JasonM wrote:I've got my pantry almost stocked for the season!!! Ray, I LOVE your sauce!!!!
(I said I LOVE your sauce !!! heheheheheh)
David Hammond wrote:“Imagine going to a French restaurant and you’re having fish, and you ask for sauce on the side. It would be crazy.”
David Hammond wrote:Now, on the BBQ circuit, the meat is going to be unsauced for judging, and that makes perfect sense.
David Hammond wrote:Charlie McKenna of Lillie’s Q made a good analogy re: the trend among some of us to ask for BBQ sauce on the side or our ribs. He said, “Imagine going to a French restaurant and you’re having fish, and you ask for sauce on the side. It would be crazy.”
eatchicago wrote:(I find it very amusing that "BBQ guys" will either choose to be lumped in with fine dining or stand firmly opposed to fine dining when it suits the argument.)
eatchicago wrote:--The Fallacy of Many Questions (presenting questions that assume universal answers): This argument assumes that everyone accepts that "asking for sauceless fish in a French restaurant is crazy". Everyone does not accept that opinion, as Steve pointed out. Maybe foodies and chefs hold that opinion, but everyone does not.
eatchicago wrote:--The Package-Deal Fallacy (everything related for a culture must be consistently related that way across the board): Even if I accepted the sauceless-fish question, all of our restaurant experiences are not a "package deal". Culturally we treat burgers, BBQ, sandwiches, pizza, etc. in a flexible manner that appeals to the diner. This is simply not crazy or even a trend. It's a culturally accepted norm. I wouldn't eat with my hands at Everest, but I'm sure I'm expected to at Lillie's Q.
David Hammond wrote:eatchicago wrote:--The Fallacy of Many Questions (presenting questions that assume universal answers): This argument assumes that everyone accepts that "asking for sauceless fish in a French restaurant is crazy". Everyone does not accept that opinion, as Steve pointed out. Maybe foodies and chefs hold that opinion, but everyone does not.
To say something is "crazy" is not to state a universal principle but just a perception of a practice.
David Hammond wrote:eatchicago wrote:--The Package-Deal Fallacy (everything related for a culture must be consistently related that way across the board): Even if I accepted the sauceless-fish question, all of our restaurant experiences are not a "package deal". Culturally we treat burgers, BBQ, sandwiches, pizza, etc. in a flexible manner that appeals to the diner. This is simply not crazy or even a trend. It's a culturally accepted norm. I wouldn't eat with my hands at Everest, but I'm sure I'm expected to at Lillie's Q.
That's true, but what McKenna is suggesting is that the amount of care and attention paid to the preparation of BBQ at his place is equivalent to the amount of care and attention paid to the preparation of food at a "fancy" restaurant.
eatchicago wrote:David Hammond wrote:eatchicago wrote:--The Fallacy of Many Questions (presenting questions that assume universal answers): This argument assumes that everyone accepts that "asking for sauceless fish in a French restaurant is crazy". Everyone does not accept that opinion, as Steve pointed out. Maybe foodies and chefs hold that opinion, but everyone does not.
To say something is "crazy" is not to state a universal principle but just a perception of a practice.
But he's still saying "X is crazy, therefore Y is crazy". If he's really saying "I think X is crazy and I think Y is crazy", well than I can't argue with what his opinions are.
eatchicago wrote:David Hammond wrote:eatchicago wrote:--The Package-Deal Fallacy (everything related for a culture must be consistently related that way across the board): Even if I accepted the sauceless-fish question, all of our restaurant experiences are not a "package deal". Culturally we treat burgers, BBQ, sandwiches, pizza, etc. in a flexible manner that appeals to the diner. This is simply not crazy or even a trend. It's a culturally accepted norm. I wouldn't eat with my hands at Everest, but I'm sure I'm expected to at Lillie's Q.
That's true, but what McKenna is suggesting is that the amount of care and attention paid to the preparation of BBQ at his place is equivalent to the amount of care and attention paid to the preparation of food at a "fancy" restaurant.
I can accept that and I'm always willing to try it his way first. But his argument is not a very convincing way of making that point, at least to me. "You must treat my food one way because you treat other food this way" is much less convincing than "Let me tell you about how I do things and how it's a little bit different than what you might be used to...."
David Hammond wrote:eatchicago wrote:But he's still saying "X is crazy, therefore Y is crazy". If he's really saying "I think X is crazy and I think Y is crazy", well than I can't argue with what his opinions are.
Michael, in most evaluative statements the "I think" is implicit though understood and it doesn't seem necessary to flag value statements (e.g., this good, that bad, this crazy, that not) as opinions because they obviously are.
eatchicago wrote:In any case, whenever I make my first trip to Lillie's Q, I intend on having things as the kitchen prepares them.
stevez wrote:David Hammond wrote:Now, on the BBQ circuit, the meat is going to be unsauced for judging, and that makes perfect sense.
Actually, just the opposite is true. Everything is sauced for judging, sometimes overly sauced. That's why, even though I'm a certified KCBS BBQ Judge, I have little desire to actually judge at these events. The over saucing of the entries offends my sensibilities and I can't justify picking a "winner" from entries of food that I wouldn't normally eat.
David Hammond wrote:
That's true, but what McKenna is suggesting is that the amount of care and attention paid to the preparation of BBQ at his place is equivalent to the amount of care and attention paid to the preparation of food at a "fancy" restaurant.
BuddyRoadhouse wrote:
Again, I'm not sayin' it can never happen, but any 'Que man worth his garlic salt will send his meat to the judging tent un-sauced.
