riddlemay wrote:Mike G answered it, YoYo. But to amplify on that, "The Sauganash Grill" is inside the new Whole Foods at Peterson and Cicero. I wouldn't be surprised if it owes its very existence to the success of Smoque.
I'm not sure exactly what the implication is here. I assume you are saying that the meats at Smoque are not smoked. If this is the case, I can assure you that you are mistaken.jellobee wrote:could it it be...
that all this 'smoque' buzz... is being generated by people that don't know how to appreciate real 'que'?
an infusion of the aromatic meld of hardwood 'flavored' creosotes with 'slow cooked' rendered meat fats.
ok now - great 'scrubber' technology, great rubs, sauces and great sides...
for an establishment that has the audacity to call itself 'smoque' - there doesn't seem any such essence, to be had... within or without.
Or just getting a little tired of it. As I said in another thread, I am sure the owners of Smoque would have built an open pit if they could have, but this is Chicago. There is a very good reason that the Salt Lick is in the middle of nowhere. Nobody wants to live next door to it. Even the once ubiquitous aquarium type smokers are rapidly disappearing from the city, thanks to neighborhood complaints being filed with the Department of Environment and the Illinois EPA. It can cost from $30,000 to $50,000 to retrofit an old smoker with air scrubbers, which would buy two new cabinet smokers. Go ask Hecky Powell why he no longer uses his aquarium smoker and switched to Southern Pride (to the detriment of his product). I will agree that SP makes inferior Barbecue when compared to a pit, but here in Chicago that is all you are going to get in a new establishment. So if you don't like the product from gas fired cabinet smokers, then go to Honey 1 or one of the other few remaining all-wood aquarium type places, and be grateful that they still exist. They could use your support. I think Smoque will do just fine without your patronage.jellobee wrote:looks like i'm getting someone a little p-o'd with my rant...
jellobee wrote:looks like i'm getting someone a little p-o'd with my rant...
perhaps my beef is in the fact that they don't 'smoque' enough.... evidenced by lack of the characteristic smoke ring in their hunk meats or any noticeable redness to their rib meats... along with the distinct flavors the proper process would naturally impart.
sorry but... a gas fired or an electrically heated oven with a 'handful' of smoldering wood chunks at the bottom, does not equate to real barbeque.
this is 21st century style barbeque... 'scrubbed', seasoned and served toward its metro patrons.
i'll continue to eat there, and at famous dave's, carson's et al and the like, but only because i have an insatiable meat jones.
YoYoPedro wrote:Jello meat is still barbecue,
YoYoPedro wrote:There are many types of BBQ, so find one that you enjoy. But don't disparage the ones that others might like and you do not as not being "real." Feel free to say that they taste like dog doo-doo, but let them still be called barbecue if they so desire.
G Wiv wrote:YoYoPedro wrote:Jello meat is still barbecue,
No it is not. To achieve "jello meat" texture one bakes, braises or boils, there is no interaction with smoke, charcoal, wood, wood fired pit, gas w/wood chunks, chips, or even electric with sawdust. Just flabby mealy pissed upon pork product slathered with burnt on sweet sauce that is often laced with li*uid sm*ke.
Gary
d4v3 wrote:Go ask Hecky Powell why he no longer uses his aquarium smoker and switched to Southern Pride (to the detriment of his product).
YoYoPedro wrote: I stand by my post, we'll just have agree to disagree.
G Wiv wrote:*I don't mean to come off like a didactic ass, but you can call a Cessna Apollo 11, it's still not getting to to the moon.
G Wiv wrote:Fine by me, but you'll still be wrong.*
Regards,
Gary
*I don't mean to come off like a didactic ass, but you can call a Cessna Apollo 11, it's still not getting to to the moon.
YoYoPedro wrote:Seriously, since you like the airborne metaphor, if you said that Mercury, Gemini and Apollo were all space rockets, yet very different from one another, you'd be correct.
Now that I am aware of all the various nuances and variations involved, it's still hard not to call anything with BBQ sauce on it BBQ.
sundevilpeg wrote:Example: by what alternative name are we to refer to when talking about the typical recipes for BBQ'd shrimp or oysters?
nr706 wrote:YoYoPedro wrote:Seriously, since you like the airborne metaphor, if you said that Mercury, Gemini and Apollo were all space rockets, yet very different from one another, you'd be correct.
Funny, I thought Mercury, Gemini and Apollo were all space capsules, mounted on top of Redstone, Atlas, Titan or Saturn rockets. (Okay, the capsules did have minor rockets built into them, but they wouldn't have gotten anywhere without being mounted on big booster rockets.) Anyway - I don't think you can say anyone's correct if they call Mercury, Gemini and Apollo "space rockets."
(distraction from a sometimes amateur didactic ass)