Funky those sauces have my interest. I love the Carolina pulled pork style of bbq. When I attended a relative's wedding in Greenville, they catered in bbq. Oh man I was hooked from then on. I have made some various vinegar/mustard sauces to compliment the pulled pork but I don't feel like I ever really nailed it. Here is whats going on at my house today...
Face your fear, accept your war.
Looks good, Ten-32!
You ought to try those sauces I posted if your interested. The Greenville BBQ you tried probably had Maurice's sauce or something very similar. The Wadmalaw sauce I posted has a more low country flavor, with more vinegar, tomato, peppers, and sweetness. Maurice's sauce will have a stronger mustard flavor but less of everything else.
In addition to smoked meats, mustard sauce is good on grilled pork chops and chicken as well. Apply it at the very end and let it char a little bit on the meat... good God man!
"I'm fucking furious, I'm violently angry, and I like it. If you don't know what that feels like then I feel bad for you"
Indeed!
Here is a recipe I found...the guy says it is eastern North Carolina sauce...your thoughts?
In a med sauce pan put 1 and 1/2 cups of white vinegar
1/2 cup apple cider vinegar
1 tbls. red pepper
1 tsp. paprika
1 tsp. onion powder
1/2 tsp. cumin
1/4 tsp. sage
1 tsp. black pepper
1 1/2tsp salt ( sea salt)
1 level tsp. dark brown sugar.
Bring to boil and turn off.
Allow to cool.
Last edited by TEN-32; 04-26-2014 at 10:25 AM.
Face your fear, accept your war.
"I'm fucking furious, I'm violently angry, and I like it. If you don't know what that feels like then I feel bad for you"
Being North or South isn't geographic, it's cultural. If your state is famous for barbeque, is generally conservative and religious, then you are a Southern State.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture..._United_States
Sounds like Missourians have to decide on an individual basis whether they are southern or not.Missouri
Missouri is classified as a Midwestern state by the Census Bureau and many of its residents. St. Louis was known as the "Gateway to the West" when settlement was expanding. Some observers include the Missouri Ozarks with the Highland South and its predominantly Scots-Irish culture. The northern edge of the Ozark Plateau was settled chiefly by mid-to-late 19th century German immigrants, however, who founded numerous vineyards and wineries. Due to this, Missouri was the second-largest wine-producing state before Prohibition, which destroyed the industry. Wineries have been rebuilt since the later decades of the 20th century, and Missouri wineries are competing well in national festivals. Part of the Missouri River valley, from beyond St. Louis suburbs in St. Charles County to east of Jefferson City, is known as the Missouri Rhineland because of the extensive vineyards and wineries based on German immigrant tradition and descendants.
In the antebellum years, many settlers from Upper South states such as Virginia and Kentucky migrated to the counties of central and western Missouri along the Missouri River, where they could cultivate tobacco and hemp. Because these southerners brought their culture and slaveholding with them, Missouri was admitted to the Union as a slaveholding state. In modern times, this area became known as Little Dixie. Before the Civil War, six of the counties included in this area had populations in which more than 25% were enslaved African Americans, the highest concentrations in the state outside the cotton plantations in the Mississippi Delta.[53] Antebellum houses typical of the South still stand in some of Little Dixie, although for the most part all of Little Dixie is considered to be Midwestern by modern standards. All the crops grown there today are corn, soybeans and wheat, of which the area was far more suited than for Southern crops like cotton, hemp or tobacco, the latter three of which essentially ceased their presence there after the Civil War along with the dominance of Southern culture. However, the Missouri bootheel is still very much culturally southern.
"I'm fucking furious, I'm violently angry, and I like it. If you don't know what that feels like then I feel bad for you"
I'll stick with my two major litmus tests for southern culture:
1: Do you like boiled peanuts?
2: What side did your family fight on?
"I'm fucking furious, I'm violently angry, and I like it. If you don't know what that feels like then I feel bad for you"
German influence as well as Scots-Irish is very strong here. I've always considered myself a Midwesterner and I think most around me do too. Now, if you head down toward the boot-heel, it feels more southern and you start to see a lot of confederate flags. Here in the central part of Missouri you very rarely see the confederate flag, but you see lots of the stars and stripes.
In truth I think its best to describe Missouri as a transitional state. Part southern, part midwestern. Also, down in the south western part of the state you start getting some influence of cowboy culture, from southern Kansas and Oklahoma.
I dunno, it doesn't matter much to me, all I know is I truly love ol Mizzou.
Sounds good. The local sauces have corn syrup to sweeten it, to thicken it, and to give it the ability to caramelize when it chars on a grill.
SC mustard base is a totally different animal than NC vinegar. With the recipe you posted earlier about the vinegar I thought you were going for NC.
The one you made sounds like it would be good to put on before you slow cook it. I like the thicker sauce for grilling or putting on sandwiches.
"I'm fucking furious, I'm violently angry, and I like it. If you don't know what that feels like then I feel bad for you"
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