Welcome to Pitstop Barbecue. Find southern style barbecue and real pit barbequing techniques. Barbecue made with smoking wood in a large brick oven is a slow process. Using indirect heat, the process is called "smoking". The slower methods of cooking tenderize cuts and the choice and combination of woods burned result in different flavors. Different types of wood burn at different rates. The heat also varies by the amount of wood and controlling the rate of burn through careful venting. Woods Selected For Their Smoke Flavor Include:
| Mesquite
Hickory
Maple |
Pecan
Apple
Oak |
The
best homemade barbeque sauces and recipes vary by region.
Kansas City - tomato, molasses
North Carolina - vinegar, pepper flakes
South Carolina - tomato, mustard, vinegar, black pepper,
Alabama - mustard, vinegar, chile peppers
Georgia
- ketchup, garlic, onion, black pepper, brown sugar, bourbon
Arkansas - tomato, vinegar, pepper, molasses
Texas - tomato, hot chilies, cumin, less sweet
St. Louis - tomato, vinegar, sweet and spicy.
To contact us CLICK HERE
Alabama
In Alabama, there are currently more barbecue restaurants, per capita,
than in any other US state. Alabama barbecue most often consists
of pork ribs or pork shoulder, slowly cooked over hickory smoke.
Pork shoulder may be served either chopped or sliced; some diners
also specify a preference for either "inside" or "outside"
meat. Alabama barbecue is typically served with a spicy, tomato-based
sauce.
Arkansas
Arkansas is in some ways the crossroads of American barbecue, firmly
rooted in the Deep South but close enough to the Midwest and Texas
to incorporate Kansas City and Texas-style barbecue traits. Like
all true southern barbecue, meat is never exposed to high or direct
heat. Instead it is smoked at low temperatures for long periods
of time.
California
In northern California many BBQ restaurants serve tofu, tempeh and
Portobello mushrooms for vegetarians, in addition to barbecue. Oakland
is a center for traditional BBQ and other soul food side dishes.
The most famous California barbecue is Santa Maria style, in the
central part of the state, with its unique 2-3 inch cut of top sirloin
or Tri-tip steak, pinquito pink beans and salsa.
Georgia
Barbecue culture in Georgia represents an enormous range of styles,
traditions, and influences. The state's "barbecue reputation"
is based on pork, which is slow-cooked over an open pit stoked with
oak and/or hickory and served with a sauce based on ketchup, molasses,
bourbon, garlic, cayenne pepper, and other ingredients. Georgia
is the melting pot of regional variations where almost any sauce
or cooking style can be found.
Kentucky
In Kentucky, barbecue also has a long and rich tradition. Mutton
is the most notable specialty in Western Kentucky, where there were
once large populations of sheep. However, mutton is virtually unknown
in The Purchase of the extreme west, where "barbecue"
without any other qualifier refers specifically to smoked pork shoulder.
A vinegar- and tomato-based sauce with a mixture of spice and sweet
is traditionally served with the meat, though not always used in
cooking.
Mississippi
Like its neighbor Alabama, Mississippians prefer pork to other meats,
usually pork shoulder, or whole hog. Most restaurants serve only
pulled pork, though some also serve chicken halves. Unlike the surrounding
states, a purely vinegar-based sauce is preferred.
Missouri
In Missouri, beef is sliced and a tomato-based sauce is added after
cooking. St. Louis-style barbecue features a sauce that is typically
tangier and thinner than its Kansas City cousin, with less vinegar
taste. Kansas City calls itself the "world capital of barbecue."
Kansas City barbecue is served with the sauce on the side, rather
than mixed onto the meat before serving.
North Carolina
Within North Carolina, there are two regional barbecue traditions,
both based on the slow cooking of pork, served pulled, chopped,
or sliced. In eastern North Carolina, typically the whole hog is
used, and the dominant ingredients in the sauce are vinegar and
hot peppers. From the Piedmont westward, Lexington-style barbecue
is the norm. It is prepared from primarily pork shoulder and served
with either a vinegar-based or tomato-based sauce.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma barbecue reflects the state's geographic location. Located
south of Kansas City, north of Texas and west of Memphis, Oklahoma
barbecue also includes pork, chicken, sausage, and bologna. In Oklahoma,
barbecue refers to meat that has been slowly cooked over wood smoke
at a very low temperature, for a very long time. The woods most
commonly used for smoking meat include hickory, oak, and pecan.
Pennsylvania
In Pennsylvania, 'barbecue' refers to various sweet and mild concoctions
in the tradition of Pennsylvania Dutch (German) cooking techniques.
Especially in central PA, barbecue is generally a mixture of browned
ground beef, or in some cases shredded roast beef, with varying
combinations of ketchup, mustard, molasses, brown sugar, white sugar,
salt, pepper, pickle relish, and vinegar.
South Carolina
South Carolina is the only state to have four types of barbecue
sauces: mustard, vinegar, heavy tomato, and light tomato. The meat
used in South Carolina is consistent throughout the state, slow-cooked
pulled pork. In addition to pork, other popular BBQ dishes include
hash and ribs.
Tennessee
While Memphis dominates the culture of Tennessee barbecue, traditional
Tennessee "barbeque" is saucy, slow-cooked pork ribs or
pulled/sliced pork shoulder, though beef brisket. The molasses content
in the sauce usually becomes less pronounced in middle and east
Tennessee, causing the sauces there to be thinner and less sweet.
Texas
Sliced brisket, sausage, and pork ribs are the most popular meats
in Texas barbecue. Chicken, beef ribs, and chopped beef are also
often found. In Texas, barbecuing refers to what others call "hot
smoking"—cooking with both smoke and low heat for hours
over woods such as oak, mesquite, or pecan. Meat prepared by Texas
barbecue often has a red tinge even when fully cooked, and a pink
smoke ring around the edges of the meat. The pink smoke ring is
very tasty and a major focus of fans of this style. If used, traditional
sauce consists of tomatoes with a vinegar base. It can be sweet
or spicy and thick or thin, depending on the chef.

Countywebsite.com
©2007
|
|