Linkdown: 4/9/14

– The first three reviews from Marie, Let’s Eat!’s epic NC barbecue roadtrip last month have been posted: Red Bridges in ShelbyWink’s King in Salisbury, and Lexington #1

– As beef prices rise, more and more Texas pitmasters are turning to pork

– Ranucci’s Big Butt BBQ, Grand Champions of the 2013 Q-City BBQ Competition, is hoping to crowdsource a portion of their new food truck

– Thrillist’s list of best barbecue in Atlanta

– The latest Carolina ‘Cue Restaurant featured in Our State Magazine is Bum’s Restaurant in Ayden

– JJ’s Red Hots is having a Bacon Beer & BBQ dinner on April 24 as part of NC Beer Month

A short article on SC’s Barbecue Trail (via bbqboard)

– Mission BBQ, a military and first responder-focused Baltimore-based chain created by an Under Armour founder, opened earlier this week in Wilmington

– Another (more promising sounding) coastal barbecue restaurant, Southport Smokehouse BBQ, is opening sometime this month:

Natives of Lexington – a town some would argue is North Carolina’s barbecue ground zero – the Hemphills’ restaurant specialized in pork shoulders cooked over hickory logs “imported” from Davidson County. The pits, Elaine Hemphill said, were modeled after those at the famous Lexington Barbecue along Interstate 85 Business.

A trio of restaurateurs, Troy Knight, Jim Sparks and Ryan Salley (who will serve as pitmaster) has taken over the spot and are returning it to its roots. They’ll offer brisket, ribs and pulled pork with both Lexington-style and vinegar sauces cooked over hickory. Salley said he’ll mostly be smoking shoulders, a hallmark of the upstate variety, but would occasionally go whole hog, the more traditional method in the Eastern region.

– Scott’s BBQ is having their annual picnic on April 19 and oh how I wish I could make it back down to Hemingway for it

Cook It Raw Charleston 2013

cookitraw:

There’s No Country Like Lowcountry

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When we decided that it was high time to bring Cook It Raw to America, we didn’t really realize the enormity and scope of how such a thing could work. America. The Star Spangled Banner. The very idea of it is daunting. It’s a titan of a landmass with a dizzying collection of cultures and landscapes, each with a unique culinary heritage. There are a hundred ‘Americas’ within this fiercely dominating nation; you could spend a lifetime studying the multitude of food histories and barely even scratch the surface. So where to begin?

We started looking at larger narrative arcs that defined the country – North vs South, Slavery, the Declaration of Independence, and so on – and when considering these elements through a culinary lens, kept coming back to the same place: The South. The South is the Mason Dixon Line, the birthplace of blues and rock and roll, spirituals and jazz – the very essence of American culture. Where else could you start?

Mass culture has defined the cuisine of the American South as universal comfort food – fried chicken, fried green tomatoes, fried everything if Colonel Saunders or Paula Dean are to be believed. But Southern cuisine is so much more than that. It is the very genesis of a distinct American culinary tradition. So, in narrowing down our focus to Southern cuisine, we began focusing on how Lowcountry cooking and how it represented so many fundamental aspects of American culture and history – the history and development of regional foodways, plant breeding, food dynasties, plantation economy and the evolution of race politics. What we discovered was a region that perfectly encapsulated so many of the cultural, historical and often prickly subjects that are fundamentally a part of the American psyche.

Charleston, South Carolina is a hotbed of living culinary history.  We chose to convene tour 6th gathering in South Carolina’s Lowcountry in order to better understand the regional heritage and food traditions in relation to the both the local culture and landscape.  On the surface, the Cook It Raw chefs are an elite legion of culinary innovators, but in the Lowcountry we were all students of the land.  Through phases of discovery, meditation and creation, our time spent in the Lowcountry brought with it lessons in preservation and tradition, along with innovative ways of keeping these important institutions alive and part of a global culinary index.

When Cook It Raw arrived in Charleston, South Carolina on a sunny October day, our expectations for fantastic and unforgettable new experiences were high. We were eager to dip into this community of historians, farmers, producers, and chefs that are passionate about the preservation of a once-dying American food culture. What we didn’t expect was to be completely smitten with the sultry weather, the soulful stories and its rich, undeniably delicious culinary history. We came for the food but left understanding the very story of America. It was, to put it mildly, glorious. Here’s what happened.

