Tag Archives: Culture

Real Southern Barbecue: Constructing Authenticity in Southern Food Culture

This book examines how processes and rhetoric surrounding a specific food product—and food culture as a whole—shape the food appearing on our plates and how they impact people’s health and market dynamics. The book takes an in-depth look at barbecue chefs and restaurant owners to triangulate the relationship between producers and their products. It explores the intersection of deindustrialization, commercialization, and changing health concerns as well as the changes in food culture, highlighting the need for producers to justify their positioning in response to commercialization and changing environmental laws and concerns. Finally, it analyzes the creation of authentic food products and questions how these products evolve over time in response to changes in broader society.

The Slaw and the Slow Cooked: Culture and Barbecue in the Mid-South

Texas has its barbecue tradition, and a library of books to go with it. Same with the Carolinas. The mid-South, however, is a region with as many opinions as styles of cooking. In The Slaw and the Slow Cooked, editors James Veteto and Edward Maclin seek to right a wrong–namely, a deeper understanding of the larger experience of barbecue in this legendary American culinary territory.

In developing the book, Veteto and Maclin cast a wide net for divergent approaches. Food writer John Edge introduces us to Jones Bar-B-Q Diner in Marianna, Arkansas, a possibly century-old restaurant serving top-notch pork and simultaneously challenging race and class boundaries. Kristen Bradley-Shurtz explores the 150-plus-year tradition of the St. Patrick’s Irish Picnic in McEwen, Tennessee. And no barbecue book would be complete without an insider’s story, provided here by Jonathan Deutsch’s “embedded” reporting inside a competitive barbecue team. Veteto and Maclin conclude with a glimpse into the future of barbecue culture: online, in the smoker, and fresh from the farm.

The Slaw and the Slow Cooked stands as a challenge to barbecue aficionados and a statement on the Mid-South’s important place at the table. Intended for food lovers, anthropologists, and sociologists alike, The Slaw and the Slow Cooked demonstrates barbecue’s status as a common language of the South.

Texas BBQ (Jack and Doris Smothers series in Texas history, life, and culture)

To Texans, barbecue is elemental. Succulent, savory, perfumed with smoke and spice, it transcends the term “comfort food.” It’s downright heavenly, and it’s also a staff of Texas life. Like a dust storm or a downpour, barbecue is a force of Texas nature, a stalwart tie to the state’s cultural and culinary history. Though the word is often shortened to “BBQ,” the tradition of barbecue stands Texas-tall.

Photographer Wyatt McSpadden has spent some twenty years documenting barbecue—specifically, the authentic family-owned cafes that are small-town mainstays. Traveling tens of thousands of miles, McSpadden has crisscrossed the state to visit scores of barbecue purveyors, from fabled sites like Kreuz’s in Lockhart to remote spots like the Lazy H Smokehouse in Kirbyville. Color or black-and-white, wide angle or close up, his pictures convey the tradition and charm of barbecue. They allow the viewer to experience each place through all five senses. The shots of cooking meat and spiraling smoke make taste and smell almost tangible. McSpadden also captures the shabby appeal of the joints themselves, from huge, concrete-floored dining halls to tiny, un-air-conditioned shacks. Most of all, McSpadden conveys the primal physicality of barbecue—the heat of fire, the heft of meat, the slickness of juices—and also records ubiquitous touches such as ancient scarred carving blocks, torn screen doors and peeling linoleum, and toothpicks in a recycled pepper sauce jar.

Janolia Beehive Smoker Pellets, 54 Pcs Chinese Natural Herb Bee Hive Smoker Solid Fuel for Apiculture Beekeeping Bee Culture, Disinfection of Hives

Description:
Material: Chinese Medicinal Herb
Single Size: 2.5cm x 1.5cm/1” x 0.6”
Total Size: 14.5cm x 9cm x 2.5cm/5.7” x 3.5” x 1”
Color: As shown

Package Include:
54 x Pcs Beehive Smoke Pellets

Notice:
1.Please allow 1-3cm error due to manual measurement.Pls make sure you do not mind before you bid.
2.The color may have different as the difference display,pls understand.

Product Features

  • Bactericidal antibacterial and antiviral efficacy.
  • Makes the bees access to clean itself.
  • Use Tobacco around bee hives, you can drive away other pests which will harassment or attacking bees.
  • Equivalent to the bee washed a bath, destroy germs bees structure, kill mites and in addition to bacteria.
  • It can also prolong the using life of the Bee Hives.