G Wiv wrote:G Wiv wrote:In other words, it's a matter of preference and Robert Adams preference is to leave the membrane on. I'd suggest if you have further questions specifically in reference to Honey 1 ask Robert Adams Sr directly. He's one of the nicer people you ever hope to meet and always happy to talk BBQ.
Spoke to Robert Adams Sr. this morning, he hopes to reopen on Saturday, and asked his thinking on membranes.
"The membrane keeps the juices and flavor in, without it the juices drip out. In the South none of the old timers take the membrane off."
Enjoy,
Gary
G Wiv wrote:Spoke to Robert Adams Sr. this morning, he hopes to reopen on Saturday
G Wiv wrote:Saturday was optimistic, reopen after the fire looks to be mid week at the earliest.
G Wiv wrote:G Wiv wrote:Saturday was optimistic, reopen after the fire looks to be mid week at the earliest.
God willing and the creek don't rise, Honey 1 will reopen Thursday April 30, keep your fingers crossed!
third coast foodie wrote:I just picked up a large tips - sauce on the side- and a large gizzards.
The smoker had been spruced up a little with a fresh coat of paint but other than the smoker and a few new ceiling tiles in the kitchen everything looked refreshingly familiar. The BBQ was also just the same, spot on flavor with lots of moist meat and a few crispy parts, undercooked fries as I always forget to ask for crispy, and gizzards overflowing for 7 bucks.
Very glad to have honey 1 back
Kman wrote:Picked up an Xtra-lg tips & links combo and a half-slab Saturday night for game 5 of the Blackhawks. Tips/links were perfect but, for the first time, the ribs were not good - in fact, they were pretty bad. Undercooked and they looked and tasted "grey". No smoke ring and really an off-taste. Chalked it up to the variability of rib-cookin' and it's the first time,ever, I've had something from Honey 1 that I'd rather toss than eat. Fortunately we'd bought the Xtra-lg with the idea of having leftovers so there was still plenty of food for the two of us - and they went really well with the Hawks victory.
Cathy2 wrote:Hi,
Gizzards need a slow cook to achieve tenderness. Moishe and Isaac's deli in Highwood does a really great job making their gizzards tender.
The breaded and fried gizzards at Honey 1 are not tender, because they were not simmered before. I wouldn't consider them overcooked, either. Without braising first before breading and frying, I can't see them being tender at all.
My only gripe about Honey 1's gizzards is the portion size. I'd much rather have a snack portion than a dinner sized one.
Regards,