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WhiteTrashBBQ

WhiteTrash BBQ -- Real Pit Barbecue from New York City. This is the story of a fire obsessed guy, living in Brooklyn, with a dream of producing award winning, competition busting, real Barbeque. Come live the dream as I compete around the country in the KCBS Championship Barbecue circuit.

Friday, August 06, 2010

Death and Taxes

I recently switched over to Google's Chrome as my primary browser. While it works just fine it did a lousy job of importing my favorites so I haven't been haunting my usual internet haunts. Last night I launched Firefox and visited some old friends and found some pretty disturbing news.

1. My friend BD, or Buffalo Dick passed away suddenly. Now I've never met Dick, or Richard as he was christened, never spoke to him on the phone, but we regularly corresponded via the internet. His blog OPINIONS AND RECTUMS,WE ALL GOT ONE! was always one of my favorite reads full of great stories, cooking tips and yes opinions. He will be missed.

2. Butch Lupinetti of Butch's Smack Your Lips BBQ has also passed away. Butch was one of the larger than life characters you meet on the competitive barbeque circuit. He was a little man in stature, but he came with a huge heart and a hearty laugh. I don't think I ever saw anything but a smile on his face.

Butch was one of the first folks to welcome me into competitive barbecue as he attended my certified judging class held at Jack's Firehouse in Philadelphia and greeted me with a kiss and a hug after I walked as part of The BBQ Brethren team at my first event Guitarbeque. As far as I know Butch never maintained a blog which is a real shame. All the stories he could have told, but he can still be seen on Throwdown reruns.


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Tuesday, February 09, 2010

CASTING CALL: Apply now for Season 3 of Grill It

CASTING CALL: You could be cooking alongside Bobby Flay!
Apply now for Season 3 of Grill It:


Calling all home cooks, backyard grillers, culinary students and foodies! Season 3 of Bobby’s Emmy-winning series Grill It! is now casting! If you love creating new recipes with seafood, poultry, fish, pork, ribs or burgers, Food Network wants to hear from you!

Interested applicants must be outgoing, fun and able to reproduce their own unique recipe on camera, with flair. Maybe it’s a new take on ribs or chicken wings, reinventing seafood on the grill or perhaps a family recipe? Whatever the dish, it needs to be original, grilled and not found in a cookbook!

How to apply:
-Email your info & photo to grillitwithbobby@gmail.com and we’ll send you an application to fill out.
- Make a 2-3 minute electronic video showcasing your recipe & personality and upload it to the Grill It! page on www.FoodNetwork.com
- On the casting tape, cook your favorite dish, tell us how you created the recipe, about the ingredients, and why you and your recipe should be on the show.
- Tell us why you think it would be great to GRILL IT! With Bobby Flay.

Please upload your video here:
http://www.foodnetwork.com/grill-it-with-bobby-flay/package/index.html

Questions? Email us at grillitwithbobby@gmail.com

All entries need to be submitted no later than Friday March 5, 2010, but the sooner the better as we're casting grillers on a weekly basis. You must be available for one day of filming in Los Angeles, CA. March 22-April 4, 2010. Expenses to/from Los Angeles will be covered!

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Wednesday, March 05, 2008

March Madness: Cop Out - Media Saturation

It's 12:37 AM according to the clock on my computer and I just finished dinner. Kinda late, I know. But I had to put in some overtime with the clients today since I was out sick for two days. I'm still coughing my head off and my throat is sore, but my voice almost sounds normal.

Tonight's dinner? Ready? A Peanut Butter and Jelly sandwich on potato bread. Woo Hoo! A real winner. Tasty though. Skippy and Smuckers - is there a better pairing in the world?