Buddy
Kman wrote:David Hammond wrote:
That's true, but what McKenna is suggesting is that the amount of care and attention paid to the preparation of BBQ at his place is equivalent to the amount of care and attention paid to the preparation of food at a "fancy" restaurant.
At any "fancy" restaurant I've even dined they made it a point to cater to whatever their patrons requested - and most especially NOT to make their patrons feel uncomfortable for making such requests.
Having grown up in the South and visiting many BBQ places between NC and Alabama I can say I've never been to a single one that had an issue with a request for sauce on the side - and many actually asked in advance if you wanted it with or without - just as many ask if you want slaw on your sandwich.
Kman wrote:Having grown up in the South and visiting many BBQ places between NC and Alabama I can say I've never been to a single one that had an issue with a request for sauce on the side - and many actually asked in advance if you wanted it with or without - just as many ask if you want slaw on your sandwich.
David Hammond wrote:I'm sure, too, that Robert at Honey 1, Mack at Uncle John's and Barry at Smoque would, also, be glad to put your sauce wherever you want it.
BuddyRoadhouse wrote:stevez wrote:David Hammond wrote:Now, on the BBQ circuit, the meat is going to be unsauced for judging, and that makes perfect sense.
Actually, just the opposite is true. Everything is sauced for judging, sometimes overly sauced. That's why, even though I'm a certified KCBS BBQ Judge, I have little desire to actually judge at these events. The over saucing of the entries offends my sensibilities and I can't justify picking a "winner" from entries of food that I wouldn't normally eat.
Steve, you must be getting all the wrong entries. While I have never been a judge at a KCBS event, I have been working at the American Royal for the past 18 years; running the Barbecue Sauce Store. I've seen hundreds of entries and eaten the leftover hunks of meat that were not entered after those entries were turned in.
Now I won't say that none of those entries were sauced, but I will say that the overwhelming majority were served naked (the meat, not the pitmaster, although who's to say what goes on when the lights go out). In fact, while it is not an actual rule, it is a written recommendation to all entrants that their entries not be sauced for fear of raising suspicions among the judges. Any pitmaster I've spoken to, holds to that "recommendation" as if it were the word of God.
Again, I'm not sayin' it can never happen, but any 'Que man worth his garlic salt will send his meat to the judging tent un-sauced.
Buddy
BuddyRoadhouse wrote:Sorry you won't be joining in on the fun. Hope all is well, or will be well in short time.
The entries I've seen usually have sauce served in a cup, on the side, tucked in with the entry. Anyone I've spoken to adheres to the "sauce on the side" philosophy specifically because of the perceptions of a flawed entry raised by sauced meat.
Again, I'm not saying that's a 100% rule, just my observation.
Buddy
Judicious a la minute kiss of sauce for G Achatz aside, my one experience with Lillie's ribs the glaze dry rub combination sat a bit too long and turned gummy/pasty, I will order ribs dry. That said a scant brush of sauce by a deft hand is entirely different than the half-cup ladle of mediocre BBQ sauce misused at 95% of Chicago BBQ joints.David Hammond wrote:When Achatz recently stopped by Lillie’s for lunch, he ordered everything on the menu. Reports are that his favorite was the ribs, which are brushed lightly with sauce during the final moments of cooking to create a thin layer of caramelized sweet spiciness over the meat.
G Wiv wrote:Judicious a la minute kiss of sauce for G Achatz aside, my one experience with Lillie's ribs the glaze dry rub combination sat a bit too long and turned gummy/pasty, I will order ribs dry. That said a scant brush of sauce by a deft hand is entirely different than the half-cup ladle of mediocre BBQ sauce misused at 95% of Chicago BBQ joints.David Hammond wrote:When Achatz recently stopped by Lillie’s for lunch, he ordered everything on the menu. Reports are that his favorite was the ribs, which are brushed lightly with sauce during the final moments of cooking to create a thin layer of caramelized sweet spiciness over the meat.
It seems the sauce debate will never end, BBQ sauce is a condiment, a dab here, swipe there, not a la brea tar pit of sludge with dusty bones popping though disintegrating pig flesh.
Head's Red BBQ wrote:G Wiv wrote:Judicious a la minute kiss of sauce for G Achatz aside, my one experience with Lillie's ribs the glaze dry rub combination sat a bit too long and turned gummy/pasty, I will order ribs dry. That said a scant brush of sauce by a deft hand is entirely different than the half-cup ladle of mediocre BBQ sauce misused at 95% of Chicago BBQ joints.David Hammond wrote:When Achatz recently stopped by Lillie’s for lunch, he ordered everything on the menu. Reports are that his favorite was the ribs, which are brushed lightly with sauce during the final moments of cooking to create a thin layer of caramelized sweet spiciness over the meat.
It seems the sauce debate will never end, BBQ sauce is a condiment, a dab here, swipe there, not a la brea tar pit of sludge with dusty bones popping though disintegrating pig flesh.
no debate on my end..i agree on conservative use of sauce ..it should compliment not overpower..but then again i feel that way about any sauce..on pasta..on fish..etc...
G Wiv wrote:That said a scant brush of sauce by a deft hand is entirely different than the half-cup ladle of mediocre BBQ sauce misused at 95% of Chicago BBQ joints.
It seems the sauce debate will never end, BBQ sauce is a condiment, a dab here, swipe there, not a la brea tar pit of sludge with dusty bones popping though disintegrating pig flesh.