November 2013 - The North Carolina Barbecue Society
Transcription
November 2013 - The North Carolina Barbecue Society
November 2013 NCBS PIG TALES® ® ® Some of the Best... ...From NCBS! Inside This Issue... Mary’s Jack-O-Lanterns / Holiday SOS Give a NCBS Membership, BBQ CAMP, and BBQ Judging Class as a Christmas, Valentine, Birthday, or simply “I Love You” Gift that the recipient will long remember. The Three Little Tiger Piglets Colonel’s Cupboard 2-3 4 5 - 10 That For Which I Am Thankful 11 Viper’s Vapors / Miss Caroline's Secrets 12 Friends of NCBS 13 - 16 2 NCBS Pig Tales® November 2013 PAGE 2 MARY’S JACK-O-LANTERNS & BRANDIED PUMPKIN DIP My children loved Halloween, especially my two girls. Carving the pumpkin for their jack-o’-lantern was my treat along with accompanying them in the background as they went about the neighborhood playing trick-or-treat. Each year the carvings became more and more complex. When my younger daughter reached middle school age she no longer wanted to go trick-or-treating, but she still wanted me to sculpt her a pumpkin. By this time in her life the pumpkins required three to four hours per creation. I don’t begrudge a minute of this time together. This recipe brings back wonderful memories for me of my children’s wonderment, real pumpkin jack-o’lanterns and the excitement and squeals that accompanied trick-or-treat with my girls. Mix can of pumpkin with condensed milk and beaten eggs. Place mixture in uncovered casserole dish. Preheat oven to 425 degrees then reduce to 350 degrees. Place pumpkin mixture in oven at 350 degrees for 1 ¼ hours or until you can pull a clean knife blade. Let pumpkin cool to room temperature. Grate white cheddar cheese in food processor. Remove grated cheese from food processor and insert chopping blade. Replace grated cheese in food processor and add cream cheese in teaspoon-sized pinches. Add sour cream, marshmallow cream and blend in food processor checking every 15 seconds until you achieve a smooth creamy dip consistency (about 30-45 seconds) that will hold on a thin cookie or wafer. Place raisins and water in sauce pan. Heat over medium heat until raisins plump. Drain raisins. Medium-coarse chop raisins (until they are almost the size of a whole raisin). Pour Brandy over raisins. One of Mary’s Jack-O-Lantern Brandied Pumpkin & Hazelnut Dip One 30 ounce can Libby’s brand Easy Pumpkin Pie Mix 2/3 cup condensed milk 3 large eggs (beaten) 8 ounces sharp white cheddar cheese 4 ounces cream cheese 4 heaping teaspoons sour cream ½ cup marshmallow cream 1 cup white raisins (golden) 1 cup water ½ cup hazelnuts 1 teaspoon sea salt ½ ounce Jacques Cardin Napoleon Brandy Toast nuts with sea salt over medium heat in mediumsized frying pan for about 3 minutes turning often until nuts are lightly browned. Remove nuts with slotted spoon. To the cheese blend add 15 ounces of the pumpkin mixture and blend. Remove mixture to large mixing bowl. Fold raisins and nuts into cheese mixture with rubber spatula. Total preparation time is approximately 1 ½ hours including cooling the pumpkin mixture. Makes 4 cups. Serve on cinnamon graham crackers. Pumpkin, Brandied Raisin and Hazelnut Dip is an excerpt from pages 98-99 of Jim Early's Reflections, The Memories and Recipes of a Southern Cook by Jim Early © 2005 3 NCBS Pig Tales® November 2013 PAGE 3 HOLIDAY SOS Thanksgiving is and has always been one of my favorite holidays. I am a foodie and I enjoy cooking for my family and seeing them enjoy the offerings. I enjoy the fellowship at the table, the stories, the laughter, the hugs, the warmth. I enjoy the weather. It is usually like the Little Bears ‘s porridge – not too hot and not too cold. For me it is a heartwarming time of family, great food, and GOOD TIMES! I do not want to rain on anybody’s Thanksgiving Day parade, but in response to recent studies, I felt a need to write this piece. As we are on the cusp of another Holiday Season each of us should not only drink responsibly, but eat responsibly as well. These are traits we need to practice year