328 pp., 7 x 91/2, 237 illus., 61 sidebars, 2-color throughout, suggested readings, index
$30.00 cloth
Published: |
Holy Smoke The Big Book of North Carolina Barbecue John Shelton Reed, Dale Volberg Reed, and William McKinney Copyright
(c) 2008 by the University of North Carolina Press.
Q: How did two Tennesseans (John and Dale) and a South Carolinian (William) get the nerve to write a book about North Carolina barbecue? What qualifies you to write on the topic?
John: We also argue—I don’t know how successfully—that our origins give us some measure of impartiality in the Eastern Piedmont, tomato vs. no-tomato, whole-hog vs. shoulder wars. It’s not our heritage that’s at stake.
William: On the South Carolina front, I'll freely admit to being fond of mustard-based barbecue—really fond of it. But the intensity of interest in barbecue and respect for it that you find in North Carolina doesn't exist where I come from. Good barbecue places in South Carolina will carry Eastern-style sauce, but North Carolina shops don't need mustard-based sauce. In fact, it would be weird if you found it in a North Carolina barbecue joint.
Q: How is Holy Smoke organized?
Q: How did this project come to be?
John: It turned out that we’d been getting ready to write this book for a long time, without knowing it. We’d been eating barbecue all over the state—and, for that matter, out-of-state, from San Francisco to London—for decades. We’d studied Bob Garner’s and Jim Early’s books on North Carolina barbecue—in fact, we had them in our car, and had done things like driving from Chapel Hill to Goldsboro for lunch. I’d been a judge at the Memphis in May barbecue competition and had written about that. I’d spoken about the cultural importance of barbecue at a meeting of the Southern Foodways Alliance, and I’d written a few magazine columns on the subject. We knew enough to know that it would take a whole encyclopedia to deal with barbecue in general, but that it might be barely possible to write a single book about North Carolina. We knew that William had already done those interviews, as a project for the SFA, so we asked him if he’d join us.
Q: Just what is North Carolina barbecue, anyway?
William: North Carolina barbecue is intensely local, with variations from one part of the state to another (the differences between the East and the Piedmont are especially hot, of course). But Tar Heels cook shoulders or whole hogs—no collars, tenderloins, or ribs, thank you—and serve the meat with a sauce that’s only a slight twist, if that, on some time-honored recipe. At its best and most traditional, there are no short cuts. It’s burning hardwood for coals, slowly cooking pigs through the night, chopping the meat on a wood block hollowed out by cleavers over time, and serving it in a stand, joint, or restaurant that’s often the center of the community.
Q: What's the difference between Piedmont and Eastern style barbecue?
Dale: That’s generally true, although we found some Eastern places that cook shoulders and some Piedmont places that don’t put tomato in their sauces.
John: As Bob Garner and many others have pointed out, though, Eastern- and Piedmont-style are actually a lot more like each other than either is like what you’ll get in Memphis or Kansas City or Texas. One friend from Georgia says that North Carolina ought to call itself “the Vinegar State.” Still, folks get heated up about these relatively small intra-state differences. As Jerry Bledsoe says, the feud is as good as the food. We talk some in the book about why North Carolinians enjoy this fight so much.
Q: Why are North Carolinians so devoted to pork? Has it always been so?
Q: How were each of you introduced to North Carolina barbecue?
William: Eastern-style sauce is called Pee Dee-style in South Carolina, after the area where it’s found. I remember eating it at my great-uncle’s house in Pamplico. I thought it wasn’t very good, and I’d get seconds of chicken bog instead. I was young, unwise, and immature, and came to see the error of my ways at UNC, where I discovered in my sophomore year that I could drive to Allen & Son, eat a meal, and get back in thirty minutes.
Q: William, you mention starting the Carolina Barbecue Society (CBS) as a UNC student in the late 1990s. What was the group's purpose? What happened at its meetings?
Q: One of Holy Smoke's most extraordinary features is its interviews with heroes of North Carolina barbecue. How difficult was it to get these barbecue men and women to share their secrets for, and to speak candidly about, the challenges they face preparing great barbecue? Do you think that their particular traditions will be carried on?
