Is it a dinner option/open later yet?
Is it a dinner option/open later yet?
Bummer
I know right now they are selling from 11 AM to Sold Out but they are using the same model as Aaron Franklin and his cutoff is 3 PM for quality control purposes.... I'll be interested in seeing if they stick to it because a big part of the issue with the consistency of OKC BBQ is that lack of quality control because they use the quantity over quality model.
BBQ restaurants that are open all day are either holding their meats all day or staggering their cook times to try and meet demand. They would rather give you a lesser quality product than tell you they don't have something. Which is almost a necessity in this age of instant gratification.... Consumers don't like to be told no.
I had a former co-worker tell me once that he would rather go to Rib Crib than Klemm's because the first week Klemm's had their brick and mortar location open they ran out of ribs the night he was there. He told me "Rib Crib never runs out of ribs!"..... I told him to get the hell out of my office.![]()
^^ yep, have had a few friends suggest going here for dinner and have not understood why they operate the way they do.
This place should be open today, right? I should have a chance to try it out for lunchtime.
Do they take credit or do you need cash?
Stopped by at 12:30. ~10 people ahead of me. Got ribs, sausage, and the burnt end beans.
Something in the burnt end beans made it taste bitter.
Ribs were good, had some pull to them, didn't fall off the bone for sure.
Sausage definitely caught me off guard. Couldn't slice through the skin they used to hold it all together. In addition, it didn't seem like it was processed long enough as I could see bits and pieces and separate them.
I'd rank them for myself as the following
Brisket
Ribs
Pulled pork
Sausage
Have yet to find a side that I'd order again (only chipotle slaw left).
They had a limited amount of beef ribs the last couple of days, the pic on FB looked great!
Most people refer to it as Elgin Style due to Elgin, TX being known as the Sausage Capital of Texas.
I generally refer to it as a Czech style sausage. Every place of worth in Central Texas makes their own version of it and for as simple a sausage as it is... Trying to find a recipe for it is like trying to find a Leprechaun hanging out with the Easter Bunny...... It's usually a beef/pork mixture seasoned with salt, pepper, probably a little garlic or onion powder, some kind of binder, possibly powdered milk, and the hot version have cayenne..... I'm pretty sure they hot smoke them as they are a fresh sausage with no curing salts in them.... They were originally made with what ever pieces of meat were leftover at the butcher shop at the end of the day.... So originally the beef to pork ratio changed from day to day depending on what was left.
There's really two kinds, and it's the maybe a little garlic that makes the difference. Both are coarse-ground with a snap. German style lacks the garlic, Czech has the garlic. Both are common in the area, the reason Elgin's is called hot guts is due to the (formerly, alas) heavy presence of pepper. If you were in Southside Market and said you could distinguish the bits and couldn't cut through the skin, they'd thank you for the compliment and tell you to just pick it up and eat it.
I had heard that Southside was making the original hot guts again.
I'm very happy that Maple's is using a local sausage maker (Native Meat Company) but I really wish one of two things would happen.... Native Meat would develop their version of the Elgin Style sausage or Maple's would source some sausages from Southside or Meyer's.... Even Aaron Franklin rolled out his own version of the sausage just within the last few weeks.
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