Day 1 – Slow and Low with Rodney Scott

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The start of our culinary odyssey begins in the grand drawing rooms of historic Charleston. We couldn’t have had a warmer Southern welcome than an invitation to lunch from Ali Rosen, a journalist, documentarist and transplanted Charlestonian, now living and working in New York. We arrived in awe at Ali’s family abode in The Battery, an historic area of Charleston known for its stately, antebellum homes…a lovely way to get acquainted with Charleston history and culture.

After lunch, we set out to discover exactly what it is that defines southern cooking. We start with the obvious – is there anything more distinctly American than barbecue?  When it comes to barbecue, “slow and low” is the mantra of these parts, and it applies to both the cooking and the way of life.  With Alessandro commandeering the bus, we piled in for our first roadtrip of a hundred miles or so from Charleston, to experience the national treasure that is Scott’s Bar-B-Que.

Rodney Scott is a bona fide pitmaster, masterfully at the helm of his family-run barbecue joint, which has been cooking up mouth-watering food since 1972.  Until recently, Scott had been toiling away in the obscurity of his small but tight-knit community in the rural hamlet of Hemingway, South Carolina – then the New York Times came calling. The rest, as they say, is smoky, delicious history.  His slow roasted whole hog, basted in the family’s secret barbecue sauce is a beacon of authenticity in the rapidly evolving food culture of the South. 

Enlisting the tradition and method of his father and others before him, Rodney coaxes unlawful amounts of succulence out of each and every hog.  Through the ins and outs of the twelve-hour process, he can be heard quietly repeating the words of his mantra: “It’s the story of my life.” But it’s more than that.  It’s the story of people and places told through a food narrative that has the power to transcend time. Barbecue is an American tradition that centers around community and rest assured, Rodney Scott is keeping the community strong, one whole hog at a time.

Barbecue may be the symbol of the South, however Southern, or Lowcountry cuisine, is marked by a repertoire of cooking practices that have emerged over centuries.  Through the intertwining of indigenous and migrant cultures, a unique and culturally distinct cuisine evolved, establishing Lowcountry cooking as truly individual among other American cuisines.  However, after World War I, this rich culinary history began to decline as rice culture fell out of favour and the agricultural focus shifted to California as the nation’s purveyor of fruits and vegetables. The breakdown of traditional foodways paved the way for the take-over of industrialized food culture, which now defines the major food systems of North America. But with a movement afoot to bring back traditional ingredients and dishes into the culinary lexicon, a revival of heirloom varietals and reconstruction of traditional Lowcountry foodways has begun. The community has pledged allegiance to its culinary roots and has come together to collectively bring traditional Lowcountry food back – and we’re here to learn about it and talk to the people that helped to make this happen.

Rebuild of Scott’s Bar-b-que Pits Underway!

thefatbackcollective:

Rodney Scott has been in meetings with Reggie Gibson and Will Wingfield of Reggie Gibson Architects in Charleston to discuss the rebuild of Rodney’s pit room lost to fire in November.  

The fundraising totals are in and plans are underway. The Fatback Collective’s collaborative efforts with Rodney took in an approximate total of $81,000 and monies raised will set the project in motion. 

A member of the Fatback Collective, Rodney Scott is excited to make sure the Fatback Fund has good footing and is therefore putting a portion of what was raised back into the fund as seed money for the next project.

“The Fatback Collective was my primary partner in this rebuild.  Now I want to honor their investment in me. I’ve made the decision to invest $20,000 of the yield from the Tour into the Fatback Fund to aid future efforts. This is my way of investing in the future of food in the South and a new generation of possibilities in Hemingway and throughout the region.”

-Rodney Scott

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FANTASTIC NEWS EVERYBODY!

-Monk

“CUT/CHOP/COOK”

Produced for the 2010 Big Apple BBQ Block Party, CUT/CHOP/COOK profiles Rodney Scott of Scott’s Bar-B-Q in Hemingway, South Carolina. Says Scott, “We only cook with wood and I’m so sure that we only cook with wood because we go out and chop it ourselves.” Monday through Wednesday, you’ll find Scott doing just that, cutting down trees and chopping wood, and Thursday through Saturday he burns that wood down into coals that he uses to cook a half-dozen whole hogs every night. This film was produced by the University of Mississippi’s Media & Documentary Projects Center & the Southern Foodways Alliance, with funding from the Union Square Hospitality Group.

Rodney Scott is in the middle of his In Exile barbecue tour, so now seems as good a time as any for this short film.

-Monk