I watched for a few weeks while a COMING SOON - BBQ sign teased from an unassuming building near Circle and Roosevelt in Forest Park. Last week, this appeared:
The facade brings to mind a Sprint store crossed with the Hyde Park Wok 'n Roll, but a slogan in the window offers more promise:
Woodsmoke perfuming the block and a tidy, small seating area were good signs. I wasn't sure what to make of the murals, which are mostly behind the counter - idyllic country scenes on one side, people dressed up out on the town on the other. The menu looked good:
I ordered a rib tip and hot link combo for $7.99, off of a paper plate special on the counter. About seven members of a garrulous gringo family (biological or culinary) merrily manned the cleavers and shiny aquarium smoker, a good-sized one, at that. I asked them if they were related to the Missouri Smokin M's (
www.smokinms.com), and the pitmaster said he'd never heard of it, but was glad to meet a barbecue fan and hoped I liked their offerings.
In a hurry, I grabbed my order to go and attacked it (mostly) at home. A waxed paper bag (not pictured) sheltered a prodigious order of fries, thick-cut with skins on, crisp and tasty, lots of salt, not a bad start, though a bit raw-oily (I need a word for the taste of something when it's been cooked in fresh, not quite-yet-hot oil instead of seasoned, piping hot fat) since I probably had one of the first batches of the day.
A paper tray supported this:
Two good hot links (one did not survive the car ride home), and a very generous portion of rib tips. The links were just slightly overcooked, and had split wide open, but I must say that the flavor was excellent, between a sagey breakfast sausage and a good chorizo, fine ground, with heat coming from pulverized hot paprika as opposed to whole pepper flakes. There was detectable and much-appreciated seasoning from some time in the smoker. I did not have a chance to ask their source. The rib tips were addicting:
Not as succulent as Uncle John's, these were also arguably overdone to some tastes (Mack would have pulled them earlier), but I am a 'burnt ends' aficionado on my brisket, so even on my pork products I can appreciate some texture variety, down to the very crisp strips that pulled grudgingly from some of the smaller tips. They got better and more interesting the more I ate, and I ended up quite excited, pulling little morsels off and demanding that my wife try them ("wait, no, this one's REALLY good").
The coleslaw was present and unremarkable, and since I asked for both hot and mild sauces on the side, there were quite a few little plastic cups thrown in as well. Some fresh, squishy white bread (exactly what's missing from Honky Tonk) rounded out the package. The sauce was relatively thin, and tasted like a mix of some commercial products with some tinkering; respectable, but largely unnecessary because the meat was strongly and pleasantly flavored. The result was between Russell's (which I'm convinced is actually pre-thinned tonkatsu sauce. Say what you want about it, at least it doesn't seem to have artificial smoke flavoring) and one of the less hickory-aggresive Open Pits in both consistency and flavor.
As I thought about analogous 'que around the city, my mind kept returning to UJ's - aquarium smoker, very strong link showing, good, chewy, porky tips, house doctored-up sauce, large portion for a decent price. The superficials might be operating stronger in my mind than a raw quality for quality comparison, since today's was my standard order from Mack as well, but my delight at having a place like this so close to home clears any reservation I have about the simile.
I'll return (soon) to try some other delicious-looking things I saw going under the cleaver, at which point I'm sure this place will have been discovered by every yuppie newsman's J Crew-wearing internet research team member and pronounced as the self-discovered barbecue panacea of the Near Western Suburbs, but I choose, lovingly (my coat still smelling of pork), to share it with LTH first, which has brought me such smoked affection and comfort in my hour of need.
Smokin' M's
7507 W. Roosevelt Road
Forest Park, IL 60130
(708) 488-0123
Tentative schedule as of 1/13:
Mon-Thurs: 10 AM - 12 AM
Fri-Sun: 10 AM - 2 AM (!)