The best Texas barbecue
#1
Posted 21 September 2005 - 10:30 PM
However, Texas can be further divided into two different styles, sauce and without. From an Austin perspective, Salt Lick is the epitome of the sauce style. Their brisket is remarkably tender but the cooking process robs the meat of its moist fat. The no sauce style, as done by Louie and John Mueller, depends on the smoke and the spartan salt and pepper rub for flavor. If one had to choose between these two styles, I think it's obvious that the no sauce style is more Texas and True as it allows the meat to really shine through. After all, when judging steaks one would never even consider anything marinated.
Brisket is the cut that is the most important in Texas BBQ. I do like sausage, beef ribs and turkey but there really is nothing as quintessentially Texas as brisket. Sure, I've laid down a lot of seemingly arbitrary rules (Texas style, no sauce, brisket) but if one were to go about the contentious -- and possibly pointless -- task of crowning the King of Texas BBQ, one has to lay down some rules.
Texas Monthly said/says the best in the state is Louie Mueller's in Taylor. I've been there about three times and I go to his grandson's John Mueller's in Austin all the time. I think Louie's is a cut above John's as the briskets I've had there are consistently better with deeper smoke rings and Louie's serves beef ribs while John's does not. There are actually only a few establishments in town that still use wood, and John's is one of the last.
Salt Lick is very good as well, but I've disqualified it because they employ the sauce style. It's not a blind disqualification though; if you ask me to simply choose whether Salt Lick or John Mueller's (or Louie's) is better I will flatly tell you that I prefer Mueller's.
I'm sure there are many many more establishments in our fair state that deserve attention, but as many of them are often located in remote locations it is not practical for me to go to them all, but I certainly hope to do so eventually.
#2
Posted 22 September 2005 - 05:01 AM
This should be an interesting thread. You've got courage, my friend!
Your rules may raise some hackles though; it seems to be skewing things in favor of Central TX/Austin barbecue styles, particularly the "no sauce" bit. That said, 3 of my top 5 would be Austin-area joints.
Some essential reading threads on the Texas Barbecue scene:
Texas Gluttony, Road Trip Across Texas: barbecue & more
Lockhart TX Barbecue
Tex Mex and BBQ in the Dallas Area
My top five, in my very limited experience:
1) Kreuz
2) Cooper's in Llano
3) Angelo's in Ft. Worth
4) Salt Lick
5) Goode Co. in Houston
Goode Co. was, for the longest time, my favorite, until I started tracking down the pantheon. I went there a few years back and was really disappointed (and sad) about how it didn't measure up any more. Everything seemed really underseasoned. Others who have been recently echo my sentiments as well. But I won't write it off just yet.
#3
Posted 22 September 2005 - 11:11 AM
1. City Market in Luling
2. Kreuz in Lockhart (I've still not tried Smitty's due to the family feud! A Kreuz employee brainwashed me before the move.)
3. Williams Smokehouse in Houston
#4
Posted 22 September 2005 - 11:35 AM
personally, I much prefer the brisket in Austin, and the ribs in Dallas.
The best ribs I've had in the Dallas are at Clark's in Tioga.
The best brisket was at Smitty's.
BTW, I know a lot of people rave about the sausage that they sell in the Lockhart area, but I don't really care for it. Does anyone else feel the same?
BBQ should NEVER be sauced. As Ray Green from North Main BBQ once told me, "the only reason to use sauce, is to hide a mistake"
#5
Posted 22 September 2005 - 11:57 AM
Edited by joiei, 22 September 2005 - 11:57 AM.
#6
Posted 22 September 2005 - 11:59 AM
Here's my list:
1. City Market, Luling
2. Louie Muellers, Taylor
3. Williams Smokehouse, Houston
4. tie Kruetz and Smitty's, Lockhart
5. Thelma's, Houston
6. Coopers, Llano
7. Littles, Dickinson
8. Gonzalez Meat Market, Gonzalez
#7
Posted 25 September 2005 - 09:16 AM
I also second Thelma's in Houston. Anywhere that fills my baked potato with a pound of chopped brisket is thumbs up in my book.
Uhhhh huh
Edited by tetsujustin, 25 September 2005 - 09:17 AM.
