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View Full Version : Garden & Gun: I had to read 3 times for it to sink in



cclaxton
01-26-2015, 11:29 AM
http://gardenandgun.com/sporting-life
It is mostly shotguns and hunting, but nonetheless mainstream oriented.
From Orlando, FL this week.
Cody

LittleLebowski
01-26-2015, 12:20 PM
Their number 1 pick for Southern BBQ is in between Warrenton and Culpepper.

ACP230
01-26-2015, 01:05 PM
My wife and I have had a subscription for several years.
We lived in northern FL for six months in the 1970s and have good memories of the places we
went. Also music in the bars where we lived and in St. Augustine.

G&G also covers custom knife makers from time to time.

jc000
01-26-2015, 01:08 PM
Their number 1 pick for Southern BBQ is in between Warrenton and Culpepper.

BBQ Country?

JV_
01-26-2015, 01:31 PM
Yes, it's the one at the truck stop.

cclaxton
01-26-2015, 03:23 PM
I tried it once....it was okay. But in my opinion the best BBQ I have ever had was at the Carolina Cup, where they cook an entire pig in the ground, then pull the meat from the bone, add spices and sauce, and mix it up and put it on a sandwich bun.....mmmmm...mmmm...good.

2nd Best: https://4rsmokehouse.com/ except for baked beans.

Best baked beans: http://www.sonnysbbq.com/

Best Brisket: http://mission-bbq.com/menu

But not sure what this has to do with Garden & Gun.
Cody

Kyle Reese
01-26-2015, 03:27 PM
Yes, it's the one at the truck stop.

Award winning.

jc000
01-26-2015, 03:42 PM
Award winning.

Pretty damn good, IMO. The Vienna spot was even better. They do good pork.

RevolverRob
01-26-2015, 04:06 PM
The best barbecue on the planet comes from Texas, full stop. There is no argument about this, there can be no argument about this, it is a fact. If you attempt to argue this your right to the best barbecue on the planet will be forever revoked. All others are imitators, some may be of high caliber, but they are imitators.

Nothing, nothing, will ever compare to the barbecoa my great grandfather used to cook in south Texas. I was knee-high to a grasshopper the first time I helped him dig a pit to roast a goat in. If I had some land I'd go out back right now and start digging a pit. We dug the pit, built a bed of stone and then started to burn mesquite in it. Once a good, hot bed of coals was going, it was add some wood to burn more, then toss a thin layer of dirt on top and put the meat on it. He put chili powder and salt on the meat, spritzed a little water to get a steam going, then buried the whole thing, careful to make an inlet for fresh air and a chimney for exhaust. We let it cook a whole day, I remember standing out by it the next morning, it smelled so good you wanted to dig it up and eat it on the spot. ~Err...sorry I got a lot lost in the memory there, it's snowing outside and I am recalling a hot summer day in Texas with a lot of good food.~

Someday, I'm gonna open a restaurant that only makes BBQ the way my grandparents and great grandparents made it...After you eat a killer meal, you can go out back to the shooting range and bust some caps or peruse some guns. Then head over to the distillery and have some freshly distilled (or aged) spirits, before you go over to the hand-rolled cigar station for a fresh cigar. I'm gonna call it "Rob's Barbecue, Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms Ranch". Everyone is invited.

Peally
01-26-2015, 04:13 PM
I'm hungry now :(

HCM
01-26-2015, 04:36 PM
The best barbecue on the planet comes from Texas, full stop. There is no argument about this, there can be no argument about this, it is a fact. If you attempt to argue this your right to the best barbecue on the planet will be forever revoked. All others are imitators, some may be of high caliber, but they are imitators.

Nothing, nothing, will ever compare to the barbecoa my great grandfather used to cook in south Texas. I was knee-high to a grasshopper the first time I helped him dig a pit to roast a goat in. If I had some land I'd go out back right now and start digging a pit. We dug the pit, built a bed of stone and then started to burn mesquite in it. Once a good, hot bed of coals was going, it was add some wood to burn more, then toss a thin layer of dirt on top and put the meat on it. He put chili powder and salt on the meat, spritzed a little water to get a steam going, then buried the whole thing, careful to make an inlet for fresh air and a chimney for exhaust. We let it cook a whole day, I remember standing out by it the next morning, it smelled so good you wanted to dig it up and eat it on the spot. ~Err...sorry I got a lot lost in the memory there, it's snowing outside and I am recalling a hot summer day in Texas with a lot of good food.~

Someday, I'm gonna open a restaurant that only makes BBQ the way my grandparents and great grandparents made it...After you eat a killer meal, you can go out back to the shooting range and bust some caps or peruse some guns. Then head over to the distillery and have some freshly distilled (or aged) spirits, before you go over to the hand-rolled cigar station for a fresh cigar. I'm gonna call it "Rob's Barbecue, Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms Ranch". Everyone is invited.

Would it be in Lockhart or would you buy The Salt Lick and replace that silly vineyard with the distillery and the range ?

Since you are stuck in Chicago, i'm only gonna say this once :p... barbacoa taco (the cabeza de vaca kind) and Big Red ...

JV_
01-26-2015, 04:39 PM
Smoque BBQ in Chicago is pretty good.
http://www.smoquebbq.com/

RevolverRob
01-26-2015, 04:42 PM
Would it be in Lockhart or would you buy The Salt Lick and replace that silly vineyard with the distillery and the range ?

