Eat My Words

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Justin Timberlake sets his eyes on Austin barbecue scene

According to a story in the Atlanta Business Chronicle, a new barbecue restaurant is coming to Austin in 2013. And this is no ordinary barbecue restaurant; it’s backed by Justin Timberlake. Yup, that Justin Timberlake… The Austin restaurant is part of a 30-city nationwide expansion plan for Southern Hospitality, a Memphis-style barbecue restaurant that first opened in New York in 2007.

Southern Hospitality BBQ Sauce

Restaurant locations in Atlanta and Denver are currently in the works, and Chicago and Austin are planned to open in 2013.

A different story (published last August) in Rolling Stone claims Ryan Tedder, the frontman for OneRepublic, also has his hands in the project and intends to bring the restaurant chain to “Denver, Nashville, Dallas, Austin, Houston, New Orleans, Atlanta, Phoenix, Palo Alto, and Washington, D.C.”

“I have been involved with Southern Hospitality BBQ in New York for some time, and I’m looking forward to taking this relationship to the next level,” Tedder said at the time.

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Wednesday, October 17, 2012

A New Definition of Cow Tipping: Tell Us Your Favorite BBQ Joints!

Dear barbecue buffs, fans, mavens, hounds, fanatics, cognoscenti, nuts, addicts, maniacs, aficionados, zealots, enthusiasts, devotes, groupies, and lovers:
Do you have a barbecue destination that you think is worthy of being on Texas Monthly’s “The Top Fifty BBQ Joints in Texas” list?

Now’s the time to tell us! Next year will mark the five-year anniversary of the last list, published in June 2008. Soon we will begin traveling and evaluating for the next top fifty feature, to be published in June of 2013. We don’t want anybody to feel like they didn’t have a chance to be considered.

If you’d like to give us a tip on a favorite place, please go to the comment section below. Mention the place and be SURE to tell us the address, city, and what your favorite dishes are. A phone number for the place would be helpful. Hours, too,  if you know them.

We will automatically revisit the previous Top 50 (including  Snow’s, Kreuz, Smitty’s, Louie Mueller’s, and City Market in Luling, and the other 45). Same goes for newly famous Franklin and JMueller, in Austin, which were on our February 2012 cover.

Let the nominating begin!               (Photograph by LeAnn Mueller)

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Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Aaron Franklin discusses upcoming changes at Franklin Barbecue

Austin’s Franklin Barbecue is making a few changes in the coming months, according to an interview owner Aaron Franklin did with Eater National this week. In the detailed interview, Franklin touched on changing up the space at Franklin Barbecue and wanting to add beef ribs, whole pork chops, and ribeyes to the limited menu as well.

“I’m thinking [the restaurant changes will] happen in about a month. We’re going to build an actual smokehouse in the back part of the kitchen. We’re going to add a walk-in cooler so we can order a lot, a lot more food. We’re going to be able to cook a lot more food. There’s also a window near the kitchen which I hope will shorten the line a little. The goal is to have two lines at some point,” Franklin said.

As to whether or not an expansion will change the quality of his highly regarded barbecue, Franklin said no way: “Right now, the problem is that we have to get the briskets off the smokers so we can cook a ton of ribs. The smokers are so crowded that it affects the food and the process. They don’t cook the same way when there’s so much meat on them. Now, we’re going to have a lot more cookers and a lot more convection. I think everything will get better.”

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Monday, August 6, 2012

Scott Roberts details The Salt Lick Cookbook

You can’t talk about great Texas barbecue without mentioning Driftwood’s most famous barbecue joint of all time – The Salt Lick Bar-B-Que. Through the years this Central Texas haunt has gained both fame and popularity for its delicious barbecue meats – well known for their preparation over an open pit. Come November, the restaurant will have its first cookbook, written by Jessica Dupuy, author of Uchi: The Cookbook, and Scott Roberts, owner of The Salt Lick Bar-B-Que. Roberts talked with TEXAS MONTHLY about The Salt Lick Cookbook, the history of the restaurant, and moving forward.

