Subj : BBQ for Daniel 4
To   : All
From : Carol Shenkenberger
Date : Sat Jun 29 2024 13:45:18

MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.05

     Title: Expatriate Eastern North Carolina Bbq
Categories: Meats
     Yield: 8 Servings

     1    (5-8 pound) Boston butt pork
          -roast; smoked
     1    Mason jar apple cider
          -vinegar
     4 tb Cayenne pepper flakes
     4    Bulbs garlic

MMMMM-------------------------PAN SAUCE------------------------------
    12 oz Apple cider vinegar
     2 tb Cayenne pepper flakes

MMMMM-----------------------HEATING SAUCE----------------------------
     1 tb Salt
     2 c  Water

  While nothing can duplicate the sweet ambrosia of slow, pit-cooked,
 whole hog Eastern North Carolina barbeque, this is a right close
 backyard approximation for those of us who find themselves exiled in
 distant, heathen regions of barbeque heresy. You will need a water
 smoker (I use a Brinkmann), plenty of hickory wood, and several hours
 of free time. Prepare your mopping sauce (apple cider vinegar and
 cayenne pepper flakes). Bring your pork roast to room temperature and
 make several deep incisions all along it. Start your fire, using
 plenty of charcoal. Soak half your hickory wood, leave the other half
 dry. When the fire dies down, put your pork roast in the smoker,
 cover, and start adding hickory wood to your fire pan. The object is
 to maintain a heavy smoke, combined with a temperature on the cusp
 between warm and ideal, for about six hours. Every twenty minutes mop
 (baste) the roast liberally with your mopping sauce. I generally
 throw three or four garlic bulbs into the fire over the course of the
 smoking, but that's optional. Now, take the pork roast, put it in a
 covered dutch oven, pour the rest of your mopping sauce over it, and
 bake it for one or two hours at 275 degrees, or until the meat is
 falling apart. Remove, let it cool, then pull the meat into thumb
 sized or smaller chunks, discarding as much fat as you can. Pack the
 pulled pork into a 12 1/2 inch skillet, turn the heat to medium, and
 apply a liberal dose of your pan sauce. Dissolve the salt in water
 and dump that into the mix. Stir frequently, adding more pan sauce as
 desired (I end up using about eight ounces per skillet of barbeque).
 Cook the liquid down until the barbeque is only slightly moist,
 remove from heat, and serve.

  Suggested Wine: Dixie Beer, Serving Ideas : French Fries, Hush
 Puppies, Coleslaw, Camp Beans.

 [email protected]

 (LIZ LINTON)

 REC.FOOD.RECIPES

 From rec.food.cooking archives.  Downloaded from Glen's MM Recipe
 Archive, http://www.erols.com/hosey.

MMMMM

MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.05

     Title: Grilled Swordfish and Bbq Shrimp with Honey Mustard Vin
Categories: Seafood
     Yield: 1 Servings

     1 ts Dijon mustard
     1 ts Corn oil
     1 ts Rice wine
     1 ts Honey
     1    6-ounce swordfish filet; 1
          -in thick
     1 oz Olive oil
          Salt and pepper to taste
     3    Shrimp; (15 count)
 1 1/2 oz Barbecue sauce
     1 sm Sweet onion; sliced 1/2 in
          -thick
          Parsley sprigs

 Combine mustard, corn oil, rice wine and honey in bowl; mix well. Rub
 swordfish with olive oil; sprinkle with salt and pepper. Rub shrimp
 with 1 ounce barbecue sauce. Arrange swordfish in 1 end of broiler
 pan;

 arrange shrimp in other end of broiler pan. Place sliced onion between
 seafood. Place on top rack of broiler preheated to 450 degrees. Broil
 for 4 minutes on each side. Spoon honey-mustard on I side of serving
 plate; place onions on other side of plate. Arrange swordfish in
 honey-mustard; arrange shrimp on onions. Drizzle shrimp with
 remaining 1/2 ounce barbecue sauce. Garnish with parsley sprigs.

 Formatted for MCrecipe by JoAnn Pellegrino 5/98

 JoAnn's note: Chef Bob, as I know him, is no longer at Kokomo's in the
 Mirage. He has been assigned to head all the kitchens at Treasure
 Island in Las Vegas. He is a wonderfully creative chef who has
 prepared

 glorious feasts for our family.

 NOTES : Recipe by Chef Robert Camerota, The Mirage Hotel, Kokomo's
 Restaurant (see JoAnn's note at end) Las Vegas Cooking published by
 Nathan Adelson Hospice of Las Vegas NV Recipe by: Las Vegas Best
 Bets/The Mirage

 Posted to KitMailbox Digest  by J Pellegrino <[email protected]>
 on May 19, 1998

MMMMM

  xxcarol
--- SBBSecho 2.11-Win32
* Origin: Shenks Express (1:275/100)