Sides of barbecue
Elle Harrow and Terry Markowitz
Barbecuing may be America’s oldest competitive outdoor sport. Rivals
spar over the proper technique: wet versus dry, direct versus
indirect, hickory versus mesquite, Texas versus Kansas. The battles
are endless. Since that day lightning struck a wooly mammoth -- and
men in animal miniskirts grunted their appreciation of the superior
taste of the meat -- to today’s pork ribs cooked by the all-American
male dressed in a printed apron, a stylish hat and long gloves, men
have debated the nature of “true” barbecue.
The history of barbecue in the United States traces its roots back
to pioneer days and poverty. Smoking was a cooking method that
preserved meat, and slow cooking tenderized it for those early
settlers with no dentists. Americans spend more than $400 million a
year on charcoal briquettes. Did you know that the inventor of the
briquette was none other than Henry Ford, using wood scraps leftover
from the manufacture of wooden automobile parts? The factory to
produce them was designed by his friend Thomas Edison.
Every great competitor has a support staff and every great
barbecuer must have a o7sous chef f7to fetch and carry the stuff
they forget and to make the side dishes. This article is dedicated to
those flunkies who usually get short shrift in the world of barbecue.
To you we say, “Leave the cooking to your natural born griller and
whip up some of these great seasonal side dishes that can all be made
in the cool of the morning. They’re so good, your guests won’t even
notice whether the rub was wet or dry!”
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