#8
Posted 25 September 2005 - 11:03 AM
Also, Black's.
Did I mention Black's?
#9
Posted 26 September 2005 - 01:10 PM
#10
Posted 04 October 2005 - 09:24 PM
City Market, Luling (mostly because of the delicious brisket - but their mustardy sauce is definitely the best)
Smitty's, Lockhart (probably the best barbecue i've ever had). Also, I don't love barbecue sausage but theirs tastes much less processed than other central TX snausage.
And then Cooper's in Mason. Much better than Llano and better atmosphere.
#11
Posted 06 October 2005 - 09:03 PM
Anyway . . . The last word in brisket that I have wrapped my chops around was . . . hold onto your blue jeans . . . At a little place in Pahoa, Hawaii (Big Island outside of Hilo) called Big Jake's. What I had was slices from a little brisket flat with a "red ring" almost all the way through and the juice was running as he sliced it for my sandwich. Sauce would have been criminal.
My own brisket is better than just about anybody's that I buy out. But I have never been able to duplicate Big Jake's. I think I may need to make a trip in the name of research.
"Having spent most of my life searching for truth in the excitement of science, I am now in search of the perfectly seared foie gras without any sweet glop." Linda LaRose
#12
Posted 11 October 2005 - 05:48 PM
If you don't already know the difference, well, your opinion on the subject doesn't really matter until you do - except, though, as to what you simply like.
Note: barbeque NOT cooked in a pit is NOT real barbeque. Start from there...
#13
Posted 11 October 2005 - 06:02 PM
Why don't you give us a run down on "real BBQ"First of all there is a difference between "barbeque" and "real barbeque".
If you don't already know the difference, well, your opinion on the subject doesn't really matter until you do - except, though, as to what you simply like.
Note: barbeque NOT cooked in a pit is NOT real barbeque. Start from there...
#14
Posted 11 October 2005 - 06:49 PM
Although, when taken seperately, Salt Lick ties with Stubb's, IMHO for best sauce. Just to throw that info out there.
#15
Posted 11 October 2005 - 07:26 PM
First of all there is a difference between "barbeque" and "real barbeque".
If you don't already know the difference, well, your opinion on the subject doesn't really matter until you do - except, though, as to what you simply like.
Note: barbeque NOT cooked in a pit is NOT real barbeque. Start from there...
Salt Lick is cooked in a brick oven, John Mueller's is cooked in a pit. I think perhaps what is more important though is the fuel used, hardwood oak being essential.
#17
Posted 12 October 2005 - 08:57 AM
The first place I found was this place called Bubba's in Ennis. The brisket alone was worth the trip there. That and the fact that they actually know how to cook a steak works well in their favor. I pass by this place all the time on my trips from Dallas to Houston, but this was the first time I stopped there. I will be making this stop all the time now.
The other joint is a place called Ernie's in LaPorte. It's a total dive where you get your food served on sheets of butcher paper and cheap paper plates. The pulled pork was great as was the brisket. I plan on dropping in here again on my next trip down to Houston.
#18
Posted 13 October 2005 - 10:16 PM
#20
Posted 15 October 2005 - 07:57 AM
Where are they?
And didn't you just violate the no sauce rule?
#21
Posted 15 October 2005 - 02:10 PM
Louie Mueller's BBQ in Taylor is the classic. John is his grandson and he opened his restaurant about five years ago. They had a family feud of some kind -- barbecue feud, how Texas! -- but after Louie passed away a few years ago they patched things up.
John Meuller's is located at 1917 Manor Rd. Right next to Hoover's Cooking and El Chile.
#22
Posted 22 October 2005 - 08:34 PM





I wonder if that sign advertising the availability of wi-fi is a joke, to trick city-slickers.

Beef ribs, brisket, sausage, potato salad.
Overall, just a tab better than John Mueller's. It's the best barbecue I've ever had, though my experience is still limited. We were lucky and got an excellent, very moist cut of brisket. Beef ribs are one of my favorites. They're so huge, like brontosaurus ribs!
#23
Posted 22 October 2005 - 08:48 PM
Beef ribs, brisket, sausage, potato salad.
