Tuesday, December 26, 2006

Jeff Stehney : a BBQ Hero


I first found out about Jeff Stehney in a cooking video "BBQ SECRETS: The Master Guide to Extraordinary Barbecue" I was having trouble with my brisket . After watching Jeff, we started placing better in brisket and pork. I enjoyed Jeff's way of cooking because it was logical and he looked like average joe . I found that out first hand , when I met him at the American Royal. It was a pleasure to chat with him and his wife . The Stehney"s recently sponsored the Open at the american royal Jeff Stehneys success has went far from the competition circuit He has a successful BBQ Joint as reference below. I was over overwhelm with joy as you can see in our picture. It was also a great pleasure to beat an idle in pork BBQ such as Jeff.
Thanks Jeff!


"Kansas City barbecue circuit champ Jeff Stehney, for example, has turned his smoking savvy and award-winning recipes into a $2 million business (projected to hit $2.3 million this year) at his Oklahoma Joe's Barbecue restaurant inside a Diamond Shamrock-branded gas. Marilyn Odesser-Torp.

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Quick Cook Boston Butt


Quick Cook Boston Butt
By
KickAssBBQ "101"


This Quick Cook method is used by some BBQ Champions in competitions.
For those of you that can maintain a smoker temp of 350 degrees,
here is a method you should try if you do not have 12-15 hours to smoke a Butt.
Boston Butts smoked in 5 hours!!!!
You can use the same recipe for Beef Brisket and Ribs!!!!!

I inject right through the plastic
on these Butts to keep from making
a mess. I inject them until they are
FULL of liquid
2 Cups Apple Juice
2 Cups Water
1 Tbs. Rub
1/4 Cup Cider Vinegar

Attention!!! Injecting is an option.
I sometimes just rinse them off and
add my rub, put in a pan, add a beer
and throw on the smoker.

I put my rub on and let them come
up to room temperature while I
get my smoker cranked and up
to 350-375 degrees. You may
want to let it get close to 400 so
that it only drops to about 350
when you load the meat.

Like all my meats, they are in
aluminum pans. There may be so
much liquid seeping out of them
while they are resting on the counter
that you may not need to add any
liquid (beer) to the pans.


350 Degrees!!!!!!!!

Put them on the smoker and get it
back up to 350 if it has dropped off
lower than that. You will probably
have to really throw on the charcoal
and wood to get that 350 temp.


At 2 hours they look like they have
been smoking for about 8 hours at
225!!!!

Cover them with foil at 3 hours.

Cook them for about another
2 hours.

I take them off at 4.5 - 5 hours hours
or when they are 195 degrees
internal. I cover them with foil and
let them rest for about 1 hour and
I pull them at about 200.

This BBQ is as good as any I have
ever smoked. Don't have 15 hours
to smoke? Try this method. Same
results!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Four further info go to : http://www.virtualweberbullet.com/pork3.html

Monday, December 18, 2006

Basic Components of Competition Pork barbecue



Type of meat : boston butt ( bone in or out) or full shoulder

Rub; basic ingredients - salt, pepper, paprika and sugar

cooking process: preferably low and slow wood or charcoal around 200 to 250 degrees

wood: my choice hickory and red oak

sauce; use only as a condiment . only to enhance the flavor.

competition I use a red sauce sweet with a little heat

options: may use a mustard slather and may inject

injection: apple juice and what ever else

cook to 180 degrees for slice and 200 degrees for pull.

Judges love bark!

Happy Qing

Sunday, December 17, 2006

Barbecue and Food Safety

USDA http://www.usda.gov/


Cooking outdoors was once only a summer activity shared with family and friends. Now more than half of Americans say they are cooking outdoors year round. So whether the snow is blowing or the sun is shining brightly, it's important to follow food safety guidelines to prevent harmful bacteria from multiplying and causing foodborne illness. Use these simple guidelines for grilling food safely.

From the Store: Home First
When shopping, buy cold food like meat and poultry last, right before checkout. Separate raw meat and poultry from other food in your shopping cart. To guard against cross-contamination — which can happen when raw meat or poultry juices drip on other food — put packages of raw meat and poultry into plastic bags.

