CraigC
Master Chef
- Joined
- Jan 27, 2011
- Messages
- 6,486
I just tried my new favorite bun for pulled pork sammies last week, King's Hawaiian!
Where I'm from originally, the BBQ joints all used plain white sandwich bread, toasted or not per the customer's preference. It was just a carrier for the meat.
Coleslaw was a side, NEVER on the sandwich.
Here in SE Florida in the predominantly black neighborhoods on most Friday afternoons you can drive along quite a few streets and see where the local Q'er has set up and is selling his BBQ by the pound. It comes with a loaf or half-loaf of regular white sandwich bread depending on how much you buy.
Potato rolls were suggested, and I agree. I use them for burgers, and they hold up to a juicy burger better than the regular white buns. White buns tend to disintegrate when they get wet.
Quick question about coleslaw. IS it the type of thing that is better the next day after it has sat ? or is it better fresh ??
Your opinions ?
larry
Maybe it's because I'm not from the South, but don't you have a fair bit of sauce on it? Dressing on the cole slaw?How are they getting wet with pulled pork?
Maybe it's because I'm not from the South, but don't you have a fair bit of sauce on it? Dressing on the cole slaw?
Must be regional differences. Pulled pork usually requires extra napkins.Even with added sauce, it is moist not dripping with it. Same with the coleslaw, whether the dressing is mayo based or vinegar based. Most often I let the dry rub and smoke speak for themselves! The sandwiches don't last long enough for the bun to get soggy, even if additional sauce is added.
Must be regional differences. Pulled pork usually requires extra napkins.
The place where she bought it has been on "Diners, Drive-ins and Dives." It's a real drive-in with curb service and everything! And they invented the waffle cone for ice cream
Dou's on the Food Network's Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives | Doumar's
So, I smoke my own butts and have my sauce down and rarely variate. I have it down to where when my wife goes to NC for family I tell her not to even bother bringing back Lexington BBQ anymore. Now, liver mush/puddin...yea, I haven't even tried, so a couple blocks, but BBQ? Not bragging, just speaking the truth. I rarely buy it and there are plenty of great smokers in Virginia.
I make a combination of a Carolina vinegar based sauce and mop sauce for my pulled pork, never a thick sauce. I toss the meat with it before food-savering and freezing as well as add more when re-heating.
My wife likes the Carolina red slaw...I like pretty much all slaw...just don't put flipping fruit in it!
Although my wife likes a sandwich with slaw, we skip the bread usually. my BBQ is...well, I just eat BBQ on a plate nowadays with anything else on the side. It's almost a shame to put excellent BBQ in a sandwich. So/so BBQ needs the sandwich, slaw, nachos, something to bring more to the plate.
The BBQ referenced in this thread I believe is vegetarian. That is on an entirely different ethereal plane, I simply cant relate. No hating here...I just cannot get my head around that one and one of my customers is a high end organic tofu maker that makes the wanna-be meat variations...I've tried them all. Seitan is another one I just cant relate to. I suppose this mock meat stuff makes some people feel better and that's cool. But, I totally get why this wants to be a sandwich!
If I am to make a hot juicy sandwich, whether BBQ or a burger; these days I am hooked on the sandwich sized ciabatta...onion ciabatta. A rugged flavorful bread with nooks and crannies like an English muffin to capture the rapturous goodness of all things wet, drippy, decadent and unctuous.
OK, I'm stopping there, my wife is out of town and...well...