stevez wrote:deke rivers wrote:i believe Honey 1 , Smoque, and even Sweet Baby Rays offers the " 4 food groups"..which includes pulled pork and brisket...
Honey 1 does not offer brisket as a regular menu item.
deke rivers wrote:G Wiv wrote:KSeecs wrote:To me...those split open links look like a travesty. In both pictures they look dry as can be. If you are smoking a sausage there is no reason it should ever bust open to that extent, unless the temperature is way too high.
I have not been to Smokin M's, but did wish to point out that cutting links lengthwise just prior to service is a fairly common style decision amongst BBQ joints, Lem's for example. I mean this as simply a data point, if Hammond says astoundingly dry, I'm thinking Sahara.David Hammond wrote:My whole chicken looked pretty good…but it wasn’t quite cooked, very chewy and stringy. I took a lot of it home, but The Wife made me dump it. It was red at the bone, not pink from the smoke, blood red.
Though the chicken may simply have been undercooked, another possible cause of red at the bone is much of the chicken we consume today is quite young even though, due to various hormones and breeding techniques, they are market size.
Often the bone is underdeveloped and somewhat porous allowing marrow to seep out through the bone. The red marrow, especially in conjunction with color from the smoke ring, can give the impression that fully cooked chicken is undercooked.
Info about chicken, bones and blood, along with a few mildly gross pictures, can be found here
Enjoy,
Gary
gotta agree Gary..even properly smoked chicken can have red at the bone..but the tough to chew and stringy along with the red makes me think this was in fact undercooked
deke rivers wrote:Dave- i gotta say all one has to do is look at that pic to agree with you..if you cant get fresh or the best food at lunch time..then whats the point?
deke rivers wrote:
i stand corrected..my point is lack of or absence of pork and brisket does not constitute 'Chicago BBQ"..and wonder bread can be had in just about every authentic bbq joint across the country
Binko wrote:deke rivers wrote:
i stand corrected..my point is lack of or absence of pork and brisket does not constitute 'Chicago BBQ"..and wonder bread can be had in just about every authentic bbq joint across the country
I didn't say it does, either. My point was that aquarium smoker Chicago-style barbecue is centered around ribs, rib tips, hot links, and perhaps chicken. Shoulder and brisket is not a usual item to find, in my experience in South Side or West Side BBQ joints. Pulled pork was a relatively new addition to Honey 1's menu. And none of the other aquarium smoker places I could think of -- Barbara Ann's, Lem's, Uncle John's, Leon's, I-57 Rib House, Exsenators, Ribs & Bibs, Hecky's, etc. -- serve brisket or pork. (I think Uncle John's has brisket now, but to my understanding it's not a smoked product, right?) At least if they do, I've never noticed it on the menu.
All I'm saying is that it's hardly unusual to find a Chicago aquarium smoker BBQ shack around here that does not serve pulled pork or brisket. I'd say it's the exception not the rule. And it appears to me from the description that this place is trying to replicate this particular style of Chicago barbecue.
deke rivers wrote:understood..I guess my biggest beef is do we really need yet another one of these type places when we got places like Smoque who are trying resally hard to change the face of BBQ in Chicago . Why open yet another "Chicago style BBQ" on Roosevelt when you got Charlie Robinsons 5 min away from this place if you want ribs, tips, and links?
G Wiv wrote:deke rivers wrote:understood..I guess my biggest beef is do we really need yet another one of these type places when we got places like Smoque who are trying resally hard to change the face of BBQ in Chicago . Why open yet another "Chicago style BBQ" on Roosevelt when you got Charlie Robinsons 5 min away from this place if you want ribs, tips, and links?
Chicago needs, and should want, all the traditional Chicago Aquarium smoker BBQ style joints it can get, what we don't need, or at least I don't, is yet another mechanical Q joint where the monthly wood allowance is less than the ketchup for hot dog budget.
