sabersix wrote:And for me it is not the reasonable exchange of opinions, it it the elitest
attitudes of the "regulars", that bothers me.
Hey, sabersix, I thought
you were a regular! Anyways ...
sabersix wrote:Who died and left you guys in charge of what is BBQ and what is not? You "regulars" are of the opinion that if it is not smoked, it is bad, i.e "meat jello" or am I missing something and "meat Jello" is a positive expression.
Now I think it is you who is being unfair, sabersix. You've certainly oversimplified things. There aren't just two kinds of barbecue: "smoked" and "meat jello." For example, the baked barbecue at Carson's is quite toothsome, not "fall off the bone" (a/k/a "meat jello"), but the closest it comes to smoke might be the Winston Red in the lips of the chef. And there are all kinds and degrees of smoking -- over pure wood fire (like Honey 1 uses), or some combination of charcoal, wood chunks and/or gas ... or at least I think so!
There are a number of real experts on barbecue who post here. In the way that a carpenter or the guy who fixes your TV is an expert, not just blowhards. I am not one of them, but I am willing to defer to their expertise in a subject where they are, demonstrably, experts. There is always room for differences of opinion, but not for ignorance, willful or otherwise. And you need to apply some common sense and familiarity with how a good argument (or even a bad one) is developed and presented. The OP in this thread took a big risk by failing to present a real argument (at least not in that first post), instead posting very strong opinions without getting very specific about what was wrong. Not until others drew him/her out did we learn the barbecue he/she got at Honey 1 Friday night had been overcooked to resemble shoe leather; I think it would have been more useful to post that fact in the first instance than to merely opine it was the "worst" barbecue the OP had ever tasted, with nothing more to explain or justify that strong opinion. Nothing wrong with strong opinions, but as a general rule, the stronger the opinion or the farther removed it is from common or received wisdom, the stronger the proof you ought to offer, if only for your own protection!
sabersix wrote:I guess the 1,000's of people that go to Gale Street Inn, to the Anchor, Fat Willies, to just about every other place in Chicago that does not have a smoker, for years and years, are food illiterate, and have no taste.
Now, you know that was unfair. I don't think anybody said this, and it's somewhat passive aggressive, too. (It's also a logical fallacy. Your implication, though stated ironically, is that the thousands who enjoy Gale Street, et al. are not only not wrong, they are RIGHT or, more precisely, CANNOT be wrong. If what you mean is that you can't be either right or wrong about taste in food, then there may be something to that and I'd like to hear more. But if what you're trying to say is that all those thousands of people who enjoy these Chicago-style rib spots are "right," and the "regulars" here are "wrong," then I can't agree (although I don't really think that's what you were getting at...) I'm sure you know that millions believed the world was flat, that there was a Christian king in Africa named Prester John, and that mandrakes were plants with human heads that screamed when pulled from the ground. That didn't make them right; in fact, they were all dead wrong.
sabersix wrote:As someone said, express a strong opinion, you should expect a strong responce.
Yes, but hopefully we can keep those strong responses focused on facts, arguments and opinions (disclosed as such). Arguing is not fighting. Arguing, properly understood, doesn't include name-calling or baiting or ad hominem attacks or faulty generalizations. It never ceases to amaze me how my own perspective and understanding on this seems to differ from so many other people. I have a background that included several years of intensive study in philosophy and logic (undergraduate and graduate study). That's where I learned the difference between arguing ("good") and fighting (bad"). To me, a good argument is entertaining, enlightening and -- hopefully if rarely -- a means for arriving at (*gasp*)
truth. But routinely, I find people can't tell the difference (or at least act like they can't), either censuring me for engaging in real argument, or thinking they are "arguing" when in fact all they are doing is fighting.
Real argument is not a game of one-upsmanship or aggression. I often wonder, what were all those other, non-philosophy majors doing in college? Daily group hugs? Why don't they seem to enjoy, or at least appreciate the potential value of, good argumentation? Why can't people get this basic idea, that it's not only OK but DESIRABLE to argue, early, often and with enthusiasm, but in a reasoned way, about normative matters of ethics, taste and opinion (food falling into all three of those categories, I think)? So, it looks like all kinds of folks have failed in all kinds of ways to do that in response to the OP's post about a lousy experience at Honey 1. I really wish people would stop picking -- and picking up on -- fights. If somebody comes out with both guns blazing, count to ten and ask some meaningful questions that might elicit a meaningful, explanatory response.
That's this "regular's" two-cents' worth.
Last edited by
JimInLoganSquare on August 7th, 2006, 8:17 pm, edited 2 times in total.
JiLS