Title: | How to Make them Goodies |
Notice: | Please Don't Start New Notes for Old Topics! Check 5.* |
Moderator: | FUTURE::DDESMAISONS ec.com::winalski |
Created: | Tue Feb 18 1986 |
Last Modified: | Thu Jun 05 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 4127 |
Total number of notes: | 31160 |
I was on the road for several years for a different company. My first trip down south was enlightening. I like Mom & Pop restaurants and truck stops, and the first one I hit had a sign advertising BBQ. I asked "Barbequed what?" and branded my self as a foreigner. I ordered it anyway and LOVED IT! I got this recipe from a friend who grew up in Alabama and North Carolina. It takes a whole Saturday to make, usually, but the whole family asks for it again and again. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% DOWN SOUTH BAR-B-QUE %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% INGREDIENTS: Fresh Pork Shoulder - 5 to 7 lb Covered Pot, 12-14 quart 10 Whole Cloves Broiler Pan 6 Cloves Garlic Aluminum Foil 2 TBSP Hickory Smoked Salt 1 tsp Unflavored Meat Tenderizer (Optional Ingredients: 2/3 tsp Cayenne Pepper (maybe more) Catsup 2 TBSP Louisiana Hot Sauce Worcestershire Sauce 2 Medium Onions A1 Sauce 2 Stalks Celery Heinz 57 Sauce 4 TBSP Lemon Juice Chopped Mushrooms 1/4 Cup Vinegar Pineapple Juice 1/4 Cup Dark Soy Sauce Molasses ) 3 8-oz Cans Tomato Paste (maybe more) 4 TBSP Honey (maybe more) 3 to 6 TBSP Liquid Smoke (maybe more) %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% PROCEDURE %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% Stab the fat covering with a sharp knife, to a depth of about 3/4 inch; do this about 10 times, spaced about 2" apart. Stick one clove stem into each stab. Place the shoulder in a large coverd pot (12 to 14 quart), and cover with water. Smash the garlic cloves and put in the pot, with the tenderizer and half the salt and pepper. Cook, just bubbling, 4 to 6 hours. When the roast is tender and falling apart remove it from the pot and set aside to cool on a cutting board. Skim the grease from the liquid, and discard all but about two quarts of the liquid; try to retain as much of the residue on the bottom of the pot as possible - this is very flavorful, and you'll want in in your sauce. Mince the onion and celery finely; add it to the liquid, along with the tomato paste and all remaining ingredients. Boil, stirring, until it's thick enough to coat your spoon. Sample the sauce from time to time, and adjust the seasonings. More Liquid Smoke, Honey, and Cayenne can be added during this process; the optional ingredients could be added now except for the mushrooms, which should not be boiled. While it's boiling, separate the meat from the bones, and remove connecting tissue. Find and remove all the cloves. Keep some of the soft fat (not the outer skin), and chop it coarsely with the pork meat. Don't chop the meat any finer than about 3/4 inch to an inch in length. PAM the bottom of your broiler pan, and arrange the pork in an even layer throughout the pan. It should be an inch or two thick. Ladle your sauce onto the meat until all is covered. Next, cover the entire broiler pan with aluminum foil, and put into the oven at 350 degrees for about 20 minutes. Remove the foil, and return the pan to the oven for about 10 minutes. Serve on soft buns, and provide plenty of napkins and cold drinks.
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1004.2 | WHERE TO FIND LIQUID SMOKE? | NYOA::MANZO | Fri Feb 26 1988 14:49 | 4 | |
SOUNDS GREAT! I WANT TO TRY IT - WHERE CAN I FIND LIQUID SMOKE THAT'S CALLED FOR IN THE RECIPE?. THANKS, AMY | |||||
1004.3 | Little bottles | AKOV88::BROWN | The more the merrier! | Wed Mar 02 1988 12:27 | 12 |
Re: < Note 1004.2 by NYOA::MANZO > -< WHERE TO FIND LIQUID SMOKE? >- Here in Mass. it is in little bottles like Gravy Master or Kitchen Bouquet (if you're familiar with them), usually in the same section as Tabasco and Worcestershire sauce and Gravy Master. I know Alexander's (Nashua, NH) has it, if you get desperate let me know and I'm sure we can arrange something! Jan who_can't_wait_to_try_this_BBQ | |||||
1004.4 | Liquid Smok{ | BAGELS::GLENN | Wed Mar 02 1988 15:50 | 8 | |
If you can't find it with the Kitchen Bouquet, try the "gourmet" section of your local supermarket. If I can find it way out here in Fitchburg, then you should have no trouble. Good Luck. Pam (Glenn's wife) | |||||
1004.5 | A word of warning | CALVA::WOLINSKI | uCoder sans Frontieres | Thu Mar 03 1988 09:40 | 9 |
I would go easy on the liquid smoke and start with about 1/2 the amount called for and taste the sauce before adding anymore. It has a VERY strong taste and you can very easily ruin dishes with too much of it. -mike | |||||
