After trying over 30 hash restaurants east of I-95, Post and Courier food editor Hanna Raskin has everything you need to know about hash or barbecue hash, “South Carolina’s greatest contribution to the barbecue canon.” A companion podcast of sorts to the online and print versions of the article.
The Winnow
Friday Find: BBQ Mea Culpas on The Winnow Podcast
Some barbecue mea culpas from @mossr in regards to a recent article on SC barbecue buffets as well as his Southern Living Top 50 BBQ list on this episode of @winnowpodcast from a few weeks back https://t.co/8WnVmcSzWe
— Barbecue Bros (@BarbecueBros) October 16, 2018
Monk: In the first half of this podcast, some barbecue talk from Robert Moss and Hanna Raskin regarding two of Robert’s recent articles: a piece in the Charleston Post and Courier on the death (or at least decline) of the South Carolina barbecue buffet and his recent published list of Southern Living Top 50 BBQ Joints.
For the barbecue buffet article, Moss incorrectly noted that after Bessinger’s Barbecue shutting down its buffet (while still remaining open as a restaurant) there were only two more buffets left in the lowcountry. Turns out, he was wrong – and apparently people let him know about all the places he missed such as Music Man’s Bar-B-Que in Monck’s Corner and Kelly’s Barbecue in Summerville. The barbecue buffet is something you mainly see in South Carolina and I have only been to a couple in NC: Fuller’s Old Fashion BBQ in Lumberton – which has since relocated to Fayetteville from Lumberton due to flooding as a result of Hurricane Matthew two years ago – and Duke’s Old South BBQ in Leland which has since closed. I suspect if there are more barbecue buffets out there, they are more likely in the coastal plain of eastern NC since we don’t really see them in the piedmont.
In regards to his Top 50 BBQ Joints list, Moss got some grief from Texans who just couldn’t believe that a non-Texas joint was #1 on his list (Scott’s Bar-B-Que in Hemingway, SC ) and that only 3 Texas joints were in the top 10. Apparently they went so far as to refer to his list as “garbage.” Seems a bit harsh, but perhaps not unexpected from Texans when it comes to barbecue – they take that ish seriously.
Friday Find: Tim Carman Drops By The Winnow Podcast to Give Tips on Ranking Barbecue
It was great having @timcarman of the Washington Post join us for the Winnow. In a latest episode he and @hannaraskin give me some much needed advice for my forthcoming #Top50BBQ list https://t.co/1t0Q6axY4C
— Robert Moss (@mossr) July 23, 2018
Robert Moss is in the middle of compiling and ranking a list of his Top 50 Southern BBQ Joints for Southern Living magazine and in the first half of this podcast episode, he gets tips from Washington Post food writer on a couple of questions he is working through: 1) How do you handle a situation like Scott’s Bar-B-Que in Hemingway and Rodney Scott’s BBQ in Charleston? and 2) Do you judge a restaurant based on the whole experience, just the meats, or everything on the plate? And what about dessert?
Moss also tells Tim and co-host Hanna Raskin why he is ranking the top 10 restaurants in this year’s version of the list.
Click the link in the tweet above or access it here
Friday Find: John T. Edge Visits The Winnow Podcast
https://soundcloud.com/user-994591363/ep-42-john-t-edge
Southern Foodways Alliance Director and author of the recently-released “The Potlikker Papers” John T. Edge recently stopped by The Winnow podcast to discuss all things southern food with Hannah Raskin and Robert Moss. There’s really only a passing mention of barbecue, but the 36+ minute podcast is worth it just to listen to one of southern food’s foremost minds opine on the past, the present, and the future of the cuisine.