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24

MY

ROUSES

EVERYDAY

MARCH | APRIL 2017

the

Barbecue

issue

B

ig Mike Lewis, pitmaster and owner of Big Mike’s BBQ

Smokehouse in Houma, believes in patience, family and the

kind of good barbecue that’s worth studying for a lifetime.

Lewis grew up in Florida and learned about barbecue eating at

places like Big John’s Alabama BBQ inTampa, an open pit barbecue

restaurant founded in 1968 by the late Rev. John A. “Big John”

Stephens and still run by the Stephens family. “There’s generations

of barbecue knowledge there,”Lewis

says.He

ate barbecue wherever

he could find it and became a dedicated student of the old joints

that dot Texas and the Gulf Coast. “I guess barbecue got in my

blood.”

After years in the Sunshine State, Lewis and his wife, Judith, moved

to Houma in 2007 so they could be near his father, Harold Lewis,

who had recently retired from running a mechanic shop. “Pop was

75 and I just wanted to spend time with him. Louisiana was calling

my name.”

The couple decided to open a restaurant and soon found a spot on

the West Side of Houma — a former Tastee Donuts — and Big

Mike’s BBQ Smokehouse opened for business.

Like Big John’s (their inspiration in Florida), Big Mike’s was a

family affair fueled by hard work and cooperation. Some parts of it

never change — even after a long day of tending fires and serving

folks, someone has to rise well before dawn to light the pits.

And for years, that job fell to Big Mike’s dad.

“Dad would get up so I didn’t have to. He knew I was already

working 12 to 14 hours a day.That man always had my back.”

The Lewis men worked side by side to build the restaurant. “Dad

didn’t take a salary the entire time he worked with me. In 2012 I

retired him. I said, ‘Dad, the train is moving; this is your stop. It’s

time for you to kick back and enjoy your life.’I sent him a retirement

check every single week, but he never spent a single cent.”

Things ran pretty smoothly until an electrical fire totaled the West

Side restaurant. Lewis scrambled to find a new spot, eventually

relocating to a Shell gas station right by the Rouses Market in the

Village East Shopping Center. “A gas station wasn’t our first choice

for a barbecue restaurant, but it actually ended up being a good

location for us,” he says.

Lewis eventually moved from the old station to a new outpost

on Barrow Street, and now he’s planning a second location in

Thibodaux.

He’s also created his own line of barbecue sauces,

rubs and fully cooked sausages, which he debuted

at Rouses. “We made a barbecue rub, which is for

brisket and pork, and a poultry rub, which we

use for grilled chicken and smoked turkey. Our

original sauce is a savory sauce, then we have a

sweet heat version.”

Every pitmaster dreams about having his own line

of food, but what was it like for him to see his vision

come true? “When I actually walked in and saw my

products on Rouses shelves? Well, I can’t begin to

describe how great that felt. I’m at Rouses every day,

and I still get excited when I see my stuff.”

The

Hog

-

Father

by

Tim Acosta, Rouses Marketing Director