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October 2009

7 x 10 in.
255 pp., 108 color and 12 b&w photos, 1 map

ISBN: 978-0-292-71998-9
$21.95, paperback
33% website discount: $14.71

 
 
 
     

Republic of Barbecue
Stories Beyond the Brisket

By Elizabeth S. D. Engelhardt
With Marsha Abrahams, Marvin C. Bendele, Gavin Benke, Andrew M. Busch, Eric Covey, Dave Croke, Melanie Haupt, Carly A. Kocurek, Rebecca Onion, Lisa Jordan Powell, and Remy Ramirez
Foreword by John T. Edge

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt

 

"Tar Heels probably shouldn't own up to liking Texas barbecue, but we have no hesitation about saying that we love this book about it. The voices of the folks who make it happen and this book's wonderful photographs add up to a splendid portrait of Lone Star barbeculture."

—John Shelton Reed and Dale Volberg Reed, authors of Holy Smoke: The Big Book of North Carolina Barbecue

It's no overstatement to say that the state of Texas is a republic of barbecue. Whether it's brisket, sausage, ribs, or chicken, barbecue feeds friends while they catch up, soothes tensions at political events, fuels community festivals, sustains workers of all classes, celebrates brides and grooms, and even supports churches. Recognizing just how central barbecue is to Texas's cultural life, Elizabeth Engelhardt and a team of eleven graduate students from the University of Texas at Austin set out to discover and describe what barbecue has meant to Texans ever since they first smoked a beef brisket.

Republic of Barbecue presents a fascinating, multifaceted portrait of the world of barbecue in Central Texas. The authors look at everything from legendary barbecue joints in places such as Taylor and Lockhart to feedlots, ultra-modern sausage factories, and sustainable forests growing hardwoods for barbecue pits. They talk to pit masters and proprietors, who share the secrets of barbecue in their own words. Like side dishes to the first-person stories, short essays by the authors explore a myriad of barbecue's themes—food history, manliness and meat, technology, nostalgia, civil rights, small-town Texas identity, barbecue's connection to music, favorite drinks such as Big Red, Dr. Pepper, Shiner Bock, and Lone Star beer—to mention only a few. An ode to Texas barbecue in films, a celebration of sports and barbecue, and a pie chart of the desserts that accompany brisket all find homes in the sidebars of the book, while photographic portraits of people and places bring readers face-to-face with the culture of barbecue.

Elizabeth S. D. Engelhardt, Associate Professor of American Studies at the University of Texas at Austin, writes and studies food, gender, race, and class in the southern United States. She and eleven of her graduate students set out to study the life and culture of barbecue in central Texas. They're a diverse group that includes native Texans, people from other barbecue strongholds of the U.S. South, a Chicagoan, and even a couple of northeasterners. They all share a passion for listening to stories, debating and trying to understand American cultures, and eating lots of barbecue.

Bridwell Texas History Series

 Of Related Interest McSpadden, Texas BBQ
Texas Monthly, Texas Monthly On...Food
 Offsite Interview recordings hosted by the Southern Foodways Alliance

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