round and teach them to our children. We need to lead by example. Children (after about age 2) do pay attention. None of us want to be a stumbling block in the path of any child by our life styles. All of us have heard the saying “He or she eats like a pig” referring to a person who is overweight or obese. The truth of the matter is, we (myself included) need to eat more like the pig. A pig will not over-eat regardless of how tempting the food or how much food is placed in front of the pig. We humans (especially in the U. S.) must have missed this class. health crisis. If the rate of obesity and overweight continues at this pace, by 2015, 75% of adults and nearly 24% of U. S. children and adolescents will be overweight or obese.” Two (2) out of every three (3) U. S, adults were overweight or obese in 2003/2004. States in the Southeast have higher prevalence of obesity than states on the West Coast, the Midwest and the Northeast. May A. Beydoun coauthor of the study and a post-doctoral fellow in the JHBS Dept. of International Health says “Obesity is likely to continue to increase, and if nothing is done, it will soon become the leading preventable cause of death in the United States.” So join me as we approach SOS (Season Of Stuffing) and practice eating a smaller portion of the amount you might usually eat. Let the turkey be the only stuffed one at the table. Less can be more. EAT AND DRINK RESPONSIBLY. LIVE LONGER . WE AT NCBS CARE ABOUT YOU AND WANT YOU AROUND. A July 2007 publication by John Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health (JHBS) noted obesity rates continue to climb in the U. S. The U.S. obesity prevalence increased from 13% to 32% between 1960s and 2004. Youfa Wang,MD, PhD, lead author of the study by JHBS stated “Obesity is a public From our house to your house HAVE A HAPPY THANKSGIVING! 4 NCBS Pig Tales® November 2013 PAGE 4 THE THREE LITTLE TIGER PIGLETS In 2008 three tiger cubs were born at a zoo in Dnipropetrovsk Ukraine. Unfortunately for the babies “mom” apparently had lost that loving feeling due to her years behind bars (some trumped up charge that on appellant review was proven unfounded by DNA). Alas mom’ s reprieve came too late for the cubs, mom wanted nothing to do with three whiney babies pulling on her. Enter kind hearted zoo keeper(s). The cubs benefactors took the cubs to a local farm and placed them with a sow (female pig) that had just given birth to a litter of piglets. The sow despite already having a dozen mouths to feed welcomed the three little cubs (does this story sound familiar) into her family. See the story by Dara Brown on MSNBC.com along with video. This same “mother’s love knows no bounds story” recently took place in China. A tigress at the Xiangjiang Safari Park in Guangdong is alleged to have abandoned her three new born cubs. Again ,a sow ( with a litter of new born piglets about the same size as the cubs ) allowed the cubs to suckle her like her own brood. See YouTube-Pig Adopts Tiger Cubs for video. You can Google “sow and tiger cubs” and see a ton of pics and stories (mostly the same ) regarding this event. The flip flop of this story occurred at a zoo in Thailand in 2007 (the year of the pig). Sai Mai, a Royal Bengal tigress born in captivity and raised by a sow for the first four (4) months of her life took on the job of raising five (5) newborn piglets. Only a door or so away from the tigress’s digs a sow was raising tiger cubs. What a coincidence! This lion lays down with the lamb show is the brainchild of Sriracha Zoo outside of Bangkok. From what I read the zoo is experimenting with teaching domestic animals such as the pig and wild animals such as the tiger to live in harmony. Righhhhht. Do you think ticket sales has anything to do with this? Nah. What I have not read is where these new found friends are supposed to hang out after they reach adulthood. I know a wild tiger in India would love for a recently released zoo tiger to bring a pig friend over for drinks. For more about the zoo’s tiger /pig guess who's