G Wiv wrote:Burt,
Not exactly what I said. Honey 1, like most small operation wood burning BBQ joints have a distinctive cycle, you seem to have, unluckily, hit them twice at low ebbs.
Early in the week when it's a little slower Honey 1's BBQ is at it's peak at lunchtime, busier week days, and all summer might be busier, the smoker gets re-fired for the dinner hour.
Friday and Sunday Mr. Adams always does two loads, Saturday he cooks continuously all day long.
It's also possible, as you are an electric smoker man, that you do not enjoy the crisp caramelized fat in the fire edginess of Honey 1's style of BBQ cookery. Same religion, different Rabbi's, as LAZ once wisely said.
Enjoy,
Gary
Gary, sorry for mis-quoting you.
I have two more things to add. Since our engaging conversation of the other day, I've been thinking about the whole mom & pop "small operation wood burning BBQ joint" premise, and quite frankly, I just dont buy it.
There are hundreds, if not thousands of other small wood smoke shacks that manage to keep their product fresh, hot, and not dried out like what I've experienced at Honey1. But even so, that's why I gave Honey1 two shots, figuring that the first mis "que" was just a fluke, unfortunately it wasn't. As a paying customer, I should have never been served the food that I was.
But if I go one step further, and think back to the literally 100's of places I've been to around the country who could also make such a claim, from Super Smokers in MO, to Mann's BBQ in Austin. No one else with such a reputation has ever served me food that didn't at least meet a certain
quality standard.
Locally, and one of the very first places that pops into my head is Big Ed's, which uses the same style smoker, with probably a little less sales volume, but they fit into this category would never do such a thing, even if I walked in at 7:45 p.m. 15 minutes before closing time. In fact, very few, if any, have ever dared to served me what H1 never should have twice, there's simply no excuse.
My numerous impromptu visits to these other fine bbq establishments has shown me time and time again, that great restaurants serve the best food, all the time, or they dont serve it all. Especially if care and pride is was what they're all about.
Secondly, my preference for electric smokers is only for when I cook at home, not for where I go out to eat.
My preferred cooker for dining out are Texas style brick & steel pits, it just doesn't get any better than that. IMO, the texture and bark that develops from a brick pit far surpasses that of any other smoker.
You know, I can easily reproduce in my electric smoker ribs like the ones I got from H1, first I would dry them out from having cooked them at too high of a temp, then I would hold them with no moisture for a few more hours. With enough hours in my electric, I caramelize anything!
Seriously, I think we we both know that the bark should never go all the way to the bone...