you know a real bbq joint before you go in the front door--by site, not smell. look for stacks of wood.
i used to be a sauce guy, till i had serious bbq. now not so much sauce, but i'm not opposed. good sauce is good. lately i like blues hog. their tennessee red's a good rib finisher. a good rub really is key for me now. you get good smoke and a good rub that's all i need.
at one time I traveled for bbq; have a map with places i needed to visit. this was before aaron franklin opened in austin. someday i'll get there. so much hype about this guy. i bought his book, and it's very well done.
in the past couple years i decided to try myself. it's a very time consuming way to cook...but at least for me that's half the fun. here's my tools, one i made, one i bought:
i call this one Frank--as in Frankenstein. my first welding job. looks awful. but i decided if it worked well--drafted clean, blue smoke, i wouldn't paint it. works awesome, so now it stays really ugly.
i bought a second one out of texas:
this is a vertical insulated from lonestargrillz. good people and it's a great insulated smoker. perfect for the long 12+ hour smokes.
yeah, i'm into this bbq stuff.
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