coming to dinner plan visit www.animalliberationfront.com. I was curious about how the mother pig and the mother tiger felt about the zoo’s version of the TV show The Nanny or Wife Swap, so I managed to get the cell phone numbers of the two mothers and rang them up. Sai Mai purred that this was her first time in the maternity ward and that she was blown away to learn that she had five(5) robust white albino ”cubs “ and not the three tiny kittens shown on the ultrasound. She shared she was doing well in therapy and had taken steps to insure that this would never happen to her again. The “cubs” have enormous appetites she confided. She said she knew tigers ate a lot, but these five ”cubs” eat like pigs. Questions about her mate were met with under the breath mutterings. She opined “Tony” (named for the one on the cereal box) seemed quite pleased with himself and went about the zoo singing the praises of Viagra. She , on the other hand , wanted him to do something that I think is anatomically impossible. Sai Mai’s porcine counterpart (her friends call her “Flo”) in that big from the belly voice of hers grunted that the three additional offspring (all male cubs) were not as pretty as her piglets, but she would love them and they had a place at her table. She said that presently the only thing she asked of the zoo was that SOMEBODY do something about those young’uns nails. Flo shared she named the two smaller of the cubs Romulus and Remus from a story she had read, and that the big burly cub was called “Bubba” because he was always talk’n bout ribs ‘n barbecue and such. Flo allowed as how she would go along with this piglet/cub thing for a while because (in her words) ” Romi and Remy ain’t no trouble, but I keep an eye on that “Bubba”, and if he ever looks at me like I’m a chocolate nut sundae or calls me “pork chop” – I’m outta here”. By Jim Early 5 NCBS Pig Tales® November 2013 Rosemary Roasted Turkey 1 14-16# Turkey 1# room temperature butter 1Tbl Kosher Salt 1 tsp. white pepper 2 Tbl minced fresh Rosemary PAGE 5 To Roast the Bird Set oven rack at lowest level and preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Roast turkey for around 2 hours basting every 20 minutes. If roasting pan is dry, add a little water. If Bird is browning too quickly, cover with foil. Mix butter, salt, pepper & rosemary together to make rosemary compound butter. Remove giblet bag from turkey and reserve for gravy. Carefully separate skin from turkey starting from the rear of the turkey using your fingers. Be careful not to tear the skin. Slide compound butter underneath the skin and gently massage it to spread across breast. Roast until thermometer inserted in the thickest part of the thigh reads 165 degrees - around 2 hrs. Let bird rest for 30 minutes. Remove stuffing and slice bird - Enjoy! Apple-Fennel Stuffing Sauté 3/4 cups diced onion, 1 cup diced celery, 1 diced apple and 1 bulb of Fresh Fennel in 1/2 # unsalted butter. add 2# dried cubed bread. (cube and leave on counter over night). Add 1 tsp salt, 1 tsp pepper, 1/2 ounce poultry seasoning and 11/4 cups turkey or chicken stock. Make sure bread is completely moist. Fill cavity of bird with the stuffing and season Turkey liberally with salt and pepper. Many thanks to my friend, Mark Grohman, Chef/Owner of Meridian Restaurant, Winston-Salem, NC for sharing one of his personal holiday favorites with our readers. 6 NCBS Pig Tales® November 2013 PAGE 6 COLONEL’S CUPBOARD Cont. My friend Chef John Milner, of Milner’s American Southern Restaurant in Winston Salem, NC wa s gracious and shared a recipe he developed for cooking the family Christmas turkey last year low and slow. The bird turned out to be John’s best turkey ever so I am sharing it again with our members. Enjoy! Method 1. Mix all ingredients for the brine and submerge the bird into the brine. I like to use a large bucket or deep roasting pan and put in the refrigerator. 2. Let the bird brine for a minimum of 12 hours but 24is ideal. Note: If the bird is not submerged rotate in the brine halfway through the brining process. 