Plan to drive directly home from the grocery store. You may want to take a cooler with ice for perishables. Always refrigerate perishable food within 2 hours. Refrigerate within 1 hour when the temperature is above 90 °F.

At home, place meat and poultry in the refrigerator immediately. Freeze poultry and ground meat that won't be used in 1 or 2 days; freeze other meat within 4 to 5 days.

Defrost Safely
Completely defrost meat and poultry before grilling so it cooks more evenly. Use the refrigerator for slow, safe thawing or thaw sealed packages in cold water. You can microwave defrost if the food will be placed immediately on the grill.

Marinating
Meat and poultry can be marinated for several hours or days to tenderize or add flavor. Marinate food in the refrigerator, not on the counter. If some of the marinade is to be used as a sauce on the cooked food, reserve a portion of the marinade before putting raw meat and poultry in it. However, if the marinade used on raw meat or poultry is to be reused, make sure to let it come to a boil first to destroy any harmful bacteria.

Transporting
When carrying food to another location, keep it cold to minimize bacterial growth. Use an insulated cooler with sufficient ice or ice packs to keep the food at 40 °F or below. Pack food right from the refrigerator into the cooler immediately before leaving home.

Keep Cold Food Cold
Keep meat and poultry refrigerated until ready to use. Only take out the meat and poultry that will immediately be placed on the grill.

When using a cooler, keep it out of the direct sun by placing it in the shade or shelter. Avoid opening the lid too often, which lets cold air out and warm air in. Pack beverages in one cooler and perishables in a separate cooler.

Keep Everything Clean
Be sure there are plenty of clean utensils and platters. To prevent foodborne illness, don't use the same platter and utensils for raw and cooked meat and poultry. Harmful bacteria present in raw meat and poultry and their juices can contaminate safely cooked food.

If you're eating away from home, find out if there's a source of clean water. If not, bring water for preparation and cleaning. Or pack clean cloths, and wet towelettes for cleaning surfaces and hands.

Precooking
Precooking food partially in the microwave, oven, or stove is a good way of reducing grilling time. Just make sure that the food goes immediately on the preheated grill to complete cooking.





SAFE MINIMUM INTERNAL TEMPERATURES
Whole poultry: 165 °F

Poultry breasts: 165 °F

Ground poultry: 165 °F

Hamburgers, beef: 160 °F

Beef, veal, and lamb (steaks, roasts and chops):

Medium rare 145 °F

Medium 160 °F



All cuts of pork: 160 °F




Cook Thoroughly
Cook food to a safe minimum internal temperature to destroy harmful bacteria. Meat and poultry cooked on a grill often browns very fast on the outside. Use a food thermometer to be sure the food has reached a safe minimum internal temperature. Beef, veal, and lamb steaks, roasts and chops can be cooked to 145 °F. Hamburgers made of ground beef should reach 160 °F. All cuts of pork should reach 160 °F. All poultry should reach a minimum of 165 °F.

NEVER partially grill meat or poultry and finish cooking later.

Reheating
When reheating fully cooked meats like hot dogs, grill to 165 °F or until steaming hot.

Keep Hot Food Hot
After cooking meat and poultry on the grill, keep it hot until served — at 140 °F or warmer.

Keep cooked meats hot by setting them to the side of the grill rack, not directly over the coals where they could overcook. At home, the cooked meat can be kept hot in a warm oven (approximately 200 °F), in a chafing dish or slow cooker, or on a warming tray.

Serving the Food
When taking food off the grill, use a clean platter. Don't put cooked food on the same platter that held raw meat or poultry. Any harmful bacteria present in the raw meat juices could contaminate safely cooked food.

In hot weather (above 90 °F), food should never sit out for more than 1 hour.

Leftovers
Refrigerate any leftovers promptly in shallow containers. Discard any food left out more than 2 hours (1 hour if temperatures are above 90 °F).

Safe Smoking
Smoking is cooking food indirectly in the presence of a fire. It can be done in a covered grill if a pan of water is placed beneath the meat on the grill; and meats can be smoked in a "smoker," which is an outdoor cooker especially designed for smoking foods. Smoking is done much more slowly than grilling, so less tender meats benefit from this method, and a natural smoke flavoring permeates the meat. The temperature in the smoker should be maintained at 250 to 300 °F for safety.

