The Evolution of the Best Barbecue in Indianapolis
If any gastronomical treat could give
the proverbially American apple pie a run for its money, it might just be
barbecue. The culinary tradition of cooking meat low and slow over indirect
flame has become so prevalent over the years that the best barbecue inIndianapolis itself represents a sort of pop culture, spawning TV shows,
historically-focused road trips, and even fusion dishes like BBQ tacos.
Barbecue’s ability to reflect whatever might be hot at the time isn’t new; in
fact, barbecue has a long history of permeation, perhaps best experienced by
the ongoing barbecue feud that plagues the South. From the Atlantic to the
Gulf, bordered by the western outposts of Texas and Kansas City, the area of
the United States known as the “barbecue belt” houses four distinct barbecue
traditions – Carolina, Texas, Memphis and Kansas City. From where did these
traditions come, and how, in a relatively small region of the country, have
they evolved along such different paths? The history of American barbecue is as
diverse as the variations themselves, charting the path of a Caribbean cooking
style brought north by Spanish conquistadors, moved westward by settlers, and
seasoned with the flavors of European cultures.
The
history of barbecue-making
The first indigenous tribes Christopher
Columbus encountered on the island he named Hispaniola had developed a unique
method for cooking meat over an indirect flame, created using green wood to
keep the food (and wood) from burning. Reports indicate that the Spanish
referred to this new style of cooking as barbacoa: the original barbecue. As
the Spanish explorers who followed Columbus turned their expeditions north,
they brought the cooking technique with them. In 1540, close to present-day
Tupelo, Mississippi, the Chickasaw tribe, in the presence of explorer Hernando
de Soto, cooked a feast of pork over the barbacoa. Eventually, the technique
made its way to the colonies, traveling as far north as Virginia.
The
emergence of barbeque belts
Best barbecue in Indianapolis belt residents
would argue that the beef-based BBQ of Texas, or the mutton-based BBQ found in
Kentucky, doesn’t constitute authentic barbecue. To be real barbecue, purists
like North Carolina native Jim Villas (author of an article, first published in
Esquire, aptly titled “My Pig Beats Your Cow”) argue that the meat must be exclusively porcine, because
the original BBQ-ers of the southern colonies depended on the cheap,
low-maintenance nature of pig farming. Unlike cows, which required large
amounts of feed and enclosed spaces, pigs could be set loose in forests to eat
when food supplies were running low. The pigs, left to fend for themselves in
the wild, were much leaner upon slaughter, leading Southern to use the
slow-and-low nature of barbecue to tenderize the meat. And use it they did.
During the pre-Civil War years, Southerners ate an average of five pounds of
pork for every one pound of cattle. Their dependence on this cheap food supply
eventually became a point of patriotism, and Southerners took greater care raising
their pigs, refusing to export their meat to the northern states. By this time,
however, the relationship between the best barbecue in Indianapolis and pork
had been deeply forged.
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