Texans are the most opinionated people to walk this earth,
and that’s my opinion on the matter.
Texas is so big that it can be viewed as distinct regions for just about
everything, food included. Barbeque has
so many regions and approaches in Texas that I always wonder just what people mean
when they refer to ‘real Texas barbeque.’
A portion of my family comes from Shelby County in East
Texas. The last time I was there was in
the late 1950’s, but I remember the pig being roasted over a pit dug in the
ground and filled with burning coals.
When it was done, we cut it into chunks and served it with a
vinegar/pepper sauce, home baked bread, and poke salad greens. They called it barbeque.
The next day we were invited to a neighboring farm where the
pig was baked in a smoky wood-fired brick oven, and then chopped into tiny
pieces and mixed with a thick tomato/mustard sauce and served with hamburger
buns and cole slaw. They called it
barbeque.
One of my friends lived in Wichita Falls where they grilled
steaks over a hot fire, and served it with slices of cantaloupe. They called it barbeque.
Out near El Paso, I had lunch at a barbeque joint that
served only chicken marinated in vinegar and chiles then tossed onto a smoky
grill. On the side were cheese
enchiladas. They called it barbeque. Actually I don’t care what they called it as
long as it came with cheese enchiladas.
At a friend’s home in Dalhart up in the panhandle, big
chunks of beef were simmered in a tomato/chile broth, and then finished in the
oven. The broth was served as a
soup. They called it barbeque.
In San Antonio a restaurant I frequented served cabrito,
tortillas, beans, rice and hot pickled carrots. They called it barbeque.
A market in central Texas serves ‘hot guts’ (sausage) and
calls it barbeque. I could eat my
weight in these things.
A family I know in Eagle Pass simmers big pork shoulders in
a broth, and then smokes it directly over hot mesquite wood coals before
slicing it and frying it in a skillet.
They top it with a thick ancho chile sauce and serve it with big ears of
boiled corn. To them it is called
barbeque.
I’ve seen barbeque cooked in big smokers, on top of grills,
in skillets, ovens, and slow-cookers.
And then there is the open pit.
This is more or less what my East Texas relatives were using, but I’ve
seen some of these things that looked as though they were a city block
long. Maybe they were. In the summer of 1967 I attended a Walter
Jetton catered event northwest of Fort Worth where enough pigs, chickens,
steers, and sausage were on the pit at one time to feed almost 3,000
people. And this was not considered big
by Walter Jetton standards.
This doesn’t begin to cover the many approaches Texans take
to barbeque. My preference is the
central Texas German smoking style found in and around Lockhart, but if I am
not in Lockhart or the surrounding area, I will definitely not go hungry.
Once again, barbeque is where you find it.
Right now I live in California, and there are a few places
advertising ‘real Texas barbeque.’ They
have some interesting approaches, and I’m certain somewhere in Texas this is
considered ‘real Texas barbeque,’ but this is California. So why isn’t this ‘real California
barbeque?’ Come to think of it, I see
‘real Carolina barbeque,’ ‘real Southern barbeque,’ ‘real Kansas City
barbeque,’ ‘real Memphis barbeque,’ and a few other ‘real’ barbeques, but I’ve
never seen ‘real California barbeque’ being advertised in California.
Before I travel down this road much farther, I must
acknowledge Santa Maria barbeque. Of course
I’ve tried it, but I wasn’t impressed.
From my experience it is either an expensive steak burned over a hot red
oak fire and served covered with ashes, or it is a tri-tip soaked in vinegar,
coated with black pepper, burned over a hot red oak fire and served sliced and
covered with ashes. The taste in both
cases was juicy over-smoked grit. If
this is ‘real California barbeque,’ no wonder they try to imitate other places.
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