Now where have I heard that phrase before?lgb&dtuba wrote: I'm a meatatarian, myself. It's a choice.
Hmmm.
Now where have I heard that phrase before?lgb&dtuba wrote: I'm a meatatarian, myself. It's a choice.
Excellent.'Vegetarian' is an old Indian word for 'bad hunter'.
Probably the best choice for newbies in Houston is Pappas Brothers. It's a Houston-based chain (as Rudy's is a San Antonio-based chain), but the Pappas family always seems to get it right. The traditional spots in Houston--Lennox or Otto's, to name two examples--require more experience to appreciate properly.TMurphy wrote:My brother recently returned from a business trip in Houston, and boy, did he rave about the BBQ...especially the brisket
Now that would be very welcomed, here. We have good barbecue in Texas(my opinion, anyway), but there are not nearly as many good Italian food places, and still fewer with top-notch pizza. At least that has been my experience, anyway.TMurphy wrote:I'll gladly trade you for some quality pizza/italian food.
Mine, too. And that's just what we have excellent examples of up here. Our town has half a dozen decent Italian places, but little in the Mexican and nothing worth eating in the BBQ departments.TubaRay wrote:Now that would be very welcomed, here. We have good barbecue in Texas(my opinion, anyway), but there are not nearly as many good Italian food places, and still fewer with top-notch pizza. At least that has been my experience, anyway.TMurphy wrote:I'll gladly trade you for some quality pizza/italian food.
Rick,Rick Denney wrote:Mine, too. And that's just what we have excellent examples of up here. Our town has half a dozen decent Italian places, but little in the Mexican and nothing worth eating in the BBQ departments.TubaRay wrote:Now that would be very welcomed, here. We have good barbecue in Texas(my opinion, anyway), but there are not nearly as many good Italian food places, and still fewer with top-notch pizza. At least that has been my experience, anyway.TMurphy wrote:I'll gladly trade you for some quality pizza/italian food.
Of course, I'm probably as ignorant about Italian food as Bloke is about BBQ.
Rick "who, unfortunately, has a limited capacity for Italian food" Denney
You make some very good points, here. Let's hope we don't dumb everything down.Evil Ronnie wrote: The beautiful thing is that we still have remnants of wonderful regional American food in America. Celebrate these national treasures, because they won't be around forever. Not everything out there is homogenized, sanitized, dumbed down corporate chain restaurant food. Try getting a MR burger at Chili's. Ain't gonna happen. Celebrate New England clam chowder in Boston, pork BBQ sandwiches in North Carolina, scrapple, Lebanon bologna and shoo fly pie in Lancaster county Pennsylvania, cheesesteak sandwiches in Philly, grouper sandwiches and fine Cuban food in Key West, BBQ brisket in the hill country, frogmore stew, she-crab soup, and low country cooking in South Carolina, and all the rest.
I had some just yesterday evening. The next time I have some, I'll eat them in your honor, Evil Ronnie.Evil Ronnie wrote:I share your frustration, man. Even though Chicago has a thousand Mexican joints, I'd give anything right now for a plate of Tex-Mex style cheese enchiladas, with chile gravy. Not to mention chips with a great chile con queso.
Evil Ronnie
The food is what I miss most about living on the East Coast. I grew up in NJ and the Italian food was amazing, especially the pizza. I used to go up to Maine for the lobster when I was in school in NH, and since my dad worked in Philly I used to get cheesesteaks all the time (unlike true Philadelphians, I have no preference in the Pat's/Gino's thing).Evil Ronnie wrote: The beautiful thing is that we still have remnants of wonderful regional American food in America. Celebrate these national treasures, because they won't be around forever. Not everything out there is homogenized, sanitized, dumbed down corporate chain restaurant food. Try getting a MR burger at Chili's. Ain't gonna happen. Celebrate New England clam chowder in Boston, pork BBQ sandwiches in North Carolina, scrapple, Lebanon bologna and shoo fly pie in Lancaster county Pennsylvania, cheesesteak sandwiches in Philly, grouper sandwiches and fine Cuban food in Key West, BBQ brisket in the hill country, frogmore stew, she-crab soup, and low country cooking in South Carolina, and all the rest.
I share your frustration, man. Even though Chicago has a thousand Mexican joints, I'd give anything right now for a plate of Tex-Mex style cheese enchiladas, with chile gravy. Not to mention chips with a great chile con queso.
Evil Ronnie
Ronnie is evil, but Ronnie is wise.Evil Ronnie wrote:[I share your frustration, man. Even though Chicago has a thousand Mexican joints, I'd give anything right now for a plate of Tex-Mex style cheese enchiladas, with chile gravy. Not to mention chips with a great chile con queso.
Philly is the capitol of cheesesteak, but Baltimore gives it a run for the money. Captain Harvey's in Dundalk is the king of cheesesteak to most who have been there.cheesesteak sandwiches in Philly
That would be "Elgin", and your spelling reveals incorrect pronunciation, too. The G is hard in the pronunciation of that little burg.ztuba wrote:Eljin texas ?spelling? Southside meatmarket
Get the Southwestern Enchilada at Chuy's in Austin (the original is on Barton Springs Road). It's not the same as Sadies in Albuquerque, but it is made with the correct New Mexican chile peppers.knuxie wrote:Since we moved back to Austin, we have been looking for Tex Mex with at least a little bite to it.
That was a sermon, not an academic paper.TubaRay wrote:Please cite your source, Jim. On what authority do they speak?
No. Given that most people (two Texans apparently excepted) would have recognized my post as humor, even satire, it hardly seemed necessary. But just for you twoknuxie wrote:So Jim has become Joe now....![]()
Barbecue is a cherished example of the cultural heritage of the South to most Southerners, but within the region, debate as to the nature of barbecue rages on. While barbecue-loving Southerners agree that the "Northern" definition of barbecue-- a cook-out in the back-yard-- is ludicrous, barbecue aficionados also like to argue about what constitutes true Southern barbecue. State by state, and even town by town, no method is exactly alike. For the purposes of this paper, the one non-debatable component of barbecue is pork, and the South is bounded by the parameters of the "barbecue belt" (see map). With apologies to the dedicated barbecue chefs of Owensboro and southwestern Texas, Kentucky's misbegotten notion of mutton, and the beef and mesquite of Texas simply do not qualify as barbecue, and these regions will not be closely examined here.