But back to BBQ, a couple of interesting things have popped up in my email today.
  1. Bobby Flay is starting a new grilling show on Food Network and he's looking for partners. You can either create a 3 minute video tape and submit it by March 15 - OR - you can go to the open casting call on in NYC on Friday. I'd do the casting call, but a three minute shot of me coughing doesn't qualify as good TV in my opinion. If you're interested contact Jessica from Embassy Row Productions at 646-747-472. Tell her you want to be on GRILL IT! WITH BOBBY FLAY ON THE FOOD NETWORK! and tell her I sent you.
  2. Marie Lena Tupot over at scenarioDNA inc is looking for any extreme barbecuers in the Houston/Texas area. She's looking to interview about three of them on video for about one hour, and we can give them each $100 for their time. Timing would ideally be next week. They need to be between the ages of 21 to 27. She can accept guys up to 30 though. The interviews will ask about their social networking and their beer drinking experiences. Sounds like BBQrs Gone Wild (Thanks Todd!). But if you're interesting in making a quick Benjamin (See us old coots are hip!) call Marie at 917-364-9742
So come on you media stars - the world is waiting!

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Tuesday, February 19, 2008

So you want to be on TV?

This has been coming into my inbox for the last couple of days. I wasn't going to post it because it's old news, but there seems to be a new push for audition tapes. Here's your chance to be a star!

GRILL IT! WITH BOBBY FLAY ON THE FOOD NETWORK!

Are you a Master Griller? Are all barbeques held at your house? If you're a serious griller (charcoal or gas) and have the skills to prove it, then live out your culinary fantasy on Bobby Flay's new half hour GRILL IT! series on the Food Network.

To apply, please create a 3-minute VHS Tape or DVD in which you cook us your favorite dish. Tell us how you created the recipe and the ingredients you use. All applicants must have a terrific personality and must illustrate why you'd make a fantastic candidate for GRILL IT! with Bobby Flay! Unlike "Throwdown with Bobby Flay" there's no winners or losers, instead Grill IT! shows people how to grill with a well-stocked kitchen.

All applicants must live in the U.S and be 18 and over (although quick-witted teenagers with parents' permission can apply).

To be considered, please mail your submission tape, original recipe and photo of yourself to the address below no later than March 15th.

ATT: GRILL IT!
110 Leroy Street
New York City, NY 10014

Questions? Email us at grillitwithbobby@gmail.com

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Tuesday, September 11, 2007

BBQ Bargains: Back to School!

Hey folks - It's Back to School time! Whoo Hoo!

Now why is ol' WhiteTrash so excited about back to school? Well, back to school means it's the end of summer and to most folks in America, the end of the barbeque and grilling season. Confused? Let me explain.

With the so called "end" of the barbecue and grilling season, the book stores here in WhiteTrash world decide that they need to clear their shelves of all the bbq and grilling books. Now's the time for all you dedicated que-rs and grillers to stock up on all the great and no so great barbecue cookbooks.

It's the time to buy all those books that look interesting, but just didn't seem to justify the price at the time.

In a trip to Barnes and Noble last night, I found Dr. BBQ's Big-Time Barbecue Cookbook on sale for $5.98 and Bobby Flay's Boy Gets Grill for $6.98. Unfortunately, I allready have both, but the Bobby Flay book is going to be someone's Christmas present. There was this beautiful book on Rubs that originally was priced at $19.95, but is now going for $2.98. Like I said it is a beautiful book but very light on recipes and heavy on pictures; but for $2.98, it might just wind up in my library.

See you in the bookstores!

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Friday, July 13, 2007

Santa Maria Tri-Tip Steak

This came into my in box this morning. Tri-tip is a great cut of meat and certainly one of the classics for outdoor cooking. If you can find it, try it. You'll like it.

While I don't agree that "many people" consider the Santa Maria Valley of California "the barbeque capital of the world," it certainly has a considerable influence. This article comes to us from CBS and The Early Show.

"BBQ Capital" Boasts Little-Known Edge


(CBS) When you think of barbecue, places such as Texas, Kansas City, Memphis and North Carolina probably come to mind.

But Northern California's Santa Maria Valley is thought of by many as the "barbeque capital of the world."

It features tri-tip beef, a little-known cut that's full of flavor.

