– The Guardian: “Pulled Pork: why we’re pigging out on US barbecue food”
As punters went wild for barbecue in general, and pulled pork in particular, restaurant chains and supermarkets jumped on the porcine bandwagon. There has been a 35% increase in the amount of US barbecue dishes served in UK restaurants since 2010, according to thefoodpeople, and a rash of smokehouses and diner pastiches have opened in London, Manchester, Leeds, Brighton and beyond. “We are in the midst of a meat-centric tsunami,” says Richard Turner, the director at Pitt Cue Co and the co-founder of rare-breed butchers Turner and George.
– A NC-born chef in Seattle is converting Western Washingtoners to vinegar-based pulled pork at his restaurant Bourbon and Bones
– Marie, Let’s Eat! finds some pork ladled in a “thick, mildly sweet sauce” at Hwy 58 BBQ in Chattanooga
– Speaking of whom, Grant took a badass barbecue roadtrip through SC and eastern NC last weekend, which will no doubt lead to a multi-week series of posts on his blog that I can’t wait to check out
You guys. This place. The stories. They’re true. Oh man. Skylight Inn. Just damn. This lunch. pic.twitter.com/qb8ePhZGjX
— Grant Goggans (@MarieLetsEat) November 8, 2014
– And finally, a “blogger spotlight” on Grant by Urbanspoon where he answered a question on his favorite barbecue
6. Barbecue seems to be one of your favorite cuisines, considering you have a very detailed section reserved for it on your blog. What are your favorite barbecue dishes and where do you go to get them?
That’s a big, fun question! We’ve written about more than 300 barbecue joints and really enjoyed a big majority of them. I like the burnt ends at Southern Soul on St Simons Island a lot, and the mustard slaw at Brooks Barbeque in Muscle Shoals AL, and the chopped pork and red slaw tray at Bar-B-Q Center in Lexington NC. I like the Brunswick stew at Turn-Around in Tallapoosa GA, and the chicken mull at Butt Hutt in Athens. Overall, my favorite barbecue is either at Old Clinton in Gray GA, or Scott’s in Hemingway SC, but that could change around the next corner.
– “North Carolina” makes Steve Raichlen’s Top 10 Meat Cities in the US (via)
North Carolina: OK—it’s not one city, but a whole state gone hog wild for pulled pork at such landmark barbecue joints as Lexington Barbecue in Lexington, Wilber’s in Goldsboro, the Skylight Inn in Ayden, the Pit in Raleigh, and the new Ed Mitchell’s in Durham.
– Mark Avalos of SLAB (Slow, Low, and Bangin’) describes his barbecue as “Memphis meets Carolina meets Texas.” (via)
– A short blog and photos about Arrogant Swine
– Elwood’s BBQ is hosting a beer dinner with new-ish Charlotte brewery Sugar Creek Brewing on November 19
Join us November 19th as @ElwoodsBBQ ‘s & @sugarcreekbrew work in concert to bring you one dynamite Beer Dinner! pic.twitter.com/btppNPK3Xb
— Sugar Creek Brewing (@sugarcreekbrew) November 10, 2014
– Well damn, this looks like it was amazing:
When TX & SC ‘cue collide good things happen. @la_Barbecue & @frHomeTeamBBQ serving it up with @COASTbrewing today pic.twitter.com/1k3L2yHx0V
— Garden & Gun (@gardenandgunmag) November 9, 2014