Best Barbecue in the Charlotte Area: Final Four

In the first round, Bobbee O’s beating Queen City Q was a travesty. Midwood, Red Bridges, and Spoon’s all stayed in the mix. And a bowling alley got past a traditional barbecue restaurant.

In the Elite 8, Bobbee O’s managed to somehow advance again in a tournament concerned with good barbecue. The bowling alley finally lost, Bridges eked past Midwood in an apparent squeaker (would have liked to see those two not in a match up this early), and Spoon’s topped Sauceman’s in a battle for South Charlotte. Now it’s down to the final four.

Reader voting has ended and the rest will be decided by a panel of judges, with the semifinalists and winner announced next week.

-Monk

Best Barbecue in the Charlotte Area: Final Four

Vote Now: Best Barbecue in the Charlotte area?

For the first time in the Observer Tournament of Food’s six-year history, we’ve seeded the bracket completely randomly.

Why? Because we’re doing barbecue, and when you’re talking ’cue, all logical divisions – and all bets – are off.

“Barbecue” – as one reader chided me, it’s “Yankee” to specify pulled pork – brings out people’s passionate preferences more than any other single foodstuff I’ve written about. More than fried chicken, more than mac ’n cheese, more than Mom’s apple pie. That’s due to two powerful points, I’ve come to believe:

1. What you grew up with matters. If you got used to crushed-red-pepper-flecked-vinegar sauce on whole-hog ’cue, that’s the only thing that feels true. If you grew up with a sweeter red sauce on coarse-chopped shoulder meat, that’s what’s right, and everyone and everything else is wrong. Vehemently wrong. Peruse my blog posts about ’cue and you find one place’s product called ambrosial and slop by consecutive commenters. “I wouldn’t feed that trash to feral hogs” is one of my favorite slams, while “the only ’cue in Charlotte worth discussing” has been said (or written) to me about an astonishing number of very different restaurants.

2. The fact that barbecue pit-cooked over wood is a dwindling method matters. Traditionalists insist this is the only way to do it, and that’s one reason Michelle Obama was so roundly scoffed at when she said Charlotte had great barbecue. (Some folks mistakenly think it’s illegal now to cook over only wood in these parts; it’s not illegal but safety restrictions make it a more expensive method than most are willing to pursue. And even when they are, the price of wood and labor and maintenance are noteworthy.)

The local Charlotte paper is doing a barbecue bracket, and a few Barbecue Bros faves are in the running. Read about all 16 contestants here and vote now!
-Monk

Vote Now: Best Barbecue in the Charlotte area?

N.C. Barbecue Society honors owner of Smiley’s BBQ

Congrats to Steve Yountz of Smiley’s Lexington BBQ.

Steve Yountz, the owner of Smiley’s Lexington BBQ, continues to have a passion for barbecue cooking nearly four decades after he landed his first job at the former Southern BBQ in Lexington.

The 50-year-old Lexington native (who turns 51 Sunday) was recently named as one of the 2012 inductees for the N.C. Barbecue Society’s Wall of Fame. He was one of four people — the only one from Lexington — to be inducted in this past year’s class.

“I’m honored,” Yountz said. “That’s quite a recognition.”

(via)

-Monk

N.C. Barbecue Society honors owner of Smiley’s BBQ