Friday
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Date Published: June 14, 2009 |
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Something 'bout BBQ y'all
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By ANNABELLE ROBERTSON
Item Staff Writer
arobertson@theitem.com
EDITOR'S NOTE: Included in this article are several barbecue establishments in the tri-county area. More coverage on additional local barbecue restaurants and cooks will appear on Sunday, June 21.
If you've ever heard a non-southerner refer to barbecue, you know they weren't talking about the smoked pork that defines the southern culinary tradition. Usually, the word is a catch-all for hamburgers and hotdogs on the grill.
But in some places, barbecue has a very peculiar definition.
In Owensboro, Ky., it's mutton dressed with butter and Worcestershire sauce.
In Tomales Bay, Calif., it's oysters on the half-shell topped with chipotle sauce.
And in Sheboygan, Wis., it's a grilled brat(wurst).
But down South, we all know that barbecue – or barbeque, bar-b-que, BBQ or 'cue, depending on what you happen to call it – is that delicious concoction of smoked pork, slow-grilled over a pit, whose sauce tells everybody where you're from.
According to Lake E. High Jr., president of the South Carolina Barbecue Association, barbecue falls into four types, and only the Palmetto State boasts them all. Thanks to an influx of German settlements between 1730 and 1750, the Midlands favors mustard-based sauces. In the Lowcountry, Scottish immigrants prepared the vinegar and pepper barbecue that still influences that region.
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Chris Moore / The Item |
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Chris Moore / The Item |
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