3. On Thanksgiving Eve...pull the bird out of the brine (discard the brining liquid and aromatics) 4. Before you go to bed (11pm is ideal for the turkey to be ready by noon on Thanksgiving day) prepare the bird for the oven… ————————————————————-- One of the Best Turkey Recipe EVER 1 each 18 pound (or so) fresh turkey, use free range if possible. I like to use Ashley Farms. Remove neck and gizzards and reserve for gravy. For the turkey 1 each onion sliced 4 each carrots chopped 4 each celery ribs chopped 6 each garlic cloves 4 tbs. canola oil For the brine 2 gallon warm water 6 cups water, chicken stock, or turkey stock 1 pound brown sugar 2 cups kosher salt 10 each allspice berries 5 each bay leaves 1 Tbs. paprika 10 each. peppercorns Black 2 each rosemary sprigs 2 each thyme sprigs 1 each sliced yellow onion 4 each chopped ribs of celery 1 each sliced fennel bulb Method 1. Preheat the oven to 325 degrees 2. In a Turkey roaster with rack cut the vegetables in the base of the pan 3. Place the bird on the rack and rub the oil all over the bird 4. Add the liquid to the roasting pan 5. Place the uncovered turkey on the lowest rack and cook at 325 degrees for one hour to start the cooking process 6. Very Important! Reduce the oven heat to 200 degrees and roast while you are sleeping for the remaining 10 hours or so 7 NCBS Pig Tales® November 2013 PAGE 7 COLONEL’S CUPBOARD Cont. 7. The next morning when you get up using a digital thermometer check the turkeys progress. The desired temperature for a done turkey is 165 degrees. An 18 pound turkey at that temperature should take 12 hours give or take. When the turkey reaches the desired doneness remove from the oven and allow to rest for 45 minutes lightly covered with foil. The beauty of cooking at a low temperature is that it is juicier, requires less stress on Thanksgiving morning and you wake up to the smells of turkey dinner. Method 1. Brown the gizzards and neck in the oil in a large sauce pot. 2. Add the flour and cook stirring constantly for three minutes 3. Add the turkey stock (or chicken stock) 4. Add the strained roasting pan liquid 5. Stir and simmer for at least 1 hour skimming and discarding all of the impurities and fat that rise to the top of the gravy 6. When the neck is tender remove and pick all of the meat off the neck bones and add back to the gravy 7. Continue to simmer and skim until the desired flavor and thickness is achieved. For the Gravy 1 each Turkey neck 1 each gizzard package chopped (heart removed) 4 Tbs. canola oil 1 cup flour 2 quarts. Chicken or Turkey stock All reserved remaining strained roasting pan liquid Salt and Pepper to taste *Happy Thanksgiving! Carve the turkey and serve with the gravy. Serves 6-10 people. Thank you John! 8 NCBS Pig Tales® November 2013 PAGE 8 COLONEL’S CUPBOARD Cont. Tequila Citrus Sauce 1/2 cup gold tequila 1 cup freshly squeezed lime juice (5 to 6 limes) 1/2 cup sour orange juice 1 tablespoon chili powder 1 tablespoon minced fresh jalapeno pepper (1 pepper seeded) + 1/4 Habanero pepper 1 tablespoon minced fresh garlic (3 cloves) + 2 scallions chopped 2 teaspoons kosher salt 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper Dried Cherry-Cabernet Reduction 4 cups Cabernet red wine 1 cup chicken stock 1/2 cup sugar 1 teaspoon black pepper 3/4 cup dried cherries 1/4 cup balsamic vinegar Corn starch mixture (2 tablespoons cornstarch, 4 tablespoons water) Combine the tequila, lime juice, orange juice, chili powder, jalapeno pepper, garlic, salt, and pepper in a large bowl. In a stainless sauce pan mix together wine, sugar, chicken stock and pepper. Reduce by half. Add cherries and balsamic vinegar and simmer 10 minutes. Add corn starch mixture to thicken to desired thickness. The above sauce was created by Chef Denis Dronne, Director of Marketing for Joyce Foods, Inc. of Winston-Salem, NC and shared with our campers at Tanglewood, May 2010. Excellent with chicken and guinea, works with other fowl as well. Tom Young, Chef/Owner of The Tractor Shed Restaurant in Hendersonville, NC, created the above Dried Cherry-Cabernet Reduction along with others for our Mountain BBQ Boot Camp in Fletcher, NC, July 2010. 