Q: What aspects of barbecue are endangered today?
Dale: Most new places these days are using some sort of hybrid gas-and-wood or electric-and-wood cooker. If you just use the gas or electricity for ignition and to regulate the temperature you don’t lose much flavor (just some soul). But there’s always the temptation to use the gas or electricity for cooking—and there goes that inimitable taste.
John: There’s another threat as well—at least we see it as a threat. That’s tarting barbecue up with culinary school touches like innovative sauces and rubs, and serving it in high-toned restaurants that talk about their “concept.” People shouldn’t get too posh—much less playful and postmodern—with barbecue. Jim Shahin says, “Barbecue was not meant to be all dressed up. It is a proletarian food, and its upscaling will be its undoing.” Shahin’s a Texan, but he knows what he’s talking about. When we see a barbecue place with a choice of sauces—much less one with valet parking—we start out suspicious.
Q: How profitable is the barbecue business? Do profit margins go up when one cooks with gas? What's wrong with cooking with gas, anyway?
William: Lots of people worship at the Church of Sauce, but real barbecuing is more like the worship of Ba’al—cooking over coals, where the fat cooks out of the pork, sizzles onto the coals, and makes the smoke that gives you that barbecue taste. Sauce is fine and can perk up the meat, but the essence of barbecue lies in that process. Pork cooked in a gas oven can turn out pretty good, but it’s not barbecue.
Q: How much exploration in barbecue do you encourage? Should I try the ribs at my favorite joint if I swear by the sandwich with a side of fried okra? Should I “save room for dessert” if I really want a plate with onion rings? Should I go across town and try someplace new from time to time?
John: We’ve really enjoyed exploring the state’s traditional barbecue restaurants, and, as Will says, there are a lot of variations on the common theme. But when you find a place that takes the trouble to do it right you should treasure it and support it. Sure, check out that new place that sells Texas- or Memphis-style—it might be good eating—but week-in, week-out, North Carolinians ought to eat North Carolina barbecue, like Italians eat pasta.
Q: How did you decide what recipes to include, and where did you get them?
Dale: The recipes came from friends and family, from our collection of historic Southern cookbooks, and from more recent cookbooks (often written by our friends—we’re lucky to know a lot of food writers). We’ve tried to give some idea of where these dishes came from and how they’ve evolved.
Q: What should I do when my favorite restaurant closes up for the holidays? Can I freeze barbecue to get me through these lean times?
Dale: Actually, in the book we recommend putting leftover barbecue in plastic bags sealed with one of those vacuum-sealing gizmos and freezing that. When you’re ready for some barbecue,
you can put the bag in simmering water for an hour or two and bring the meat up to 180 degrees,
just the way it came out of the pit. Call it sous vide, if you want to—whatever you call it, it works like a charm.
Q: What's the history of serving alcohol at barbecue joints and restaurants? Should I care if I can't get a beer with my barbecue and Brunswick stew?
William: You're more likely to find beer at recently established places, and generally in metropolitan areas or vacation spots in the mountains or at the beach. Heck, the Skylight Inn only served Pepsi—not even sweet tea—until the 1990s. B's in Greenville uses old whiskey bottles for its table sauce, but it’s not clear where they come from. Keaton's, in Cleveland, does serve beer, but no more than two per customer. This de facto Prohibition is ironic considering that a lot of pit masters would tell you a major reason to cook barbecue the old-fashioned way is to have an excuse to drink. (The murals in Ed Mitchell's old restaurant in Wilson showed guys drinking out of a jug marked “XXX” next to where the pigs were cooking.)
Q: Would it be wrong to take a bottle of wine to a pig pickin'? If not, what kind of wine goes best with barbecue?