On The Early Show Thursday, resident chef Bobby Flay gave viewers a taste of tri-tip and Santa Maria.

Flay used the original cowboy grilling method and tri-tip beef to bring old world tradition and smoky flavors to his grill on our plaza.

He says tri-tip used to be a very local to Northern California, but is becoming popular with chefs across the country.

Where did it originate? The Santa Maria Valley is a feast for the senses, with lush rolling hills and fragrant fields of strawberries.

But cruise down Broadway on any given weekend, and it's the mouth-watering smell of barbecue that will greet you.

Santa Maria-style barbecue is the authentic taste experience of Santa Maria. The sumptuous feast of barbecued sirloin, salsa, Pinquito beans, toasted French bread, and green salad has been described by Sunset Magazine as the "best barbecue in the world," and the California's Visitor's Guide raves it's the "No. 1 food not to miss while visiting California." It's the featured cuisine at all festive occasions, both public and private, and so thoroughly ingrained in local culture that it's truly a way of life.

Santa Maria Barbecue has its roots in the mid-19th century, when the rancheros gathered to help each other brand their calves each spring. The host would prepare a Spanish-style barbecue as a thank you for his vaqueros (America's first cowboys), family and friends. Under the oaks of the serene, little coastal valley, they would enjoy a traditional feast that included beef barbecued over a red oak fire, served with Pinquito beans, bread, salsa and homemade desserts.

Today's Santa Maria-style barbecue grew out of this tradition, and achieved its "style" some 60 years ago, when locals began stringing their beef on skewers and cooking it over the hot coals of a red oak fire. The meat, either top block sirloin or the triangular-shaped bottom sirloin known as tri-tip, is rolled in a mixture of salt, pepper and garlic salt just prior to cooking. It's then barbecued over red oak coals, giving the meat a hearty, smoky flavor.

The traditional Santa Maria barbecue menu features, of course, the barbecued sirloin, trimmed, sliced, and laid out in metal pans, so the diner may select the desired doneness. The only condiment for this tender and flavorful meat is a fresh salsa. With it is served grilled French bread dipped in sweet melted butter, perfect for soaking up every last bit of the flavorful meat juices. Also served on the side are a tossed green salad and slow-cooked Pinquito beans. For the most authentic Santa Maria barbecue experience, select a robust Santa Maria Valley wine to accompany your meal. The tasty feast is finished with coffee and a simple dessert.

Once a well-kept local secret, word of Santa Maria-style barbecue has spread around the world, enticing travelers to come by the thousands, seeking a taste of this local specialty, and it's not difficult to find. On a typical Saturday, you'll see clouds of fragrant smoke billowing through the air, leading you to numerous barbecues throughout the city. They range from outdoor feasts along Broadway that are sponsored by schools and local charities, to restaurants offering a more formal dining experience, to backyard cookouts in which families enjoy their own recipes that have been passed down through the generations.

It's no wonder Santa Maria is often called the "Barbecue Capital of the World"!

FOOD TERMINOLOGY

TRI-TIP BEEF (aka bottom sirloin): The tri-tip is a cut of beef from the bottom sirloin primal cut. It's a small, triangular muscle, usually one-and-a-half to two-and-a-half pounds per side of beef. In the United States, this cut was typically used for ground beef or sliced into steaks until the late 1950s, when it became a local specialty in Santa Maria, rubbed with salt, pepper, and spices and cooked whole on a rotisserie or grilled. (The tri-tip is still often labeled "Santa Maria steak")

Tri-tip is now available in most of the U.S., though it remains a relatively overlooked cut. Most popular in central California, it's begun to enjoy increasing popularity elsewhere for its full flavor, lower fat content, and comparatively lower cost.

Tri-tip is a very good cut of meat. However, usually, by the time you've trimmed the excess fat, you'll find it's more expensive than top sirloin. Tri-tip is mostly used for family barbecues and fund-raising events, since the cuts are small.