9 NCBS Pig Tales® November 2013 COLONEL’S CUPBOARD Cont. Pineapple Papaya Salsa 3 tomatoes 1 fresh pineapple approx. 2 lb 1 fresh papaya approx. 16 oz 5 green onions 1 bunch fresh cilantro, chopped 2 jalapenos, seeded minced 3 T lime juice 1 tsp garlic, chopped 2 tsp salt Core and dice tomatoes. Peel and dice the pineapple. Peel, seed and dice papaya. Combine all the ingredients and chill well. Chef Valerie Mason, Lead Instructor for the Cape Fear Community College Culinary Department, created several compliments for chicken, guinea and pheasant for the NCBS Coastal BBQ Boot Camp, October 2010. The above salsa recipe was delicious! PAGE 9 10 NCBS Pig Tales® November 2013 PAGE 10 COLONEL’S CUPBOARD Cont. Place butter and chocolate in a medium mixing bowl and microwave for approx. 3 minutes until butter and chocolate are melted. Fold butter and chocolate. In large mixing bowl, add eggs and sugar and blend well with a whisk. Add chocolate butter mixture to eggs and blend. Add vanilla, flour and salt to mixture and continue blending. Add liqueurs and fold. Better Than Sex Chocolate Pie One 9 inch deep dish frozen pie shell (thawed) 1/4 pound salted butter 2 squares unsweetened chocolate 2 eggs 1 cup sugar 1/4 cup flour 1/4 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon vanilla 3 tablespoons Frangelico liqueur 3 tablespoons Britt Licor de Café coffee liqueur 4 tablespoons freshly ground hazelnut coffee (unbrewed) 1/4 cup dark chocolate-covered espresso beans 1/4 cup milk chocolate-covered espresso beans Squeeze the dough around the edge of pie shell between your thumb and forefinger and pinch scallops so your pie shell will look like a homemade pie shell and not a commercial product. Set pie shell aside. Place dark chocolate-covered espresso beans in a sandwich bag and zip. Place sandwich bag on a chopping block to protect your countertop and lightly smash the beans with a hammer. Do not powder the beans, simply reduce them to pieces the size of Rice Crispies or half of a Rice Crispy. Repeat this procedure with the milk chocolate-covered espresso beans. Add the smashed beans to mixture and fold with a rubber spatula. Add the hazelnut coffee to mixture and fold with a rubber spatula. When mixture is well blended, pour it into unbaked and thawed pie shell. Cut strips of aluminum foil the width of the roll and approx. 3 inches wide. Crimp aluminum foil under the aluminum pie dish holding your pie shell. Gently make a canopy over the exposed pie crust. This will prevent the pie crust from browning and will give a nicer appearance to your pie. Bake pie in a preheated oven at 350 degrees for approx. 47-49 minutes. Check middle of pie with a toothpick. If the toothpick pulls out clean, your pie is ready. If the toothpick has particles of batter on it, continue to bake pie checking every 1-2 minutes. Remove pie from oven and place on rack to cool. Cut pie with a wet sharp knife cleaned after each slice to reduce drag. A small sliver of this pie is sufficient for dessert as it is quite rich. Garnish each slice of pie with a dollop of real whipped cream, mint leaves and a dark chocolate-covered espresso bean. Total preparation time is approximately 1 1/4 hours. The above recipe is found on page 115 of Jim Early’s book Reflections: The Memories and Recipes of a Southern Cook. It is one of the author’s favorite desserts and hopefully will become one of yours! 