Enjoy,
Gary
deke rivers wrote:Why open yet another "Chicago style BBQ" on Roosevelt when you got Charlie Robinsons 5 min away from this place if you want ribs, tips, and links? I had heard about this place opening up awhile back and thought we might finally get some good BBQ in the burbs.
I think this guy missed the boat and could have brought something really good to the table BBQ wise to an area starved for this type thing.
seebee wrote:*Russell's is not Aqua Q, but does advertise itself as a bar b q place. Pretty sure they just place BBQ sauce on meat and then call it bbq.
seebee wrote:deke rivers wrote:Why open yet another "Chicago style BBQ" on Roosevelt when you got Charlie Robinsons 5 min away from this place if you want ribs, tips, and links? I had heard about this place opening up awhile back and thought we might finally get some good BBQ in the burbs.
I think this guy missed the boat and could have brought something really good to the table BBQ wise to an area starved for this type thing.
While I do see your point with it being another "Chicago aquarium q joint" as opposed to a different style of q joint, I would add that IMHO Robinson's has been absolutely horrendous for at least ten years. If SM's can hone its technique down to start churning out a respectable product, I'd assume they would do VERY well, as Coleman's in Maywood is really the only other place for decent Aqua Q in this area if you ask me. If your only real competition in the area is Russell's*, Robinson's, Coleman's, Hillary and Cook's, and Joe's, then another Aqua Q place should thrive (if it's done right) IMHO. If the owner is not familiar with brisket, or pulled pork, then I don't think it would have been wise for them to take on the Famous Dave's a little bit south of there. If M's can start doing Chicago Q right, I'll be happy they came.
*Russell's is not Aqua Q, but does advertise itself as a bar b q place. Pretty sure they just place BBQ sauce on meat and then call it bbq.
deke rivers wrote:I have had Robinsons on occasion and its notthat bad..not that good either but thats my point....its sad when places like Famous Daves can thrive. The lot is always full and the Q is mediocre at best.
Now i grew up on Russells..doesnt mean I liked it either..most times it was a place to stop half drunk while on the way somewhere else
i often wondered why they claimed it was BBQ
SmokinM's wrote:Also, THE FRIES ARE MADE IN NO TRANS FAT SATURATED OIL. Just to make notice.
SmokinM's wrote:I believe what makes a true barbecue is the sauce. But what do i know im just a kid.
SmokinM's wrote:When smoked right most meats definitely have the same taste. Even when chewy and sometimes a little bland to taste.
SmokinM's wrote:I believe what makes a true barbecue is the sauce.
SmokinM's wrote:But what do i know im just a kid.
SmokinM's wrote:Now my uncle (smokin m's pitmaster) has lots to say when it comes to good barbecue. If he wasn't so computer incapable I'd have him type his own ideas.
deke rivers wrote:why??? I think we got a big enough glut of those type places
dont you?
Why wouldnt you rather see a decent BBQ place in Chicago that opens up the whole BBQ world to Chicago besides ribs and tips? It can be done without being mechanical
you of all people should welcome that concept I would think
I politely suggest you spend more time listening and learning from your uncle and less time at the keyboard.
Santander wrote:Gary Aloysius FitzWiviott! Are you trying to earn the Mike G. Memorial Curmudgeon Award?
SmokinM's wrote:When smoked right most meats definitely have the same taste.
SmokinM's wrote: THE FRIES ARE MADE IN NO TRANS FAT SATURATED OIL. Just to make notice.
Ann Fisher wrote: and although he couldn't tell me what they were cooked in ("it's white, it comes in a box, you scoop it out")
BP wrote: From what I have learned from people on this forum site, SmoqueBBQ smokes by using wood panels, powered by gasoline.
BP wrote:The owners of the two businesses are very passionate about operating not just good establishments, though great establishments. The owners are very polite and respectful of accomodation. I am physically disabled, yet despite crowds, weather, etc, I have always been helped by the owners in order for me to enjoy dining there. The food, being smoked, even though the method of smoking the food is different at both places, are equally as good (my opinion).
If there is an issue with the food there, mention it to the owners.