ronnie_suburban wrote:riddlemay wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:LOL - it's probably the very first time any 2 people have disagreed about BBQ here in our forums.

Indeed.

The world of BBQ may be divided into two parts: those who hold certain truths to be self-evident concerning what BBQ is and ought to be, and those who are delighted to have something delicious in their mouths. I'm in the latter group, but I don't begrudge the opinions of those in the former group. (There are areas of culture, mostly not to do with food, in which principles matter just as much to me as BBQ matters to them.)
I think it's even more fundamental than that: not everyone agrees on what constitutes delicious. And beyond that, BBQ is a fickle beast. It is, by its nature, inconsistent. I've bbq'd in my backyard hundreds of times and it doesn't always come out the same. So it's pretty clear that 2 people can go to the same commercial operation, order identically -- even on the very same day -- and have wildly different experiences. Is every rib or brisket served in that joint from the same pig or cow, or even the same farm? Did it all sit equally as long waiting to be served after it was ready? Of course not. There are myriad variables.
Yes, I believe there's also something very important to be said about the experience level and knowledge of those doing the eating but one need not travel that far down the line to encounter legitimate differences of opinion. And so it goes . . .
All very wise and true. It prompts me to think, even though I demurred from descriptors in my original post, that I really ought to attempt a few to describe
why I thought Q's burnt ends tasted so good on the night we had them. Han can then (if he wants) elaborate further on why he thought they didn't taste good.
Here are a few descriptors:
Tender...moist...not stringy...prominent beef flavor...fatty as they should be without being greasy...nice note (not overwhelming, but there) of burnt flavor around the edges...satisfying in that way only good beef can be.
Although someone could disagree with these descriptors, they at least move the question a few degrees from the
totally subjective. (Or at a minimum provide useful support for my opinion, so that someone can know what "delicious" means to me in the world of brisket.)
Pithy quote here.