Use a food thermometer to be sure the food has reached a safe internal temperature.

Pit Roasting
Pit roasting is cooking meat in a large, level hole dug in the earth. A hardwood fire is built in the pit, requiring wood equal to about 2½ times the volume of the pit. The hardwood is allowed to burn until the wood reduces and the pit is half filled with burning coals. This can require 4 to 6 hours burning time.

Cooking may require 10 to 12 hours or more and is difficult to estimate. A food thermometer must be used to determine the meat's safety and doneness. There are many variables such as outdoor temperature, the size and thickness of the meat, and how fast the coals are cooking.

Does Grilling Pose a Cancer Risk?
Some studies suggest there may be a cancer risk related to eating food cooked by high-heat cooking techniques as grilling, frying, and broiling. Based on present research findings, eating moderate amounts of grilled meats like fish, meat, and poultry cooked — without charring — to a safe temperature does not pose a problem.

To prevent charring, remove visible fat that can cause a flare-up. Precook meat in the microwave immediately before placing it on the grill to release some of the juices that can drop on coals. Cook food in the center of the grill and move coals to the side to prevent fat and juices from dripping on them. Cut charred portions off the meat.


Last Modified: May 25, 2006

Saturday, December 16, 2006

What is Barbecue?

Definitions of BBQ on the Web:
Barbecue: A cooking method involving cooking food iindirectly over a wood or charcoal fire. Usually some sort of rub, marinade, or sauce is brushed on the item before or during cooking.

Sunday, December 10, 2006

Thanks to Tucker BBQ Pits


Pigs on the Run" barbecue team had Richard Middleton cook with them at
the American Royal 2006, where they won 5th place in pork out of 486 teams.
We want to thank the Tucker team for all they have done for us . It is a great little cooker. It was very easy to use.
John Atkins


http://www.tuckercooker.com/CustomerPictures/0906_6.htm

 

American Royal BBQ - Open Kansas City, MO - 10/7/2006


Grand Champion: HABITUAL SMOKERS
Reserve Champion: BOYS FROM TORNADO ALLEY


Overall



HABITUAL SMOKERS
BOYS FROM TORNADO ALLEY
GREAT GRILLS O' FIRE-JEF
I SMELL SMOKE !!!
EARLY BIRD BBQ
PHILLY PIGS BBQ TEAM
MASON-DIXIE SWINE
PELLET ENVY
SMOKIN CLONES BBQ
BLUES HOG BARBECUE COMPANY


Chicken



GREAT GRILLS O' FIRE-JEF
FILL 'ER UP BBQ
BLUES HOG BARBECUE COMPANY
BIG DAWGS BBQ
HABITUAL SMOKERS
SMOKE'N BABES
MAXIMUM LOIN
I SMELL SMOKE !!!
WILLDEAL CATERING & BBQ
TOAD HOLLAR BBQ

Ribs



PHILLY PIGS BBQ TEAM
PORK-N-BONES
FAST EDDY'S BBQ
UP IN SMOKE-DC
FREDA'S REDNECK BBQ
LOTTA BULL BBQ
PARROTHEAD SMOKERS
SNAIL SLOW SMOKIN'
BEN AND JERRY, THE UDDER
SAUSAGE-FEST BBQ


Pork



TEXAS RIB RANGERS
BOYS FROM TORNADO ALLEY
WHO LET THE HOGS OUT
SWEET LOUIE'S
PIGS ON THE RUN
RON STOMACHS
SPARKLE PLENTY
GRILLAS BBQ TEAM
FOUR MEN AND A PIG
PORKY'S PALS

Brisket



CAVEMAN BARBEQUE
BURN & TURN BBQ
GREAT GRILLS O' FIRE-JEF
LOTTA BULL BBQ
HABITUAL SMOKERS
BOYS FROM TORNADO ALLEY
MOTLEY QUE CREW
JP CUSTOM SMOKE
ROYAL OAK
LAST SUPPER


Sausage



BAR-B-QUAU
RIB STARS
BULLFEATHERS/WARTHOGS
TOM & JOSHS ORGASMIC SLABS
ROCK'S FAMOUS BBQ
MEAT MITCH
SMOKIN CLONES BBQ
PINK FLAMINGO BBQ
SQUEAL OF APPROVAL
BIG BELLY BBQ

