Flip wrote:Dmnkly wrote:So the problem is, if one wants to limit the term BBQ to the former definition, what the heck do you call the latter? As amusing as Meat Jell-o is (and this is a name that really, really needs an actual dish to go with it), I have to believe there's something a little more diplomatic
I'm sure, after reading this, that either Moto or Alinea will be serving this very soon.
Flip
saps wrote:How long did you boil those links for?
midas wrote:But let's keep one thing in mind. What we grow up eating is what we tend to favor. I grew up in the 60's in Rogers Park. There were no real BBQ places at all. I grew up on the ribs from Sally's on Western. I still would love to find a place that serves ribs like that. But it ain't BBQ.
midas wrote:First let me say that the Olive Garden ranking in Milwaukee reminds me of my 11 day business trip to Akron. The first thing I did when I got there was ask about where to get the best pizza. Person after person told me Dominos. At first I thought it was a joke, but I spent the next 11 days proving them right. You could get rich in that town just heating up frozen pizza and selling it.
But let's keep one thing in mind. What we grow up eating is what we tend to favor. I grew up in the 60's in Rogers Park. There were no real BBQ places at all. I grew up on the ribs from Sally's on Western. I still would love to find a place that serves ribs like that. But it ain't BBQ.
We also had Talbotts. It was a dry rib with no sauce. And it was pretty good, but it ain't BBQ. Ribs were also a popular dish as Millers, and we all know that wasn't BBQ. And almost every pizza joint in the neighborhood sold ribs, and you can't get farther from BBQ than that.
But it's what we grew up eating. There were no real BBQ places around. And nobody sold pulled pork or brisket. It was ribs and chicken, that's it. Hot links? The closest we got was the Oscar Meyer Smokey Links at Wrigely Field.
So people can be excused for actually liking meat-jello. It's what they grew up eating. But it no more resembles BBQ than your local carry-out Chinese restaurant resembles real Chinese food.
To add one more point, even real BBQ is regionalized. People in Texas have a different idea of BBQ than the people of Kansas City. And they are both different than North Carolina who, themselves, argues with South Carolina about what real BBQ is.
To add one more point, even real BBQ is regionalized. People in Texas have a different idea of BBQ than the people of Kansas City. And they are both different than North Carolina who, themselves, argues with South Carolina about what real BBQ is.
jazzfood wrote:as long as there's a pig alive, i'll never be a vegetarian. i see a pig and say "you look delicious".
G Wiv wrote:In other words, he was going to toss all that delicious pig candy, actually, more like pig crack, in the circular file.
sabersix wrote:I have to say that the following line is the most pompus thing I have seen since the discussion of allowing Woman/Blacks to have the right to vote. And I think makes my point.
"Not every opinion is of equal value." or so say Antonius.
G Wiv wrote:Speaking of Honey 1
G Wiv wrote:Now I know Robert Sr.'s MO* pretty well, he does not like crisp, tosses the burn edges of spare slabs and, in pursuit of quality, does not think about the bottom line. In other words, he was going to toss all that delicious pig candy, actually, more like pig crack, in the circular file.
Calvin Trillin wrote:The main course at Bryant's, as far as I'm concerned, is something that is given away free--the burned edges of the brisket. The counterman just pushes them over to the side as he slices the beef, and anyone who wants them helps himself. I dream of those burned edges. Sometimes when I'm in some awful, overpriced restaurant in some strange town--all of my restaurant-finding techniques having failed, so that I'm left to choke down something that costs seven dollars and tastes like a medium-rare sponge--a blank look comes over my face: I have just realized that at that very moment someone in Kansas City is being given those burned edges free.
I realize that I could be tempted to betray my principles for a handful of burned edges from Arthur Bryant's...
Calvin Trillin wrote:The main course at Bryant's, as far as I'm concerned, is something that is given away free--the burned edges of the brisket. The counterman just pushes them over to the side as he slices the beef, and anyone who wants them helps himself.
I realize that I could be tempted to betray my principles for a handful of burned edges from Arthur Bryant's...
stevez wrote:The days of free burnt ends at Bryant's are long gone. They now sell the burnt ends and they're so popular that a lot of times you don't get actual burnt ends when you order, but chunk sized pieces of beef with some browned edges attached.
stevez wrote:The days of free burnt ends at Bryant's are long gone. They now sell the burnt ends and they're so popular that a lot of times you don't get actual burnt ends when you order, but chunk sized pieces of beef with some browned edges attached.
rdstoll wrote:stevez wrote:The days of free burnt ends at Bryant's are long gone. They now sell the burnt ends and they're so popular that a lot of times you don't get actual burnt ends when you order, but chunk sized pieces of beef with some browned edges attached.
I will be at Bryant's in two months and will scout this out. There is a big BBQ contest going in Kansas City the first weekend of October and I'm going there to taste the fare.
Ramon wrote:I'm lonley -- please say hi to me in line tomorrow
sabersix wrote: And what the hell is so bad about "meat Jello"?