Showing posts with label Salt Lick Cookbook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Salt Lick Cookbook. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Barbecue Like a Texas Legend

Here in Austin, we’re fortunate enough to enjoy “grill out” weather from Easter through Thanksgiving, but this weekend is special. It's Memorial Day and we want you to step up your cookout game with some tried-and-true recipes from some of the biggest barbecue players in Central Texas: Scott Roberts of the Salt Lick, Vencil Mares of the Taylor Café, and from the notebooks of Robb Walsh (we posted Robb's recipe for barbecued hog forequarter with East Carolina barbecue sauce and a Tennessee Hog Rub here). 

So as you prepare to honor the men and women in the armed forces, 
Barbecue Crossroads by Robb Walsh
Photographs by O. Rufus Lovett
take this opportunity to preserve and enjoy diverse American foodways and share them with your friends and family. For more recipes, check out Barbecue Crossroads: Notes and Recipes from a Southern Odyssey and The Salt Lick Cookbook: A Story of Land, Family, and Love. Happy Memorial Day!

Beer Joint Sausage

Vencil Mares of the Taylor Café learned how to make sausage at Southside Market in Elgin. This is a Bohemian Czech sausage recipe from Central Texas. 

If you cook sausage too quickly, you render the fat out of the “batter” of meat and fat inside the casing. This causes the sausage to squirt out all its fat. For best results, set the batter by cooking the sausage very slowly at first. Once the batter is set, you can cook the sausage over high heat.
  • 6 pounds beef rump roast or beef trimmings
  • 4 pounds fatty Boston butt pork roast
  • ¼ cup salt
  • 5 cloves garlic, minced
  • 3 tablespoons coarsely ground black pepper
  • 1 teaspoon cayenne
  • Medium hog casings (available at butcher shops) 
Vencil Mares’s bohunk sausage
with beans served at the bar at Taylor Café
Photo by O. Rufus Lovett from Barbecue Crossroads
 
Coarsely grind the beef rump and pork butt together through the ¼-inch plate of a meat grinder. In a large bowl, mix the ground meat with the salt, garlic, pepper, and cayenne. Knead the mixture with your hands until everything is well blended. Don’t rush the mixing—it takes a long time.

In a small skillet, heat a little oil. Form a meatball-size piece of the mixture into a small patty and fry it. Taste for seasonings, and adjust to your taste.

Soak the hog casings in lukewarm water. Stuff the meat mixture into the hog casings with a sausage stuffer or a pastry bag, and tie into 4- to 6-inch links. The sausage will keep for 3–4 days refrigerated, and up to 2 months frozen.

When you’re ready to cook the sausages, place them in a pan of warm water on the stove and slowly bring the heat up to 140°F to set the “batter.” Set up your smoker for indirect heat with a water pan. Sear the links over hot coals for 3 minutes on each side, or until nicely brown. Move them to indirect heat over a drip pan and smoke for 30 minutes, or until cooked through. Makes 10 pounds.

Variation: Vencil’s Turkey Sausage

Grind 8 pounds of boneless turkey and 2 pounds of fatty pork, and proceed with the recipe for Beer Joint Sausage.


Hush Puppies

In Texas, hush puppies are usually the size and shape of golf balls. In North Carolina, hush puppies are closer to the size and shape of your little finger. You shape them by rolling them between your palms. Or you can just drop the batter from a spoon into the hot oil and make them free-form shapes.

  • Peanut oil for deep-frying
  • 2 ½ cups yellow corn meal
  • 1 teaspoon soda
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 tablespoons sugar
  • 2 tablespoons flour
  • 1 tablespoon baking powder
  • 1 egg, beaten
  • 2 cups buttermilk
  • 3 tablespoons chopped onion 

Mix the dry ingredients in a bowl. Beat the milk and egg together and combine with the dry ingredients. Add the chopped onion. The batter should be stiff enough to hold its shape. If the batter is too soft, add more cornmeal until it is firm.
Gather a heaping tablespoon of batter and roll into a ball or a finger shape as desired and drop into 350°F oil and fry 3–4 minutes or until golden brown. Maintain the temperature and fry in batches of 4 or 5. Makes about 20 hush puppies.

Salt Lick Coleslaw
Interior spread from the Salt Lick Cookbook

The Salt Lick coleslaw is a shredded cabbage salad mixed with vinegar and oil dressing. Dousing the cabbage with mayonnaise wasn’t an option for settlers when they were traveling west in wagon trains. They had to use ingredients that wouldn’t spoil. We wanted to stay as true as possible to how my family originally made coleslaw.