Vegetables



SMOKE ON THE LAKES
ROYAL PYRO
BANDIT AND THE SMOKERS
TEXAS RIB RANGERS
BETHANY BLUES
RUB ME TENDER
CASHEW BBQ
BALDY AND THE BASTERS
ROCK CHALK JAYHAWK BBQ
FLAMIN' YAWNS


Beans



SHORT BUS BBQ CREW
HEAVY SMOKE BBQ
HI-TECH SMOKERS
HOT MEAT SMOKERS
BAR-B-QUAU
CHICK'N PIG BBQ
PIG IN A POKE
CASUAL SMOKERS
BUCCANEER BBQ
WALTON'S OVERDONE BARBEQUE

Potatoes



THE OINKS
QSS SMOKIN'
SMOKE-N-THINGS
SWINE FLEW
ROCK CHALK JAYHAWK BBQ
MUNCHIN HOGS @ THE HILTON
SQUIRREL'S 2 BBQ
MULLET BROTHERS BBQ
BAVARIAN BBQ BOYS
BOYS FROM TORNADO ALLEY


Dessert



LAST SUPPER
CAPWEST MORTGAGE CORP.
RANCH HOUSE BBQ
SMOKIN MOTHER RUCKERS
TRIPLE A COOKERS
D-DON'S PIT CREW
BOYS OF BBQ & PATTY
CASUAL SMOKERS
WILLDEAL CATERING & BBQ
SQUIRREL'S 2 BBQ




 

BBQ Contest Results - Snowshoe, WV - 9/9/2006BBQ Contest Results - Snowshoe, WV - 9/9/2006

Blues & Brews BBQ Cookoff
Snowshoe, WV - 9/9/2006


Grand Champion:
Reserve Champion:
 


Overall Rankings




Dizzy Pig
Bill's Grill
Pigs on the Run
Big John's BBQ
The Frying Pan
Pee-Wee's BBQ (Canada)
Jo boy's BBQ
Gary's Barbeque
Dixie Bones
Blue Ridge Mt. BBQ



Chicken




Grilling Stones
Bill's Grill
Dixie Bones
Gooney Creek BBQ
The Frying Pan
Big John's BBQ
Pigs on the Run
Jo boy's BBQ
Hoss's BBQ & Catering Co
Dizzy Pig

Ribs




Gary's Barbeque
Pigs on the Run
The Frying Pan
Blue Ridge Mt. BBQ
Bill's Grill
Dizzy Pig
Jo boy's BBQ
Gooney Creek BBQ
Beachbum BBQ
Big John's BBQ


Pork




Dizzy Pig
Grilling Stones
Pigs on the Run
Pee-Wee's BBQ (Canada)
The Frying Pan
Big John's BBQ
Bill's Grill
Gary's Barbeque
Dixie Bones
Gooney Creek BBQ

Brisket




Dizzy Pig
Bill's Grill
Pee-Wee's BBQ (Canada)
Big John's BBQ
Hoss's BBQ & Catering Co
Beachbum BBQ
Jo boy's BBQ
Pigs on the Run
Dixie Bones
Blue Ridge Mt. BBQ


Anything But



Jo boy's BBQ
Pigs on the Run
Hoss's BBQ & Catering Co
Big John's BBQ
Grilling Stones
Bill's Grill
Gooney Creek BBQ
Dixie Bones
JD's Smokin Misfits

Dessert



JD's Smokin Misfits
The Frying Pan
Hoss's BBQ & Catering Co
Dixie Bones
Grilling Stones
Bill's Grill
Pigs on the Run
Jo boy's BBQ
Gooney Creek BBQ



 

New Holland Summer FestNew Holland, PA - 8/26/2006

Grand Champion: Team Agave
Reserve Champion: Lost Nation Smoke Co.
 


