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B
arbecue fans can be funny. Gather a few
true believers together from different
parts of the country, and you’ll get
spirited conversations (read “borderline
arguments”) over a wide range of topics.
Loyalists from across the South will argue the
virtues of different cuts (St. Louis-style ribs
versus baby-backs), smoking woods (hickory,
oak, mesquite), cooking times (the longer the
better? Depends …), sauce recipes (sweet or
spicy?) or any other nuance that makes
their
regional variation on the style
absolutely superior
to any other.
But ask about what bread goes with their ’cue, and
there’s a near-universal consensus: sliced white bread.
Period.
It’s the one area where BBQ partisans can find consistent
common ground.With the exception of south Texas (where
saltine crackers and tortilla culture come into play) and parts of
the Appalachian South (where cornbread variations rule supreme),
white bread is the undisputed King of Barbecue Baked Goods.
Soft, pliable and wonderfully absorbent, good old-fashioned white
bread is the unanimous side starch for barbecue styles for sopping
up spicy grease and pools of sauce. In the hand, a springy slice acts
as the base of a sandwich or a utensil to grab meaty bits straight
from the plate. Stylistic variations crop up — double-thick Texas
toast and sesame-seeded burger buns are acceptable for sandwiches
— but they’re just slices adapted to special projects.
In a proper barbecue context, pillowy squares of sandwich bread are the
only real option.There aren’t choices for bread at a barbecue joint for the
same reason nobody orders a shrimp po-boy on toasted pumpernickel
or a double cheeseburger on a buttery croissant. Sure you
could
do it —
I mean it’s
possible —
but somehow, it’s just
not right
.
In the middle of a meal, white bread can be a functional extension
of a hungry diner’s fingers and an adult’s return to childhood —
better than a fork, and a perfect excuse to eat with your hands. A
“back to basics” way of connecting with your food, and the reason
why God gave us opposable thumbs.
Just about every city has its own local bakery with its own beloved
regional brand. Growing up in New Iberia, we bought loaves
of Evangeline Maid but dug into the plastic Holsum bag at my
grandparents’ in Baton Rouge. New Orleans and the Gulf Coast
was all about Bunny Bread, which confused me as a kid. (I mean,
bread made out of rabbits?)
But the grocery store staple was on the picnic table whenever my
grandfather smoked brisket for Fourth of July. I started noticing that
it was always the last thing to go on a multi-meat plate at church
barbecues, or a smoke-stained backroads rib joints in Alabama,
legendary pig joints in Chapel Hill or meat markets outside Austin.
The soft “phhffft” of slices on the plate was always a welcome sound
that meant impending action — like a ref ’s whistle before kickoff.
We think about barbecue in the modern context — mostly home
and restaurants these days —but for many barbecue styles, the slow-
smoked specialty was inextricably linked to meat markets and small
community grocery stores. In his book
Legends of Texas Barbecue
,
author Robb Walsh describes the store-centric menu of early Texas
’cue (smoked meat or sausage, sliced onions, pickles, saltines or a
loaf of white bread) as a practical workaround to racial segregation
— and one of the few ways for black and Mexican cotton pickers to
get a working meal in an era of segregated restaurants. When you
couldn’t sit in the dining room, you built a meal from the grocery
aisles and meat market so you could get back to your job.
And decades later, soft slices of humble sandwich bread are a
part of the American culinary songbook and an inextricable part
of barbecue culture. A little softness to go with the spice. And a
knowledge that sometimes, the simplest option makes the meal that
much better.
BBQ TRADITIONS
Slice of LIFE
by
Pableaux Johnson
Ribs and white bread, Dreamland Bar-B-Que, Tuscaloosa, AL
Photo courtesy Alabama Tourism Department
www.ilovealabamafood.com