Monday, December 23, 2013

Your Last Minute Local Bookstore Shopping List

This time of year can be overwhelming. We're here to help! We've whittled down some of our best-selling books to 13 gift recommendations. We stand by these selections, but if you want to explore more options, we've linked to related titles. Now place your order, check several names off your list at once, and keep your cool! Happy Holidays.


The Salt Lick Cookbook
By Scott Roberts and Jessica Dupuy



No trip to Austin or Central Texas is complete without a visit to the Salt Lick. Both foodies and home chefs alike will enjoy the family recipes and prep techniques from this legendary restaurant.


Barbecue Crossroads: Notes and Recipes from a Southern Odyssey
By Robb Walsh

James Beard Award-winning author Rob Walsh takes us on an extraordinary journey from Texas to the Carolinas and back and to tell the story of Southern BBQ, past, present, and future. Whether a devoted fan of pulled pork or beef brisket, any Southern foodie on your list will enjoy the 70+ finger-licking recipes presented in this engaging book. 


America’s premier tequila expert presents a festive blend of lively personal anecdotes, spicy cultural history, and inspired recipes for drinks and dishes – all featuring Mexico’s most notable contribution to the world of distilled spirits. There actually is a whole other world out there beyond lick it, slam it, suck it. 



My Mexico: A Culinary Odyssey with Recipes
By Diana Kennedy

Considered the Julia Child of Mexico and author of the James Beard Award-winning Oaxaca al Gusto (also published by UT Press), Diana Kennedy has the magic touch when it comes to cook books. At 90, she is a master chef with a devoted following around the world. Finally back in print and fully updated, My Mexico is the most personal of Kennedy’s books

More in cookbooks »


This charming book presents a lively history of the pecan from Southern groves to the Chinese marketplace. Whether you prefer to say “pee-kan” or “pi-khan,” this little nut inspires a sense of nostalgia due to its special place in the American diet and starring role in popular holiday dishes. For fans of the one-food-item-as-cultural-history thing. 

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

13 Gifts to Charm Every Book Lover

This time of year can be overwhelming. We're here to help! We've whittled down some of our best-selling books to 13 gift recommendations. We stand by these selections, but if you want to explore more options, we've linked to related titles. Now place your order, check several names off your list at once, and keep your cool! Happy Holidays.


The Salt Lick Cookbook
By Scott Roberts and Jessica Dupuy



No trip to Austin or Central Texas is complete without a visit to the Salt Lick. Both foodies and home chefs alike will enjoy the family recipes and prep techniques from this legendary restaurant.


Barbecue Crossroads: Notes and Recipes from a Southern Odyssey
By Robb Walsh

James Beard Award-winning author Rob Walsh takes us on an extraordinary journey from Texas to the Carolinas and back and to tell the story of Southern BBQ, past, present, and future. Whether a devoted fan of pulled pork or beef brisket, any Southern foodie on your list will enjoy the 70+ finger-licking recipes presented in this engaging book. 


America’s premier tequila expert presents a festive blend of lively personal anecdotes, spicy cultural history, and inspired recipes for drinks and dishes – all featuring Mexico’s most notable contribution to the world of distilled spirits. There actually is a whole other world out there beyond lick it, slam it, suck it.



My Mexico: A Culinary Odyssey with Recipes
By Diana Kennedy

Considered the Julia Child of Mexico and author of the James Beard Award-winning Oaxaca al Gusto (also published by UT Press), Diana Kennedy has the magic touch when it comes to cook books. At 90, she is a master chef with a devoted following around the world. Finally back in print and fully updated, My Mexico is the most personal of Kennedy’s books

More in cookbooks »


This charming book presents a lively history of the pecan from Southern groves to the Chinese marketplace. Whether you prefer to say “pee-kan” or “pi-khan,” this little nut inspires a sense of nostalgia due to its special place in the American diet and starring role in popular holiday dishes. For fans of the one-food-item-as-cultural-history thing.


Friday, June 7, 2013

A Note to Future Me...for Father's Day

In a letter to his future self, UT Press sales representative C. J. Hoyt reveals what really makes a successful Father's Day gift—a great book! 