Overall Rankings




Team Agave
Lost Nation Smoke Co.
Tarheel Smokers
Philly Pig BBQ Team
Smokey T's Pit Crew
Ribs Within BBQ
Dizzy Pig
Shenandoah Q Crew
Dixie Bones
Bad Bones BBQ Crew



Chicken




Pennsylvania Porkmeister
Philly Pig BBQ Team
Hog Heads
Tarheel Smokers
Go Big BBQ
Team Agave
Dixie Bones
3 EYZ BBQ
Taste-Liss Cookers
Jerry Elliott's BBQ

Ribs




S & S Grilling and BBQ
Dizzy Pig
Hog Tails BBQ Team
Pig Pen BBQ
Taste-Liss Cookers
Shenandoah Q Crew
Crispy Critters
Boo Boo & Scoot
Lost Nation Smoke Co.
Lo'-N-Slo' BBQ


Pork




Lost Nation Smoke Co.
Smokey T's Pit Crew
Ribs Within BBQ
Tarheel Smokers
Midnite Smokers
Team Agave
Philly Pig BBQ Team
Brick Beach BBQ Team
Shenandoah Q Crew
Bad Bones BBQ Crew

Brisket




Team Agave
Smokey T's Pit Crew
Ribs Within BBQ
3 EYZ BBQ
Jack's Down Home BBQ
Lost Nation Smoke Co.
Bad Bones BBQ Crew
WildbillBQ
Tarheel Smokers
Ribn' It

Chesapeake JubileeChesapeake, VA - 5/20/2006

Grand Champion: Pigs On The Run
Reserve Champion: Freestate Smokers
 


Overall Rankings




Pigs On The Run
Freestate Smokers
Wood Chicks
Big Daddys Butt Rub
Jerry Elliott's BBQ
Free Range BBQ
JT and the BBQ 3
Dixie Bones
Smokey Bottom Boys
Knotts Island BBQ



Chicken




Pigs On The Run
Jerry Elliott's BBQ
Freestate Smokers
Smokey Bottom Boys
Beach Bum BBQ
Free Range BBQ
Knotts Island BBQ
Smoked From Above
3 P's
Wood Chicks

Ribs




Wood Chicks
Pigs On The Run
Dixie Bones
JT and the BBQ 3
Smokey Bottom Boys
Smoked From Above
Freestate Smokers
Knotts Island BBQ
Free Range BBQ
Open Doors Inc.


Pork




Big Daddys Butt Rub
Freestate Smokers
Pigs On The Run
Wood Chicks
JT and the BBQ 3
Knotts Island BBQ
Jerry Elliott's BBQ
Dixie Bones
Beach Bum BBQ
Smokehouse Gang

Brisket




Free Range BBQ
Big Daddys Butt Rub
Pigs On The Run
Smoked From Above
Jerry Elliott's BBQ
Arc Electric
Wood Chicks
Beach Bum BBQ
The Senator
Dixie Bones



 

Pork In The Park Salisbury, MD - 4/22/2006

Grand Champion: IQUE
Reserve Champion: Peppers.Com
 


Overall Rankings




IQUE
Peppers.Com
Team Agave
Freestate Smokers
Ribs Within
Smoken Dudes Smokehouse
Free RangeBBQ
Pigs on the Run
Lunchmeat
Midnite Smokers



Chicken




3 EYZ BBQ Co.
Pigs on the Run
Freestate Smokers
Pork & Deans BBQ
BBQ for You
Team Agave
Peppers.Com
Three Phat Boys
Patapsco Valley Smokers
Lunchmeat

Ribs




IQUE
Free RangeBBQ
Bethany Blues BBQ Pit
Peppers.Com
Cool Smoke
Giggling Pigs BBQ Co.
The BBQ Guru
MoMoBBQ Co.
Cookin Commandos BBQ Sqd
Philly Pig BBQ Team


Pork




IQUE
Team Agave
Peppers.Com
Lunchmeat
Smoken Dudes Smokehouse
Christmas City BBQ
Midnite Smokers
Pork Shank Redemption
Joboy BBQ
3 EYZ BBQ Co.

Brisket




IQUE
Ribs Within
Bethany Blues BBQ Pit
Midnite Smokers
Sweetgum Hollow
Team Agave
Purple Turtle Catering C
Peppers.Com
Lost Nation Smoke Co.
Pigs on the Run

Travel Channels Best BBQ Contest

World's Best Barbecue Contests

By Philip Scher







In barbecue contests, teams of devoted and elaborately equipped barbecuers converge to match recipes and cooking techniques, the winners earning trophies, prize money, bragging rights and the time of their lives. For spectators, cook-offs represent a great excuse for a down-home party with loads of barbecue and beer plus concert stages, craft fairs, auctions, races, and carnival rides among other fun and games.


