Linkdown: 12/10/13

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Our State Magazine has been profiling a NC barbecue restaurant a month and this month they turn their attention to Midwood Smokehouse, currently #1 on the Barbecue Bros Charlotte big board

Frank Scibelli just comes right out and says it: If you want good barbecue in Charlotte, you don’t have a lot of options.

But Charlotte is growing, you say. There are more cooks cooking more food, and more varieties of it, than ever before.

“Still not good barbecue,” he says.

Maybe it’s got to do with the smoker. You have to have a smoker, he says. Not many barbecue places in Charlotte have one. He does. He mentions it over and over again. He asks if I’ve seen inside it, where at least one piece of hickory is burning 24 hours a day. He makes sure I know the only thing that powers his smoker is wood.

The final report on the unfortunate Sandy Plains Baptist Church salmonella outbreak in Shelby in September confirms it was salmonella

– A look inside last weekend’s Garden and Gun Jubilee Made in the South Weekend, in which Rodney Scott had a pig roast on Sunday that had to have been amazing

– Old Carolina Barbecue set to open in Cleveland and appears to be trying to do it the right way

Before entering the business, Schafer toured the Carolinas and visited dozens of eateries to ensure his menu would be as genuine as possible.

“We didn’t invent barbecue, we just wanted to do it right,” he said. “There’s authenticity behind the recipes.”

Key to the barbecued items are large on-site smokers.

– For the uninitiated, a great primer on NC Barbecue (mostly eastern) from a man who clearly knows what he is talking about, Bob Garner (via, tambien en espanol)

– Finally, yet another plug to like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter

Linkdown: 8/14/13

– Nerd alert: the mystery of the smoke ring has been solved:

It turns out that burning organic fuels like wood, charcoal or gas produces a variety of chemicals, including trace amounts of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) gas. When NO2 gas meets the surface, it dissolves into the meat and picks up a hydrogen molecule, becoming nitrous acid (HNO2), which then gets converted into nitric oxide (NO). NO reacts with myoglobin, and together they form a stable pink molecule that can withstand heat. The thickness of the ring depends on how deep into the meat the NO is able to penetrate before reacting with myoglobin.

– Little Pigs BBQ in Statesville, a restaurant formerly part of a Memphis-style chain, celebrated its 50th anniversary last week

– Two men in Akron who wanted to bring “authentic barbecue” to northeast Ohio have opened a restaurant and naturally called it Old Carolina Barbecue

– Rodney Scott will be presiding pit master to over 30 chefs who will “prepare their personal take on barbecue” in Charleston, SC on 10/26 at the BBQ Perspectives public event

A piece on Upstate SC barbecue entitled “In the Shadow of the Giant Peachoid”

– An open-faced barbecue sandwich on cornbread named after knuckleballer Phil Niekro is one of the local ballpark delicacies featured in this Garden and Gun blog post

– Lexington Barbecue and barbecue in general get a shout out in a recent list of “9 Southern foods you must try”

– So there’s this: a wine pairing guide to regional barbecue