Hey Buddy,


Remember all those tacky gifts we bought Dad for Father's Day? The fancy dress socks. The novelty ties. That one time we gave him Stetson cologne for some reason or another. Well, that's why I'm writing you this letter. I'm guessing we have ourselves a mess of kids by now and we need to set the bar a little higher. We don't want to end up with too many socks in the drawer and smelling like a Sunday at Golden Corral on "our" Father's Day, do we? Heavens to Betsy, no! So, pay close attention.

1. First things first. Breakfast in bed. That's a given.

2. Let's face it, Future Me. We just married a vegetarian, so our barbecue intake is going to be next to nil. The best we can hope for are books with plenty of pictures.

Buy Barbecue Crossroads: Notes & Recipes from a Southern Odyssey
Buy The Salt Lick Cookbook: A Story of Land, Family, and Love
3. By the time you read this letter, I'm guessing we've sat through roughly 150 episodes of Gilmore Girls and now it's time for a detox. Maybe this Father's Day we can sit back and relax to our favorite Western miniseries Lonesome Dove. Then again, we probably don't want to be crying in front of the kids when Deets dies, so I guess we'll just have to settle for the next best thing.

Buy A Book of Photographs from Lonesome Dove
4. Even if they do manage to get a handle on this whole global warming thing in the future, Texas will still be one hot tamale come this time of year. How about we send the kids out on the front porch to hand-crank some ice cream while we make ourselves an ice cold margarita or three and toast to a Father's Day well done?
Buy ¡Viva Tequila!: Cocktails, Cooking, and Other Agave Adventures
5. If all else fails, ask for a hoverboard. And if those haven't been invented yet, well, I see no reason in living that long anyways.

Sincerely,


Christopher J. Hoyt

Friday, October 26, 2012

Austin Chronicle :: The Salt Lick Cookbook

Scott Roberts

The Austin Chronicle profiles The Salt Lick Cookbook: A Story of Land, Family, and Love:

"In the book's title, Salt Lick BBQ restau­rant owner and pitmaster Scott Roberts and noted wordsmith Jessica Dupuy didn't mention the focus that's held four generations of the Roberts clan together: great, simple food. Roberts' combination memoir/cookbook is a loving homage to a remarkable culinary heritage, a special rural environment, and the family that is the foundation of the story. From a pristine 600-acre spread on the banks of Onion Creek, settled by the great grandparents in 1867, to the farm of the grandparents, to the barbecue restaurant started by the parents, Roberts weaves a fascinating and compelling tale of the history of the family, the land, and the restaurant. What started as a simple country roadside shack has grown into a smoked meat culinary complex (complete with a 50-acre vineyard and its own wine label) that feeds over 600,000 devotees a year.

The 100 easy-to-follow and well-written recipes are loaded with descriptive headnotes and backstory. They begin with the cherished country dishes of the old days, like Hisako Roberts' delicious chicken and dumplings, aromatic green onion and cheese soufflé, and her sinfully rich but light lemon chiffon pie. The recipes include all of the restaurant's menu items (except the famous barbecue sauce; that's one you don't get), and for the barbecue neophyte, Roberts details the entire process in amazing detail, complete with step-by-step photos. The recipes finish with some of the dishes from the catering operation, including such treasures as quail with grapefruit glaze and a delectable pulled pork and mushroom stew.

Roberts and Dupuy have put together a compelling historical document that makes for fine reading; the recipes are the delicious bonus. Kenny Braun's lavish photographs run throughout, aptly illustrating the land and the food. This is a cookbook that you'll find invaluable on the cutting board or the coffee table, and one that would make the family's ancestors very proud."

Scott Roberts and Jessica Dupuy appear in the Cooking Tent from 3:30-4:30pm on Sunday, and at the Central Market Cooking School on Tuesday, Nov. 27, at 6:30pm.

See the Chronicle's full 'Culinary Dream Team' >>

 

Austin American Statesman :: The Salt Lick Cookbook

The Salt Lick Cookbook: A Story of Land, Family, and Love
By Scott Roberts and Jessica Dupuy
Coming November 2012
The Austin American-Statesman previews the food book authors appearing this weekend at the Texas Book Festival.

"In his new book The Salt Lick Cookbook, Scott Roberts finally got to tell the story of his family’s legendary Driftwood barbecue restaurant. He’ll be speaking with local food writer Jessica Dupuy, who co-authored the book, and showing off some of the dishes whose recipes you’ll find in the book."