1004.7 | EXIT26::VERNAGLIA | Mon Mar 14 1988 13:06 | 2 | ||
Star Market has liquid smoke, it is by the meat department | |||||
1004.8 | Hot Sauce... | EXIT26::VERNAGLIA | Fri Mar 18 1988 12:18 | 2 | |
What's the Louisiana Hot Sauce? where do you find that one? | |||||
1004.10 | Where to find Louisiana.. | HOCUS::MANZO | Thu Mar 24 1988 14:52 | 5 | |
Louisiana Hot Sauce should be found where other hot sauces/barbecue sauces are found i.e., where Tobasco sauce is. It shouldn't be hard to find in the regular grocery stores. | |||||
1004.11 | try Mexican food section | GENRAL::KILGORE | COME ON SPRING! | Mon Mar 28 1988 00:09 | 7 |
In Colorado, at least in the Kings Sooper I shop at, you will find Durkees Hot Sauce as well as Tabasco sauce in the Mexican food section. When I used to work in a grocry store it was in with the mustard and catsup but someone came up with a wild idea and changed things around! Every store is set up different! Judy | |||||
1004.12 | Texas Barbecued Beef | BOXTOP::JANCOURTZ | Wed Apr 27 1988 10:44 | 56 | |
TEXAS BEEF BARBECUE I take issue with the person who implied Texas barbecue is inferior. It may be DIFFERENT from deep-south pork barbecue, but it ain't any worse. In fact, the worst barbecue I ever had was just... WONDERFUL. Most Texans would insist the only way to barbecue is to go and slaughter a whole cow and roast it all day on a spit, using a patient Mexican equipped with a bucket of sauce and a string mop to baste the thing. Here's my Texas girlfriend's substitute version done with only PART of the cow in a normal oven. It's very easy and amazingly good. 1 tablespoon salt 2 tablespoons pepper 2 tablespoons Dijon or dry mustard 3 tablespoons paprika 8 pounds beef brisket (you'll probably get two four-pounders) 1/2 cup (1 stick) butter 1/4 cup vegetable oil--NOT olive oil 2-1/2 cups cider vineger 3/4 cup sugar 1/2 cup Worcestershire sauce 3 large onions, chopped fine (4 to 5 cups chopped onion) 6 cloves garlic, minced 1-2 tablespoons Tabasco sauce 1. Rub the salt, pepper, mustard and paprika over the meat. Melt the butter and oil in a large pot and brown the meat in it (don't worry if it burns in spots--adds to the flavor.) Remove the meat to a large casserole or roasting pan with a tightly-fitting cover. (I use a big turkey-roaster. You can just use a roasting pan and cover everything with foil when the time comes.) 2. Pour off the excess fat from the browning pan and dump in everything else (vinegar, etc.) Bring to a boil and simmer a few minutes, stirring to get up all the burned goodies on the bottom. 3. Pour the sauce over the meat, cover tightly, and bake in for four hours at 300 degrees F. (No need to check, baste, or fuss during this period.) Remove cover, turn the briskets over, and bake UNCOVERED for another 45 minutes to brown the meat and reduce the sauce a bit. 4. Serving: Slice it and serve with the sauce on the side. A good Texas-style meal would include potato salad, baked beans, corn bread, maybe a bit of cole slaw (we're not talking diet food here.) For a fancier occasion, slice the meat and arrange it on a serving platter, dribble a bit of sauce over it, and sprinkle sliced radishes, scallions, and lime wedges over it. This is even better reheated the second day, shredded and served on Wonder-bread style soggy old buns. European visitors go absolutely nuts over this (they think it's "real american".) | |||||
1004.13 | Best BBQ Sandwiches | SCOMAN::STOOKER | Wed Apr 27 1988 14:57 | 24 | |
I grew up in South Carolina and the BBQ pork roast that I grew up is really different than any of these recipes that I see here. My mother, who cooks great BBQ, would buy a pork shoulder roast 4-6 lbs. She would then preheat the oven to 350-375 (not sure which) and would then place the roast into a roasting pan. The only thing that she would use for seasoning would be vinegar and red pepper. She would baste the roast several times during cooking. (The worst part of this is that the smell of the vinegar during cooking is so strong and it will bring tears to your eyes, so you need to do this when the weather is nice and you can open up the doors and windows to get fresh air) She would cook the roast until it was tender. She would make a homeade BBQ sauce that consisted of Catsup, Vinegar, Worcestershire(?sp) sauce, red pepper and butter. This would be heated up and can be made as spicy as you like. We ate this BBQ as sandwiches. We would slice the BBQ real thin and place on bread. On top of the BBQ, we would place cole slaw (yes, cole slaw) and then on top of this we would pour BBQ sauce on top. Top with another slice of bread and you have the messiest, best tasting BBQ sandwich you'll ever taste. [Of course, this is a matter of opinion, and what you grew up with] |