Overall, just a tab better than John Mueller's. It's the best barbecue I've ever had, though my experience is still limited. We were lucky and got an excellent, very moist cut of brisket. Beef ribs are one of my favorites. They're so huge, like brontosaurus ribs!
see now that's why you never degrassier your bbq sauce. It looks so much cooler when you take a picture.
I thought it was a cup of beer at first. really weird looking beer.
As much as I like the size of beef ribs, I've never really had a good rack of them. I've never had it so that the flavor is even near as comparable with pork ribs. It usually has a taste with less of a pronounced flavor to me, whereas pork (when done right) is just chew after chew of mouthwatering goodness.
Then again, maybe I've just never had it where someone's cooked it correctly. We'll see.
Maybe you should start another discussion for this but, how was the mushroom festival? What kinds were out?
#24
Posted 22 October 2005 - 10:36 PM
see now that's why you never degrassier your bbq sauce. It looks so much cooler when you take a picture.
I thought it was a cup of beer at first. really weird looking beer.
Haha, you're right, it looks really cool. Louie's sauce is much thinner than John's. It's really difficult to use. I like to mix it with the sides like potato salad or coleslaw. John's sauce was better.
As much as I like the size of beef ribs, I've never really had a good rack of them. I've never had it so that the flavor is even near as comparable with pork ribs. It usually has a taste with less of a pronounced flavor to me, whereas pork (when done right) is just chew after chew of mouthwatering goodness.
Then again, maybe I've just never had it where someone's cooked it correctly. We'll see.
Aside from being a bit chewier and not being as fatty, I think it has more flavor than brisket. Neither Mueller seems to do pork ribs right, or at least it's tough and dry to me. Not sure if there really is a "right" way to do it. The salt and pepper rub and deep smoke rings make it quite flavorful, but I prefer pork ribs to be cooked with a sauce so that the meat becomes very tender. RO's Outpost in Spicewood makes an excellent sauced-up rib end platter.
Maybe you should start another discussion for this but, how was the mushroom festival? What kinds were out?
As requested: Texas Mushroom Festival 2005, Report.
#25
Posted 28 October 2005 - 06:07 AM
#26
Posted 02 November 2005 - 11:35 AM
. . . . .
Beef ribs are one of my favorites. They're so huge, like brontosaurus ribs!
Beef ribs are so hard to find. Those look wonderful. When I was a little girl back in the early 50s, my grandfather used to go to Otto's in Houston on Saturday and bring BBQ home for lunch. He always brought me at least one beef rib. He told me they were brontosaur ribs. (I was into dinosaurs. Now they don't even call it a brontosaur anymore.
"Having spent most of my life searching for truth in the excitement of science, I am now in search of the perfectly seared foie gras without any sweet glop." Linda LaRose
#27
Posted 02 November 2005 - 01:19 PM
Kent, what do you think about theTexas BBQ page list?
Those results are pretty much in line with everyone's opinions in this thread. I've decided that it is nearly impossible to crown a number one as so much can vary from one cut of brisket to another. Does a restaurant deserve the crown because the cut they served to the judge that day happened to be the most moist? It's reasonable to form a top five, but any less than that and you're just counting on the luck of the draw.
#28
Posted 02 November 2005 - 04:17 PM
Link to Rudys: http://rubysbbq.com/
#29
Posted 02 November 2005 - 05:52 PM
Ruby's does make a decent crawfish etouffee, but still not as good -- or as cheap -- as Quality Seafood.
Edited by Kent Wang, 02 November 2005 - 05:52 PM.
#30
Posted 03 November 2005 - 12:55 PM
I have been to Ruby's and to be honest, everything they do ends up way too dry. Next time you're in Austin, please check out John Mueller's. I introduced one friend of mine that was an ardent Ruby's fan to Mueller's and he was blown away.
Ruby's does make a decent crawfish etouffee, but still not as good -- or as cheap -- as Quality Seafood.
Kent,
Thanks. Ive never found that about Rubys but i promise that while im down for thanksgiving (so much better in TX then NY) I will go to Joh Muellers (my father in law told me last night that we have gone and i didnt like it but i think he was remember our trip to Arts Rib Shack) and then right to Rubys and compare the two in a post.
Glad someone has at least heard of the place.
RM