What made you guys decide it was time to do a book?

We’ve been thinking about it for a long time. I’ve always been proud of the fact that we’ve been around for so long and how we came be. I had been thinking about the book for ten or fifteen years, and about a year ago everything lined up. We realized we needed to stop thinking about it and start doing it, so we met up with Jessica. She and I spent a long time together talking about the stories, the history, and the recipes of The Salt Lick.

A lot cookbooks come out nowadays that are a balance between recipes and the story of a restaurant or chef. What was the story you wanted to tell in The Salt Lick Cookbook?

I wanted to tell the story of the family behind The Salt Lick. Like the story of how my great grandmother came to Texas in the 1880s, how the Roberts came in 1867, how they got here, the way they cooked then, and the way we cook today. That cooking technique has been handed down for generations. My father’s parents were significant in my life, and there was a whole lot of stuff that has happened through the years that I thought would be nice to share with people. The Salt Lick is tied to my family, so they were inevitably going to be mentioned in the cookbook. Jessica said the fact that my daughter is learning everything was a big deal, too, so we wanted to include the next generation in there as well.

Scott Roberts

Were there certain recipes or stories you really wanted to feature?

I wanted to include the fact that as a young child of about six or so I would watch my grandmother and her sisters grinding up meat and cooking these sausage links on a wood-fired stove. I can still remember the sound of the [meat] cooking and sizzling. My job then was to stay out of the way [laughs]. I had many stories like that one, and it was great to share them and honor the whole family.

What will be the recipe in here that readers will be excited to see? Were there any that were difficult to part with?

I’ll put it this way, we put all the recipes from the restaurant in the book except for the barbecue sauce. That’s going to remain a secret. I think people will really enjoy meats like the pork ribs and beef brisket. I think people will also really like my grandmother’s biscuits and her fried-chicken recipes. And one of the ones they are really going to love is my mother’s lemon meringue pie.

You guys have had a newfound notoriety recently with things like Top Chef Texas. How do you want to move forward into the future?

We want to continue to do what we’ve been doing, but add some new things along the way. We’re going to start concentrating on the wines and start working on a few new items like barbecue oysters. We want to continue to support local foods, so things like the barbecue oysters will be only Texas Gulf oysters. We want to keep doing what we’ve always been doing, but just add bits and pieces as we go.

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Friday, July 27, 2012

The Tickets are Gone! Texas Monthly BBQ Festival is Sold Out

They went as quickly as they came! Sorry, ya’ll! The Texas Monthly BBQ Festival tickets have officially sold out. The VIP tickets were gone faster than the blink of an eye, and now the general admission passes have all been snatched up as well. For those lucky individuals who got their passes, we look forward to seeing you all on September 23!
Trust me, you’re in for a day of some delicious barbecue, and we apologize for the meat sweats in advance. For those of you who missed out, get like a pack of ravenous wolves and track some tickets down. Believe me, you don’t want to miss out on this year’s action.

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Thursday, July 26, 2012

The Tickets are Coming! Texas Monthly BBQ Festival Tickets on Sale Today

Do you smother your meats in tangy barbecue sauce? Have you ever planned a road trip just to devour some Central Texas barbecue? Would you stand in a three-hour line for a single serving of brisket at Franklin Barbecue? Well, ready your wallets my fellow barbecue-loving fiends! Tickets for the Texas Monthly BBQ Festival go on sale today at 10 a.m., and you better grab tickets while you can because – similar to a hearty serving of finger-lickin’-good Texas barbecue – these tickets will go fast.

The third annual festival takes place on Sunday, Sept. 23 at the Long Center for the Performing Arts in Austin. Through this link, individuals can purchase VIP or general admission tickets and sample amongst over 20 barbecue joints from across the state. For more information about the festival visit the Texas Monthly BBQ page or follow us on Twitter.