Tri-tip has become a popular cut for producing Texas Red Chili Con Carne on the competitive chili cooking circuit.

This cut is very versatile in how it can be prepared. While the preferred method is slow-smoking, tri-tip can also be marinated or seasoned with a dry rub, and cooked over high heat on a grill, on a rotisserie, or in an oven. After cooking, the meat is sliced across the grain before serving.

Tri-tip may be more difficult to find in some areas of the country, but because it comes from the loin portion of the cow, any sirloin or tenderloin cut will make a suitable alternative.

RELISH: A relish is a cooked or pickled, chopped vegetable or fruit food item, typically used as a condiment. The item generally consists of discernable vegetable or fruit pieces in a sauce, although the sauce is subordinate in character to the vegetable or fruit pieces. It might consist of a single type of vegetable or fruit, or a combination, and the fruits or vegetables might be coarsely or finely chopped, but generally, a relish is not as smooth as a sauce-type condiment, such as ketchup. The overall taste sensation might be sweet or savory, hot or mild, but it is generally a strong flavor that adds excitement to or complements the primary food item it is served with.

Chutneys might be considered a type of relish. Crosse & Blackwell says, "Chutney is typically made with fruit; relish is normally made with vegetables."

In the U.S., the most common commercially available relishes are pickle relish. Two variants are hamburger relish (pickle relish in a ketchup base or sauce) and hotdog relish (pickle relish in a mustard base or sauce). Other readily available commercial relishes in the U.S. include corn relish.

Heinz, Vlasic, and Claussen are well known in the U.S. as producers of pickles and relishes.

Pickle relish can be mixed with mayonnaise to make tartar sauce, and piccalilli can be mixed with mayonnaise or crème fraîche to make remoulade.

RECIPES

Santa Maria Style BBQ Tri Tip
Serves: 4-6
  • 2 tablespoons kosher salt
  • 1 tablespoon garlic salt
  • 1 tablespoon freshly ground black pepper
  • One two-and-a-half pound tri-tip roast, fat trimmed
  • Canola oil
1. Heat the grill to high
2. Combine the salt, garlic salt and pepper in a small bowl. Rub both sides of the beef with the rub and drizzle with a few tablespoons of the oil. Place on the grill and cook until golden brown on both sides and cooked to medium-rare doneness, about 15 minutes total. Remove from the grill, let rest for 5 minutes before slicing across the grain into thin slices.

Santa Maria Pinquito Bean Relish
  • 1/2-pound slab of bacon, finely diced
  • 1 medium Spanish onion, finely diced
  • 1/2 poblano chile, finely diced
  • 2 cloves garlic, finely chopped
  • 2 cans pinto beans, drained, rinsed and drained again
  • Salt and pepper
1. Heat a large sauté pan over medium heat. Add the bacon and cook until golden brown and the fat has rendered. Remove the bacon with a slotted spoon to a plate lined with paper towels.
2. Add the onion and poblano to the bacon fat in the pan and cook until soft, 3 to 4 minutes. Add the garlic and cook for 30 seconds. Add the beans and cook until warmed through. Fold in the cooked bacon and transfer to a medium bowl.

Tomato Relish
  • 2 ripe beefsteak tomatoes, finely diced
  • 1/2 small red onion, finely diced
  • 2 cloves garlic, finely chopped
  • 1 serrano or jalapeno chile, finely diced
  • 3 tablespoons olive oil
  • 2 tablespoons chopped fresh flat leaf parsley or cilantro
  • Salt and freshly ground black pepper
Combine all ingredients in a medium bowl and let sit at room temperature before serving.

Grilled French Bread
  • 1 loaf French bread, split lengthwise
  • 1-1/2 sticks unsalted butter, at room temperature
  • Salt and freshly ground black pepper
Place bread on grill, cut side down and cook until lightly golden brown, flip over and continue cooking for 30 seconds longer. Remove from the grill and spread the butter over the cut side and season with salt and pepper.

© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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