is an individual thing, but it's really made me rethink just how much trouble I want to go through in my own back yard when I can buy great Q for ~$17 (as long as it's Wed thru Sat, and I get there before 6 PM, or before they run out !)

Dean...
 
Great BBQ is obviously very subjective. But since I got my WSM, I haven't been to a BBQ joint. My food is simply better. Anyone should be able to cook better BBQ in the backyard than most local BBQ joints. I've got my Rib and chicken done cold. Pork Butt very good. Gonna take a shot at brisket this weekend. Now I'm not sayin' my "Q" is better than yours. It's just way better than I can get in Boulder CO. Although I will say the Rib Tips at Famous Dave's are really good.
 
I agree with Kevin. What I have seen in Competition makes me wonder if I would want to eat more then one bite. With all the tricks done to make a huge impression in just a single bite I doubt I would want to call that the kind of BBQ I would like to be known for. When making BBQ I always look at the process as how would I cook this if I was doing it for a big party of maybe 100-150 people. To me that is how I see BBQ. Cooking for the masses. In that sense I would not be injecting the meat or clipping each piece of chicken to look alike or painting the backside of each slice of brisket with a sauce. I want the diner to eat the entire plate of food and say WOW, that is what I call BBQ!
 
It should be a federal law that restaurants can't call their food BBQ if it's been steamed or in the oven.
 
<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Originally posted by Mark H:
It should be a federal law that restaurants can't call their food BBQ if it's been steamed or in the oven. </div></BLOCKQUOTE>

Give this man a medal! It gets to a point where it's no longer taste subjective. Crap is crap.
 
My wife won't order steaks at a restaurant because she says mine on the grill are better and about six months ago I bought a WSM . Now she won't buy ribs at a restaurant. Don't get me wrong, I love to cook but I would like to go out and eat once and a while.
 

 

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