
Bat shit boring, I know. Kind of like Baseball?

I could be in Melbourne.
Where's the "like" button?
I could stand it if it wasn't (quite literally) ~11 minutes of play amongst ~100 commercials over the course of 3 or so hours. And all of the rote manipulation of the game clock which has nothing to do with sportsmanship. And icing the kicker, all the penalties, the up-close shot of the coach every 15 seconds, etc.
Yeah, but in football season my local bar has a couple of guys come in and do authentic southern barbecue on Sunday afternoons. Ribs, links, brisket, chicken, tritip, sides of collard greens, home made potato salad, mac n' cheese, something I'm forgetting, home made cornbread. Two mains and two sides for 12 bucks (plus tip) and I take some home for a TV snack later.
And your point is?weedywet wrote: ↑November 8th, 2018, 9:19 pm Barbecue, for starters, is REGIONAL... there isn't any such thing as "authentic Southern barbecue" as a singular thing.
Kansas City is distinct and different from Memphis which is different from Nashville, which is different from the Carolinas which is different form Texas, etc.
(and KC kicks their asses by the way)
It's bunch of African-American cats cooking Q in a grill made of 3 55 gallon drums cut in half, welded together, with grills installed. To their family recipes. I'm not certain where their tradition hails from, but it's definitely "southern" and probably translated through Oakland, which was kind of a melting pot for Q after WWII when all the southerners moved up top work in the shipyards.weedywet wrote: ↑November 10th, 2018, 5:03 pm I get the joke.
But at least give the Brooklyn hipsters credit that they open TEXAS Style barbecue places or CAROLINA style barbecue places and try to do it faithfully.
It’s the neighbourhood burger places or bars who call anything bathed in rubs or sauce “authentic” barbecue that I object to.
It’s a bit like calling anything in a martini glass a martini.
It can be GOOD, even.
It’s still not a martini.
Bullshit.
In general, no contest. Not even close.
Hear, hear!
I like pretty much all good barbecue, but sometimes sauce is used to cover up inferior meat. If the meat is really good and it's cooked right it shouldn't really need sauce. I'd be more inclined to put sauce on chicken and pork can go either way. Beef I tend to go no sauce if the meat is good.weedywet wrote: ↑November 13th, 2018, 6:22 am But again that ‘no sauce’ trip is a particular thing. It’s not more ‘authentic’ as mich as it’s a regional attitude.
Texas bbq is typically no sauce. KC doesn’t disdain sauce. Carolina is kind of dependent on it.
There’s no ONE right way anymore than Sichuan is more ‘authentically ‘ Chinese than Hunan, or Roman food more “Italian” than Naples.
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