Ground rules: Barbecue is a noun, not a verb, and its production, unlike grilling, involves slow cooking over low heat — "low and slow" is the chef's mantra. Every cook-off spotlights pork in various permutations; most also include beef brisket, chicken, sauce, side dishes, but none permit the use of anything but wood or charcoal heat. Unless they become judges or somehow ingratiate themselves to contestants, spectators usually don't get to sample contest entries because there's just not enough to go around. Fortunately, plenty of commercial vendors offer free samples and meals for sale. And if any of these World's Best Barbecue Contests are out of reach, consult the barbecue contest calendar for information about cook-offs close to home.




Top Picks




10. National Capital Barbecue Battle

9. Massachusetts State BBQ & Blues Festival

8. Canadian Barbecue & Chili Festival

7. National Championship Barbecue Cook-Off

6. Big Pig Jig

 
5. Blue Ridge BBQ Festival

4. World's Championship Bar-B-Que Contest

3. Jack Daniel's World Championship Invitational Barbecue

2. American Royal Barbecue

1. Memphis in May World Championship Barbecue Contest

Lang BBQ Pits


Ben,
It has been a pleasure using your product. Since March 2003 we have
done 4 concessions, 2 contests and many private parties. In that time we paid
the smoker and had our first win in a contest in Lynchburg , Va. We have no
problems with the health Dept requirements. It is easy to manage. I am
looking for a concession BBQ trailer next.

Thanks,
John Atkins
The BBQ Connection

http://www.pigroast.com/index.html



 

Fluvanna’s Award-Winning BBQ: The BBQ Connection 

     There’s nothing quite like Virginia barbecue, and Old Dominion barbecue masters are rightfully proud of the state’s take on this southern favorite – light and tangy, with the emphasis on quality meat: chops and ribs, hams and steaks, chicken and pulled pork loin. There’s a “Governor’s Cup” for barbecue, just like there is for wine, and The BBQ Connection, a Palmyra-based catering company, won honors recently at a cooking contest held in the Southside border town of Danville. “Pigs on the Run,” the BBQ Connection’s traveling competition barbecue team smoked 16 Virginia teams and a number of teams from other states to win the award. Danville, right on the edge of the Virginia-North Carolina border was a fitting host for the event, since it’s inundated with influences from both sides, each with a distinctive style of balancing the interaction of meat, spices and fire.. 

     The Governor’s Cup delighted the family team, who hauled the mobile smoker over the hills and through the tobacco fields of rural Virginia to compete. For official competitions like the Danville gathering, it’s not a simple matter of lighting the gas grill. Serious barbecue cook-offs, like this one sanctioned by the Kansas City Barbecue Society, specify that the sweating cooks use only charcoal, wood or pellets. The championship traditionally goes to the team showing versatility by claiming victory in several events. Since the Danville event, “Pigs on the Run” have scored points in Asheville for their treatment of a Boston Butt. John Atkins, owner of the BBQ Connection with wife Teresa, said the winning butt got several treatments: injection with apple juice and brown sugar, a dry rub with spices, and a good dousing with barbecue sauce. Atkins likes the “Eastern North Carolina” barbecue, a style that’s less sweet than the barbecue produced on the other side of the state. And, he says, if you go to Kansas City, you’ll get only dry-rubbed barbecue; if you go to Texas, the ribs will be beef rather than pork. Despite the regional differences, good barbecue is appreciated by all, Atkins says, and the chefs love to learn from one another at these events.` 

     Atkins, his wife, father-in-law, brother-in-law, and son are generally the “pigs” and they arrive at the competitions the night before the judging, prepared to cook all night. The first stop is at the judges’ stand, where the meat is inspected to make sure the it hasn’t been pre-treated in any way. At midnight or so, the team begins cooking and there are a lot of informal competitions all through the night, like “Anything but,” a test of the team’s familiarity with its grill. The ideas is to prepare food that’s not in the typical barbecue contest (anything but chicken, pork ribs, pork butt or shoulder, or beef brisket). Atkins prepared oysters for the crowd in Asheville, pairing them with bacon, asiago cheese and a spicy sauce. Atkins is so familiar with his portable cooker – which is really a wood-fired oven when the lid is closed – that he makes pies and cookies as well as meat. Atkins has been fascinated with barbecue for years, but the transforming moment came when he was providing a critique of someone else’s barbecue while out with his wife, Teresa. Her response was essentially that it was time for him to stop talking and start basting. They compete several times a year and are next on the line in Lynchburg in the fall. 