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Monday, April 2, 2012

ICYMI: Reactions to the Franklin BBQ “Vegan Brisket”

APRIL FOOLS! Breathe a sigh of relief, all you extremist carnivores. Aaron Franklin of Franklin Barbecue in Austin IS NOT – I repeat, IS NOT – going to host Meatless Monday Vegan Brisket dinners. The TM Daily Post story really sent some of you into dire meat sweats and brisket withdrawals. Who knew threats of veganism could be so potent?

We have to admit, some of the responses from our readers, Facebook fans and tweeps were priceless. A few highlights:

“There’s a special place in hell for anyone who calls themselves a Texan who would ever consider serving or eating this abomination. Don’t let Texas turn into another San Francisco.” – Willis, in the story comments

“Do NOT click on the picture, y’all. It just looks gross.” – Sheree, Facebook (note: picture was of a real Franklin BBQ beef brisket)

“That’s more disgusting than pink slime!” – Kathy, Facebook

“Get a rope!” – Rosemary, Facebook (always our favorite comment)

“Meatless brisket would be something akin to Godless Heaven.” – Jim, Facebook

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Monday, March 26, 2012

Foodways Texas Is Getting Fat and Sassy

Foodways Texas, which was founded in July 2010 “to preserve, promote, and celebrate the diverse food cultures of Texas,” held its second annual symposium in Austin this past weekend. A couple of hundred participants listened to talks on the theme of “Texas Preserved”—a deliberately wide-ranging topic that covered cocktails, the drought, cattle, sugar plantations, heritage pigs, beer, shrimp boats, oysters, “trash fish,” and even mayhaw jelly.

Attendees also ate, very, very well, from a brisket dinner catered by Austin ‘cue maestro John Mueller (with sides by Hoover’s Cooking) to the recreation of a Texas farm dinner circa 1840 at Boggy Creek Farm. The main course at the latter feast consisted of succulent grilled Red Wattle pigs (a heritage breed) provided by Revival Market in Houston; the chef for the occasion was Sonya Cote of Austin’s East Side Showroom and the brand new Hillside Farmacy.

Here are four choice moments from the nearly two-dozen presentations at the symposium:

“Two generations ago Texas housewives could buy sugar grown, refined, and packaged in Texas. The brand was Imperial, and it was downright disloyal to buy anything else. But gradually the thriving Texas sugar cane industry collapsed. The cause of its slow death was a perfect storm of cane disease, bad weather, and cheap sugar from other countries, to name just three reasons. But today, sugar cane may be making a comeback in the Rio Grande Valley. Could Texas once again become a sugar belt—or sugar bowl?” – MM Pack, food writer and culinary historian, Austin, speaking on “A Short but Not Always Sweet History of Sugar in Texas.” (more…)

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Monday, October 31, 2011

TMBBQFest Photo Gallery

Mouse over for captions, or click for full-size image. See ya next year (or tomorrow at your favorite joint)!

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

TMBBQFest, “23 Pitmasters in 23 Days”: Bertram’s Closing Puts Us One Man Down

Photo by Trey Kazee

Make that 22 pitmasters.

Since Bertram Smoke Haus made our Top 50 in 2008, a lot has happened with the joint northwest of Austin. Pitmaster and owner Jim Wallace moved out of his original location, a 100-plus year-old former mercantile and lumber store, for a bigger new spot that he renamed Bertram Bar B Que.

Unfortunately, as some of our most die-hard BBQ Finder App and web site users already know, Bertram 2.0 did not work out.

The good news is, Wallace is still manning the mesquite, including as a caterer, but more importantly, he’s planning to re-open back at the old Smoke Haus spot as soon as possible.

The bad news is, because of that transition, he can no longer make the festival on Sunday. We at TEXAS MONTHLY still wish him the best, and look forward to future feedings at the new old place.

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