Barbecue podcast “The Low and Slow Barbecue Show” serves up barbecue recipes, advice for smoking barbecue, and cooking barbecue stories of success - and failure! Home smokers and BBQ Pitmasters share advice - all steeped in Carolina barbecue flavor.
Listen and learn how to smoke meat, the best meat to smoke, how to make Carolina barbecue sauce, and the best barbecue restaurants we love to visit - the best barbecue in North Carolina! (And maybe a few other “barbecue” places, too!) Every episode promises to share a few experiments for the next time you fire up the barbecue smoker.
Barbecue meat smoking enthusiast, news journalist, and sports radio broadcaster Chigger Willard walks through the barbecue basics with guests who bring a wide variety of experiences to the barbecue world. Competitors. Restauranteurs. Fund-Raisers. Tailgaters. Moms and Dads. ALL the people who make the best barbecue share all their barbecue best.
What wood do you use for meat smoking? How long should you smoke meat? Can you mess it up? Can you really cook that on the smoker? How do you barbecue in the crockpot? And just what is Alabama white sauce anyway?
We’re smoking over everything. From Eastern Carolina barbecue – America’s first smoked whole hog, Lexington barbecue where vinegar meets ketchup, and even on to the more exotic: western-style barbecue sauces, South Carolina’s mustard gold, and other peculiar concoctions.
Get answers to the smoking barbecue questions you want to ask – and get them low and slow. That means you’re getting the lowdown, nice and slow – so you can understand it, USE IT … and tell your friends to listen to The Low and Slow Barbecue Show.
Low & Slow barbecue tips for the indoor oven master. Shutdown Fullcast’s Ryan Nanni shares his recipe for Bo Ssam pork shoulder.
Some people are limited to preparing their favorite barbecue … inside. If you’re one of those folks in an apartment, or heaven forbid you don’t have an outdoor smoker, or even a place to get outside, this episode of the Low & Slow Barbecue Show is for you.
Let there be no doubt that the low & slow barbecue traditions of the Carolinas are best performed outdoors for the at-home pitmaster.
Whether you’ve got a cinder block pit, a pull-behind trailer smoker, or more modern technology like one of those fancy pellet things, to do it right, you’re gonna be producing a lot of heat and a lot of smoke. You’re probably going to be doing it for a long time, too. Combine all those factors, and you have a cooking equation that belongs outside. Plus, it is just nice to be out of the house, especially as the weather warms in the spring.
But what if you don’t have the luxury of an outdoor kitchen, or a carport parking spot for your Weber Smoky Mountain? Plenty of unfortunate people in this world don’t have a patio space to prepare a barbecue delight.
Chigger Willard talks with culinary enthusiast and college sports aficionado Ryan Nanni from Shutdown Fullcast. Listen to get advice for preparing Bo Ssam, as well tips for serving the Korean barbecue delight of low & slow cooked pork shoulder. And because Ryan Nanni is a familiar voice in the world of college sports media, we also talk about his favorite tailgating venues for barbecue – and the overrated college football pre-game parties.
Visit The Low & Slow Barbecue Show website here!
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