by waaytoomuchintothis » Sat Nov 23, 2013 7:03 pm
I will resist the temptation to expound for two or three pages (who am I kidding? ten or twelve pages), about the natural superiority of Memphis Barbeque. I promise.
1. Real barbeque is PORK! (fresh, untreated whole pork shoulder (19-28 pounds), cooked at 200 degrees for 1 hour per 2 pounds, usually 12 hours or a little more, over a charcoal and hickory fire, with the lid closed as much as humanly possible (if you're a'lookin' you ain't a'cookin'). Cooking sauce (high in vinegar to keep it tender), is usually injected into the deepest part of the shoulder with a four inch heavy gauge cardiac needle. The shoulder is placed skin down, so the fat that is rendered out fries the skin into a crispy treat to eat. It is served with unsweetened Cole Slaw, chopped so it will stay on the sandwich, and Sweet Sauce on a fresh bun. Sweet Sauce is an art form. I worked on mine for many years, and I won 3rd place at the Memphis in May BBQ Contest out of over 700 entrants after competing for 5 years with lesser finishes. There are many similar versions of the dish in the Deep South, but this is Memphis style.
2. There are many kinds of barbeque, with regional traditions that are complex and varied. I like the pork best, but in places away from the Deep South, they cook beef, chicken, lamb, baby goat, crawfish, lobster, fish filets, shrimp, and Arkansas Round Steak (bologna, a huge log of it at a time- its very good).
3. The meat may be pulled (picked off the shoulder in chunks and left in the big chunks), chopped (soaks up more sauce this way), or open faced on a slab of French bread.
Oh, and Lynne, I pack it on that way, spread a lot of slaw and sweet sauce on, and then I cheat. If the chop has been done well, I can smoothly cut the sandwich into four quarters without mushing it at all. Each quarter is about half the size of a good burger (not a slotburger of course), and that's a mouth full. Good frosty beer, a little potato salad and some baked BBQ beans rounds out the meal. And soon thereafter, the diners are round, too.