11 NCBS Pig Tales® November 2013 PAGE 12 Thanksgiving As the holiday we call Thanksgiving, Turkey Day etc. nears it is easy to look at it as a long weekend. The merchants have focused our attention on Christmas, that’s what makes the cash registers ring. We have been bombarded with Christmas music since before Halloween. When the jack o’ lanterns came down, up went the Santas. Thanksgiving is not a big money maker except for the grocery stores and then only for a few days. But to me Thanksgiving is “special”. It is a day when families should be together in some manner, in person if possible, by phone if not. No emails, no texting, no cards. It should be as personal as distance allows. Make the effort, carve out the time, make it happen. And when you gather at some time amidst the eating, stories and the laughter ask for quiet and take the time to truly give thanks to God for the bounty of the blessings we all have received. Despite market slumps, unemployment, partisan politics, the greed of some, and bad things happening to good people, we are still the most prosperous, the most envied and the most blessed country on the planet. And during this time of prayer and thanksgiving remember those who help make all of this possible for each of us……our men and women of The United States Armed Forces. Our prayers are with you ALWAYS! Jim Early How to Observe Thanksgiving Count your blessings instead of your crosses; Count your gains instead of your losses. Count your joys instead of your woes; Count your friends instead of your foes. Count your smiles instead of your tears; Count your courage instead of your fears. Count your full years instead of your lean; Count your kind deeds instead of your mean. Count your health instead of your wealth; Count on God instead of yourself. ~Author Unknown A Thanksgiving Blessing Our Father, With stumbling efforts and feet of clay, we seek to do Thy will. We often are immersed in our own cares and needs. Help us to see the needs of others. Attune us to hear an unspoken cry for help. Make us sensitive to worlds beyond our own. As we gather at this table, let the warmth of this moment transcend the chills of days to come, whatever the source. You have blessed us so abundantly. Help us to share the gifts which are ours with those who, for whatever reason, have received less. Most of all, we give thanks for Your greatest gift, Your Son and his name, we offer our prayer of love, joy and Thanksgiving. ~Jim Early From our house to you wherever you are Happy Thanksgiving! 12 NCBS Pig Tales® November 2013 PAGE 11 THAT FOR WHICH I AM THANKFUL As we approach the holiday that we call “Thanksgiving” I am mindful of the many blessings that we as a Society have received this past year. I wish to remind our members of a few: We again had three very successful NCBS BBQ Boot Camps and NCBS Certified BBQ Judge Classes that began in 2009. We had our first season hosting 8 Wounded Warriors at each camp. We had great responses from our 8 culinary students at our camps. We added Samuel Jones and John Young to our camp faculty. We added Samuel Jones, John Young and Bryan Mosher to our NCBS Board of Directors. We added many new members to our membership. We had a wonderful first event at our new mountain “home” at Sugar Mountain Resort in July. We revised our website and will continue to do so. We had tremendous support from our sponsors. We received a very nice gift from our newest sponsors Steve and Lori Angel of the Angel Foundation that covered our Wounded Warrior expenses at Wilmington. We have been invited to participate in some exciting events in 2014. We have had unmatched support of our volunteers that make our Society run successfully. Thanksgiving should not be a holiday, it should be an attitude that we hold in our hearts every day for we are TRULY BLESSED. Jim Early 13 PAGE 13 NCBS Pig Tales® November 2013 Friends of NCBS TRADITION. HISTORY. CULTURE. As a firm that has been serving the legal needs of our clients for over 125 years, we are honored to help preserve North Carolina’s barbecue history and culture. Kilpatrick Townsend is proud to serve the legal needs of the North Carolina Barbecue Society and its members as General Counsel. www.kilpatricktownsend.com Atlanta ~ Augusta ~ Charlotte ~ Denver ~ Los Angeles ~ New York ~ Raleigh ~ San Diego ~ San Francisco Seattle ~ Shanghai ~ Silicon Valley ~ Stockholm ~ Tokyo ~ Walnut Creek ~ Washington D.C. ~ Winston-Salem 14 PAGE 14 NCBS Pig Tales® November 2013 Friends of NCBS R. H. Barringer Distributing