William: I would think long and hard before taking wine to a pig pickin'. After drinking all day a tipsy pit master might mistake the bottle for something to put on the pig or christen the cooker with. If you do bring a bottle, you'll want something that can stand up to the vinegar in the sauce. I’m a big believer in drinking wines that come from the areas where the food originates, but Southern wines are generally more delicate than what a pig pickin' brings to the table. If you're hell-bent on drinking wine, a big strong unoaked Chardonnay or a Beaujolais might work. Now, as a 26-year-old talking about wine, I will proceed to lie down in the road and hope to be hit by a bus.
Q: Is barbecue a political dish? If so, how?
William: Barbecue in North Carolina is primaries, debates, yard signs, bumper stickers, robo-calls, and victory parties all wrapped up into one and multiplied by ten. It's political because politicians host barbecues, praise barbecue, and attend barbecues to campaign. It's political because different parts of the state compete about whose barbecue is better and best represents the state. It’s political because the hog industry is one of the biggest businesses in the state and
restaurants’ wood supplies dried up when the furniture industry moved off-shore. If North
Carolina ever turns to a third-party, grand coalition to govern, it will probably be called the Barbecue Party.
Q: How close is the taste of today's barbecue to that made with the fattier pork of yore?
John: “Pasture-raised” pork comes closer to the old-timey stuff than the shrink-wrapped, factory-farmed product you get in your grocery store, and we think it does taste marginally better, although maybe not enough to justify the price difference. After all, part of the charm of barbecue is taking a cheap cut of meat and turning it into something delicious. Some of the fun is gone if it costs as much as steak to begin with. But the price is coming down, and if you add in considerations of humane treatment for the pigs, maybe it’s worth it.
William: The fact that barbecue is a bit drier than it once was may be one of the reasons sauces have become more popular—to the point that many people think they’re what “make” barbecue.
Q: Is there a polite way to complain about too much gristle in your barbecue? How much gristle would you consider to be too much?
William: People like to say that the best thing about barbecue is that bad barbecue is still good, but gristly barbecue is not good. It’s tough and unpleasant. Gristle often means that some tough strands of fat haven't been rendered. Good barbecue will have most of that slowly cooked out. On the other hand, fat is tasty; it’s part of what separates barbecue from something more dainty like a tenderloin. Take all the fat out of barbecue and you'll have a pretty bad product.
Q: If I follow your directions for making my own barbecue, how likely is it that strangers “following the smoke” will show up and ask to be invited to stay? Do you have any house rules for such a situation?
Q: Did you encounter anything particularly outlandish posing as or challenging traditional North Carolina barbecue?
William: There are exceptions, but by and large brisket and ribs are best left to Texans and other interlopers. And one place we went serves pork collars, a lean cut of meat that doesn't lend itself well to the barbecue process. I've had barbecued deer—it was good, but not something I’d cook every day. Probably the best “outlandish” dish we’ve run into is the “barbecue chicken” at Keaton's. One could hold a philosophical summit on whether the chicken is “barbefried” or “frybecued”: it’s fried, then dipped into boiling barbecue sauce for just a second. It’s unique, and divine.
Dale: One interesting development is that we’re starting to see really out-of-state barbecue, cooked all over North Carolina by recent immigrants. There’s Korean kalbi—marinated ribs—in Durham. There’s Far Eastern-style—that is, Chinese—in Charlotte. (Talk about whole-hog, how about heads and stomachs, too?) And of course Mexican barbacòa all over the place.
William: I've seen Thai Rooster sauce (Sriracha) served with barbecue as a hot sauce, and now I keep it at the house for that. Every culture has charcoal, grills, tough cuts of meat, and spices, and there's plenty of room at the table in North Carolina for these flavors to go to work.
Q: What's the future of North Carolina barbecue?
John: Cooking barbecue right is a hard way to make a living, and unless you have discerning customers who appreciate what you’re doing it’s awfully tempting to take the easy (and less expensive) short cuts—as all too many places have done.
Dale: That’s one reason we wrote this book.
This interview may be reprinted in part or in its entirety with the following credit: A conversation John Shelton Reed, Dale Volberg Reed, and William McKinney, authors of Holy Smoke: The Big Book of North Carolina Barbecue (University of North Carolina Press, November 2008).
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