Since you are stuck in Chicago, i'm only gonna say this once :p... barbacoa taco (the cabeza de vaca kind) and Big Red ...

You are a horrible human being, but I like you anyways. :p

I don't know if I can tear down the vineyard at The Salt Lick. My wife and I looked at having our wedding there, but you had to rent the vineyard and ranch house and a private dining room, the bill was ten thousand bucks A DAY. :eek: Hard to walk away from a cash cow like that.

Besides Lockhart might be a bit nicer, more water and all.

-Rob

NickA
01-26-2015, 04:52 PM
Would it be in Lockhart or would you buy The Salt Lick and replace that silly vineyard with the distillery and the range ?

Since you are stuck in Chicago, i'm only gonna say this once [emoji14]... barbacoa taco (the cabeza de vaca kind) and Big Red ...
We need to make a trip to Salt Lick before it gets hot.

vaspence
01-26-2015, 05:11 PM
The best barbecue on the planet comes from Texas, full stop. There is no argument about this, there can be no argument about this, it is a fact. If you attempt to argue this your right to the best barbecue on the planet will be forever revoked. All others are imitators, some may be of high caliber, but they are imitators.

Negative on that. All you need to know is: inside white meat pulled. And North Carolina...Eastern North Carolina.

SeriousStudent
01-26-2015, 10:09 PM
The best barbecue on the planet comes from Texas, full stop. There is no argument about this, there can be no argument about this, it is a fact. If you attempt to argue this your right to the best barbecue on the planet will be forever revoked. All others are imitators, some may be of high caliber, but they are imitators.

Nothing, nothing, will ever compare to the barbecoa my great grandfather used to cook in south Texas. I was knee-high to a grasshopper the first time I helped him dig a pit to roast a goat in. If I had some land I'd go out back right now and start digging a pit. We dug the pit, built a bed of stone and then started to burn mesquite in it. Once a good, hot bed of coals was going, it was add some wood to burn more, then toss a thin layer of dirt on top and put the meat on it. He put chili powder and salt on the meat, spritzed a little water to get a steam going, then buried the whole thing, careful to make an inlet for fresh air and a chimney for exhaust. We let it cook a whole day, I remember standing out by it the next morning, it smelled so good you wanted to dig it up and eat it on the spot. ~Err...sorry I got a lot lost in the memory there, it's snowing outside and I am recalling a hot summer day in Texas with a lot of good food.~

Someday, I'm gonna open a restaurant that only makes BBQ the way my grandparents and great grandparents made it...After you eat a killer meal, you can go out back to the shooting range and bust some caps or peruse some guns. Then head over to the distillery and have some freshly distilled (or aged) spirits, before you go over to the hand-rolled cigar station for a fresh cigar. I'm gonna call it "Rob's Barbecue, Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms Ranch". Everyone is invited.

I miss cabrito.

On Sunday's after Mass, my grandfather would give the ranchhands the afternoon off. They would roast a goat over a pit full of mesquite, and my grandmother would make fresh tortillas and frijoles.

I was a 7-year-old sitting on the porch of the bunkhouse, eating tacos while the hands played guitar and drank cerveza. They would eat, sing and drink, and then teach me how to ride horses.

I miss our old place something fierce. :(

LittleLebowski
01-27-2015, 07:34 AM
I miss cabrito.

On Sunday's after Mass, my grandfather would give the ranchhands the afternoon off. They would roast a goat over a pit full of mesquite, and my grandmother would make fresh tortillas and frijoles.

I was a 7-year-old sitting on the porch of the bunkhouse, eating tacos while the hands played guitar and drank cerveza. They would eat, sing and drink, and then teach me how to ride horses.

I miss our old place something fierce. :(

Enjoyed that read.

Drang
01-29-2015, 05:17 PM
May I humbly suggest a modification?
I'm gonna call it "Rob's Barbecue, Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms Emporium".

mtnbkr
01-30-2015, 02:41 PM
Negative on that. All you need to know is: inside white meat pulled. And North Carolina...Eastern North Carolina.

Ohhh yeah.

My family's from Eastern NC. I've made my fair share of ENC BBQ.

If you can't make your own sauce, get Scott's. It's "the best ye ever tasted". :D

Chris

JAD
01-30-2015, 09:00 PM
I just ate an hour ago at what used to be called Oklahoma Joe's. I travel to Texas a lot, and eat que there regularly. We're just going to have to agree to disagree.

NickA
03-10-2015, 07:51 AM
Someone I actually know is in the mag this month. Pretty neat.

http://gardenandgun.com/blog/bright-spot-sneak-peek-susan-hables-new-book-color

Tamara
03-10-2015, 08:03 AM
The best barbecue on the planet comes from Texas, full stop. There is no argument about this, there can be no argument about this, it is a fact.

Texans cain't even remember to BBQ the right dang animal half the time. :D

LHS
03-10-2015, 11:12 AM
Texans cain't even remember to BBQ the right dang animal half the time. :D

This. I want my pork ribs, pulled pork and bacon.

RoyGBiv
03-10-2015, 11:34 AM
Texans cain't even remember to BBQ the right dang animal half the time. :D

Truth! (except that it's more than half the time :rolleyes:)

Us transplants are left to roll our own.

http://i1373.photobucket.com/albums/ag388/RoyGBiv00/Butt_zpsao1ajuay.jpg~original