Barbecue, the All American Way

Discussing barbecue or bbq can lead to arguments. There are strong opinions of what is true barbecue. Experts will tell you tales of smoke, heat, wood, water, fire, dry or wet, brine or no brine, cut, butt, baby back ribs, spare ribs, pork shoulder, brisket, beef ribs, East coast, Carolina, Florida… the terminology goes on and on. Plus now in the DC area, there is Korean and Salvadoran barbecue and all the fusions in between.

Barbecue is quintessentially American. The word comes from the native word barbacoa from the island of Hispaniola (today’s Haiti and Dominican Republic). The idea is that long slow applications of heat will improve tough cuts of meat. Everyone used to use all the parts of the animal and turn them into sausages etc. but here are the most famous types (for a good read, try this article) explained simply:

Carolina style is pork usually slow smoked for 12-20 hours, served pulled apart, tossed in a vinegar dressing, and served in a bun.

Memphis style is pork ribs (and shoulder) in a dry rub. The shoulder is pulled and served in a bun.

Top platter has chicken, Texan brisket, Memphis style pork, Carolina style pulled pork, sausage, and turkey.

Texas is all about beef. Brisket is the most famous type but there are also tri-tips. The best barbecue in the DC area is 2fifty.

Brisket can be as juicy as this but it is hard to find. This was at Rose’s Luxury years ago.

Kansas City was once the meat packing center of the US. The barbecue here is ribs with sauce.

Kansas style ribs on the upper left smothered in sauce, pulled pork, sauce, coleslaw, brisket, sausage, and wings. Fries in this style are a new fusion-y thing.

Apart from the meat, the sides are a big part of barbecue. I once had the best garlic coleslaw at a barbecue joint in Texas. I tried to buy the sauce but they said that it was only for eating in the restaurant. Darn.

Every year there are barbecue competitions and secrets about sauce, rub mix, and every other element are guarded in bank vaults.

If you are here on Memorial Day weekend, enjoy the smell of outdoor parties.

An American Christmas Meal

I got invited to celebrate an American Christmas in Maryland.

Honey glazed ham.

Maryland is close to the South so some of the foods were traditional Southern foods.

Deep fried turkey.

We were invited for 1 pm but did not eat until 6 pm. We had a snack of seafood pasta salad.

Collard greens.

When the food arrived, having been cooked in various ovens and yards (the turkey was deep fried), was overwhelming.

Mac and cheese, salmon, stuffing, turkey, and collard greens.

There was so much food.

Ham, sweet potatoes, and mac and cheese.

There was the traditional turkey, honey glazed ham, stuffing, gravy…

Sweet potatoes.

And then some Southern dishes such as collard greens, sweet potatoes, cabbage…

An auntie slicing the turkey.

Then the addition of modern touches like salmon.

Seven layer salad.

And the seven layer salad. This salad is not healthy because at the top one adds a lot of mayonnaise and shredded orange cheese. It was tasty.

Turkey, cabbage, salmon, salad, mac and cheese, stuffing, and ham.

There was dessert of sweet potato pie and banana pudding. But I could not eat it that day.

An auntie serving up banana pudding to go.