Co. Inc. Winston-Salem, NC R. A. Jeffreys Distributing Co. of Wilmington Wilmington, NC 15 PAGE 15 NCBS Pig Tales® November 2013 Friends of NCBS Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company Winston-Salem, NC Pepsi Bottling Ventures Wilmington, NC Joyce Foods Dewey’s Bakery To The Point, Inc. Winston-Salem, NC Winston-Salem, NC A.B. Vannoy Country Hams Olde Fayetteville Insurance and Financial Services Fayetteville, NC Triad Packaging 16 PAGE 16 NCBS Pig Tales® November 2013 Friends of NCBS Trigger Agency Casual Furniture World Winston Salem, NC Bridges Barbecue Lodge Shelby, NC Honky Tonk Pig Winston-Salem, NC Wilber’s Barbecue Goldsboro, NC Short Sugar’s Drive-In Reidsville, NC Skylight Inn Ayden, NC Grady’s Barbecue Dudley, NC Milner’s American Southern Cuisine & Cocktails Herb’s Pit Bar-B-Que Tanglewood Park, Clemmons, NC Village Inn Event Center - Clemmons, NC Sugar Mountain Resort - Banner Elk, NC Sugar Mountain Rentals - Banner Elk, NC Best Western - Banner Elk, NC Mainstay Suites - Wilmington, NC Big Oak Drive-In & BBQ - Salter Path, NC Murphy, NC Richard’s Bar-B-Q Salisbury, NC Are you interested in becoming a business sponsor of NCBS? Visit www.ncbbqsociety.com, email us at [email protected] or call (336) 765-NCBS for more information 17 NCBS Pig Tales® November 2013 PAGE 17 Our Mission The mission of the North Carolina Barbecue Society (NCBS) is to preserve North Carolina’s barbecue history and culture and to secure North Carolina’s rightful place as the Barbecue Capital of the World. Our goal is to promote North Carolina as “the Cradle of ’Cue” and embrace all that is good about barbecue worldwide. As we strive to achieve these lofty goals we will be guided by the polar star that barbecue is all about good food, good friends and good times. NCBS Pig Tales® is the official monthly publication of The North Carolina Barbecue Society and is free to members. Dues start at $35.00 a year ($25.00 for seniors and students). Visit us at www.ncbbqsociety.com to download application. Become a contributing correspondent and send us your articles, ideas, pictures and recipes. Email correspondence is preferred. We reserve the right to edit any article, ad, comment or recipe. Contact NCBS 144 Sterling Point Court Winston-Salem, NC 27104 Phone: (336) 765-NCBS Fax: (336) 765-9193 [email protected] ® www.ncbbqsociety.com Markus Brisbane - Editor in Chief, Layout & Design Wiz Steve McCulloch - Web Host, Winnow Creative [email protected] Columnists Jim Early All rights reserved, The North Carolina Barbecue Society © 2013 Are you interested in becoming a business sponsor of NCBS? Visit www.ncbbqsociety.com, email us at [email protected] or call (336) 765-NCBS for more information. Contributing Correspondents Margo Knight Metzger Jim Morgan Jason Ingram Sean Wilson NCBS Photographer Lloyd Aaron Lloyd Aaron Photography NCBS Officers President…………………………………... Jim Early Vice President…………..…..Debbie Bridges-Webb NCBS wishes to give its membership a voice in NCBS Pig Tales®. The articles in this publication reflect the views, opinions and preferences of the author of the article and do not necessarily reflect the views, opinions and preferences of NCBS officers, board members or the staff of NCBS Pig Tales®. The recipes shared in this publication, unless they are excerpts from Jim Early’s books The Best Tar Heel Barbecue Manteo to Murphy, Jim Early’s Reflections: The Memories and Recipes of a Southern Cook and Shining Times the Adventures and Recipes of Sportsmen have not been kitchen tested by this publication. Secretary………………………........Mary E. Lindsey Treasurer……………………………………Jim Early Asst. Treasurer…………...…..……Mary E. Lindsey NCBS Board Members Jim Early…………………………Winston-Salem, NC Mary E. Lindsey……………………...Gainesville, GA Rick Hollowell……………………….Greensboro, NC Steve Grady……………………………….Dudley, NC Debbie Bridges-Webb……………………Shelby, NC Samuel Jones……………………………..Ayden, NC Bryan Mosher……………………...Holly Springs, NC John Young………………….…..Winston-Salem, NC
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