Thursday, October 28, 2010

A Church With Barbecue In Its Name?

I was just watching a BBQ TV show and they featured a church in the Carolinas with Barbecue in its name and I thought, what? No way, get out of here Bobby Flay. But hold the phone, little Bobby was tellin' the truth.

Meet the Barbecue Presbyterian Church in Sanford, North Carolina; I kid you not. This church was established in 1895 and the story goes that the church founders gazed upon fog rising from a nearby pond and remarked how it looked like a BBQ pit. And a church is born.

Members, apparently, often dine on chopped pork, sweet potatoes, slaw and rolls after Sunday service. They even incorporate the word barbecue in some of the hymns they sing.

What a place!!

If you have your doubts, Google this puppy. It's located at, ready? 124 Barbecue Church Road.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Meet our Day and Night Jobs

My family and I operate Chain Gang BBQ in Nixa, Missouri. We have operated our little red serving trailer for all of 2010 and pride ourselves in serving up Championship Quality BBQ and homemade side dishes from our own family recipes.

As the weather gets colder, we will be offering up our famous Pit Chili and a wonderful Brunswick Stew. Now granted, Brunswick Stew is a favorite of the deep south, it is truly worth trying some. It will remind you of a gumbo without the seafood or rice. We make ours with chicken, andouille sausage, yukon gold potatoes, okra, and other goodies. It is a "stick-to-your-ribs" dish.

The Chain Gang also features our signature side dishes, baked beans along with creamy cole slaw, 7 cheese mac n' cheese and 3 varieties of sausage; polish, BBQ and hot link.

As we like to say, it's BBQ like no other.

My BBQ Compass Is North By Northwest

In my neck of the woods, southern Missouri, we are influenced by the Kansas City style of BBQ. Sauces are tomato based with molasses, brown sugar and a dash of vinegar thrown in for the tartness to off set the sweet. It's a balance that works well for folks around these parts. If you go to southeast Missouri, the Memphis style begins to take a firm hold on BBQ tastes.

In all my years of tending a pit, I never really got into the "history" of BBQ in Kansas City that would end up being a blueprint for what many have followed throughout the years.

In the early 1920's, a young man named Henry Perry left the Mississippi river boat restaurant scene and headed to Kansas City. Historians say that Perry operated a BBQ joint from inside an old trolley car not far from the 18th & Vine area. Perry sold a full slab of ribs for the unbelievable price of 25 cents; he also smoked and sold woodchuck, possum and other critters indigenous to Missouri. But, aside from being known as the "Father of Barbeque" in Kansas City, he was responsible for the formation of two BBQ joints still operating today in KC.

Early on, Perry hired two employees to help him work the pits; one was Arthur Pinkard and the other was Charlie Bryant. Pinkard was the first to be lured away from Perry and he was done so by a man named George Gates in 1946. Pinkard and Gates then formed Gates & Sons BBQ which still has multiple locations in KC and sells BBQ sauces, meats and rubs on line. Not long after Pinkard left, Perry suddenly died and Charlie Bryant took over the operation but soon retired. At that point Charlie's brother, Arthur took over, made a few cosmetic changes, but kept the pits churning out phenomenal BBQ and is still at 18th and Brooklyn in KC.

Perry's original sauce was rumored to be very hot with pepper and harsh. Many said Perry got a kick to see customers grab their glasses of water to wash away the heat in an effort to find relief. The Bryant brothers made changes to the Perry recipe to make it sweeter and more palatable and that formula is still served today.