Michael Symon's playing with fire BBQ and more from the grill, smoker, and fireplace

Michael Symon, 1969-

Book - 2018

In preparing to open his barbecue restaurant, Michael Symon enthusiastically sampled smoked meat from across America. The 150 finger-licking, lip-smacking recipes here draw inspiration from his favourites. Michael offers expert guidance on working with different styles of grills and smokers, choosing aromatic woods for smoking, cooking various cuts of meat, and successfully pairing proteins with rubs, sauces, and sides. Print run 125,000.

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Subjects
Genres
Cookbooks
Published
New York : Clarkson Potter/Publishers [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Michael Symon, 1969- (author)
Other Authors
Ed (Edward Charles) Anderson (photographer), Douglas Trattner (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
239 pages : color illustrations ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780804186582
  • Introduction
  • Pork
  • Beef
  • Chicken
  • Seafood
  • Lamb
  • Vegetables and sides
  • BBQ sauces, relishes, and rubs
  • Acknowledgements
  • Index.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The Chew cohost Symon, via his restaurant Mabel's BBQ and this, his first live-fire cookbook, lays claim to ownership of Cleveland-style barbecue. Hallmarks include smoke from the wood of fruit trees that are abundant in northeast Ohio, specifically apple and cherry, as well as spices and meats that reflect the city's Eastern European heritage. Also, there is the crucial ingredient of time: Pastrami is brined for four days and smoked for 12 hours. Pork belly is cured for a week and smoked for about three hours before being sliced into slabs of bacon. Poultry is faster but requires additional props: Symon's chickens are hung from a string in a fireplace, spatchcocked and weighed down with bricks, covered in hay, or mounted on a partially full beer can atop a grill. Seafood options range from smoked sturgeon to grilled walleye wrapped in corn husks. With just 42 main-dish recipes spread across the first 167 pages, the gaps are filled with an overabundance of "pitmaster profiles," in which barbecue chefs from across the country are briefly interviewed and their own eateries promoted. Meanwhile, Ed Anderson's color photography of savory cuts encrusted with dry rub or slathered with sauce is nearly enough to make Cleveland synonymous with mouthwatering. This is an excellent guide to live-fire cooking. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Introduction My Love Letter to Live-Fire Cooking Mabel's BBQ in Cleveland, Ohio, is a restaurant conceived from my lifelong obsession with live-fire cooking. Whether it's grilling rib eyes, smoking lamb ribs, baking pizza in a homemade wood-fired oven, or just cooking hot dogs on a stick over a campfire, I have been in love with these primitive styles of cooking for as long as I can remember. So it's no surprise that for almost as long, I've been begging my business partners to let me open a barbecue restaurant. After close to twenty years of pleading, my wife, Liz, and business partner, Doug, finally relented, and in 2016 we opened Mabel's in downtown Cleveland.    My taste for barbecue came from my years of traveling around the country filming television shows like the Food Network's Burgers, Brew & 'Que , where I visited the country's absolute best barbecue joints and learned a lot about the various types of regional barbecue and the folks who make it. It quickly became apparent that all of the best pitmasters--regardless of where they happened to live and cook--prepared barbecue that was specific to their own particular region. That meant grilling or smoking indigenous animals over native hardwoods in equipment custom-built for that purpose. Everything from the cuts of meat and spice rubs to the sauces and sides is based on literally generations of local history, experience, and cultural preference.   That's why when the time (finally!) came for me to open up a barbecue restaurant of my own, I knew that I wanted to make it unique to my hometown. That meant crafting a style and menu that draw upon Cleveland's rich cultural heritage, much of which is firmly rooted in eastern Europe. We season meats with Jewish deli-style pastrami spices; our kielbasa is made by a sixty-year-old Ukrainian butcher at the West Side Market; we smoke over locally sourced apple- and cherrywoods; we serve Hungarian-based sides like spaetzle and cabbage; our tangy mustard-based sauce is designed around the legendary local stadium-style mustard Bertman Ball Park.    It's not that I don't love Carolina chopped pork, and Memphis dry ribs, and Kansas City burnt ends, and Texas hot links--I do, I love them all! But I had no desire to attempt to shoehorn one or all of those styles into my Cleveland restaurant. I wanted the sights, smells, and flavors to be reminiscent of the foods we grew up eating; otherwise, it wouldn't feel authentic. It wouldn't feel right.    And that's probably the most important thing that I picked up during all my travels. The BBQ folks who do it best, whether it's been for five years or five decades, have a genuine passion for the craft that comes straight from the heart. There's an obsessive dedication to step up their game every single day; to put in the work and time to make a brisket that is 1 percent better tomorrow than it was today. Despite their regional differences, barbecue pros--the true practitioners of low and slow--are all members of the same clan.    And I couldn't be more thrilled to join them and those who came before them. We've been blessed at Mabel's to have some of the biggest names in barbecue walk through our door and try our food. The response by them--and, more important, Clevelander diners--has been overwhelmingly positive. That tells us that we're doing something right and that this Cleveland-style barbecue just might have some legs after all! Excerpted from Michael Symon's Playing with Fire: BBQ and More from the Grill, Smoker, and Fireplace: a Cookbook by Michael Symon, Douglas Trattner All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.