     The team doesn’t just compete. They’re also available for hire, but don’t expect to visit them in Palmyra and come away with cartons of shredded pork and barbecue sauce. They cook in your yard so everything is fresh, and Atkins will come up with a menu or follow your instructions. Although he prefers the vinegar-based East Carolina barbecue, he’ll cook to your taste on your own lawn, and cook any kind of meat or fish. He’ll also produce the sides – potato salad, dessert, anything you’re hungry for. The “pigs” will be on hand at the Daylilly Festival in Fishersville July 17, so stop by and have a taste. To reach the team for your next big gathering: 434-589-5375.  

     There’s a lot of mysticism and superstition surrounding barbecue. If you ask 10 different barbecue cooks what their recipe is, you’ll get one answer, “It’s a secret.” So learning how to make your own barbecue might seem difficult at first. For those who want to invest the time and money, and risk the occasional stomach ache, your best bet is to turn to the Internet for advice.   is a site filled with all kinds of information on Barbecue, from equipment to recipes to essays on spices. It’s not the prettiest site on the Web, but it has tons of information.   is another site to give you a good start on barbecue. It’s much prettier than Barbecue’n, but not quite as thick with information. It does have a good selection of recipes and even some classified ads, in case you want to buy a branding iron with your initials for custom-made steaks or perhaps a barbecue pit that you can attach to a trailer hitch. 




 

FOOD- THE DISH- Premier pit crew: Putting our town on BBQ map

Published October 19, 2006 in issue 0542 of the HooK.

By DAVE MCNAIR DAVE@READTHEHOOK.COM


In June, Barbeque Connection owner John Atkins said, "When you think of Charlottesville, you don't think of barbeque. We want to change that."


Atkins had just done a lot to change that, taking the Grand Prize and placing no lower than third in all four major categories at the 2006 Chesapeake Jubilee Barbecue Cook-off, the BBQ State Championship of Virginia, on May 19 and 20 in Chesapeake. Under his competition name, Pigs on the Run, the Lake Monticello-based caterer put himself in the running for the BBQ Nationals in Kansas City on October 6. Well, guess what?


"We finished fifth in the world in the pork category out of 500 teams from around the country," Atkins reports.


After the 20-hour drive to Missouri, Atkins and his partners, David Hansen and Richard Middleton, cooked for two nights, serving up their BBQ chicken, ribs, pork and brisket. "Everything could be cooked only with wood, charcoal, or pellets," he says, "no gas or electricity."


Atkins reports that the judges looked at taste, tenderness, and appearance-- but mostly taste. Although competition was intense (they finished 213th overall), Atkins says their fifth-place finish in the pork category was a real thrill.


"We had a great time," says Atkins, who can't believe his little crew from the Lake did so well.


Atkins' son Bryant, who appears to be a chip off the old BBQ cooking block, was especially thrilled. "It's been my life-long dream to win at the Nationals," says the excited 10-year-old.


What's even more remarkable is that running the Barbeque Connection is only a part-time gig for Atkins, who works full-time as a UVA hospital surgical technologist. ("So I'm not afraid to cut up meat," he quipped to Dish in June.) But Atkins remains humble, saying there's no real secret to cooking great barbeque, just being focused and patient over the fire and cooking it "low and slow."


That may be true, but the little BBQ outfit that could is moving high and fast in the smoky-pit world. In fact, when Dish last wrote about Atkins, we suggested that Charlottesville might have to be renamed a "World-class BBQ City" if he won at the Nationals. 


Well, he didn't win. But fifth in the world in pork barbeque? What do you say, Mr. Mayor?

Barbecue Books

  • Championship Barbecue by Paul Kirk