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Smoke & Spice - Revised Edition: Cooking With Smoke, the Real Way to Barbecue (Non)

Smoke & Spice - Revised Edition: Cooking With Smoke, the Real Way to Barbecue (Non)
By Cheryl Alters Jamison, Bill Jamison

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Product Description

Smoke & Spice, the James Beard Book Award winner that has sold more than a million copies and is the only authoritative book on the subject of genuine smoke-cooked barbecue, is now completely revised and updated. Outdoor cooking experts Cheryl and Bill Jamison have added 100 brand-new recipes, the very latest information on tools, fuels, equipment, and technique, and loads more of their signature wit, charm, and reverence for ‘Q.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #896 in Books
  • Published on: 2003-03-05
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 1.43" h x 7.24" w x 9.20" l, 1.97 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 496 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review
Barbecue is not about grilling food fast over high heat. That's something else, delicious in its own right, but something else entirely. Barbecue is about marginal cuts of meat (for the most part), about smoke, about fires burning so low and slow you hardly ever see the flicker of a flame. Barbecue is about succulent pork ribs as dark as sin just falling off the bone and dripping with glorious sweet pork godliness. Or enjoying the effects that 12 to 18 hours of smoking has on beef brisket.

The trick is, how do you do it? How do you master a cooking technique all but ignored in favor of fast and hot? The answer lies in Smoke & Spice. Authors Jamison and Jamison provide all the information you're ever going to need to run a real barbecue. Tips and techniques abound on every page--accompanied with countless recipes that stretch the barbecue imagination. And seeing that one cannot live on barbecue alone (though that's a challenge well worth considering) there are just as many recipes included for all the good food that accompanies barbecue--from Scalloped Green Chile Potatoes to South-of-the-Border Garlic Soup to Buttermilk Onion Rings and even Bourbon Peaches. If smoke in your eyes makes your mouth water, this is the primer for you! --Schuyler Ingle

From Publishers Weekly
Nine years and a half million copies after its first edition, this handy resource for barbecue done the right way returns in an expanded volume. The Jamisons have added an extra 100 recipes as well as 20 new recipe variations. Classics like a Humble Hot Dog, which demands a bun of "squishy white bread," and Cajun County Ribs sopped in cider vinegar and Worcestershire share the pages with Jerked Salmon done Jamaican style in a sauce of tamarind, honey and ginger. Sometimes worlds collide as with Southwest Stew on a Stick, chili-powdered sirloin glazed in beer and molasses and served as a kebob. Given the proper amount of smoke and time, even the lowliest of meats find dignity, as with the Triple Play Tube Steak, wherein a two-pound chunk of bologna is draped in sauce and smoked for two hours; the sauce caramelizes, making for a sticky-sweet sandwich. An at-first-surprising inclusion is the Kentucky Burgoo, but it turns out to be merely a mix of chicken, beef and lamb, forgoing the possum and squirrel that sometimes turn up in the stew. The authors end the book with a selection of chilly desserts, such as Peach Melba Ice Cream, and cool drinks like Cold Buttered Rum.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
Most "barbecue" cookbooks are actually about grilling rather than smoke cooking, which is true barbecue. The Jamisons focus on the real thing, describing in detail the techniques and equipment necessary and offering dozens of tantalizing recipes for barbecuing almost anything. They tend to lapse into the corny tone the topic of barbecuing often seems to inspire and favor recipe names like "Going Whole Hog" or "Ragin' Rabbit," but there's lots of information here, along with plenty of good recipes. Recommended.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.