
EAST TEXAS
GOODE CO. TEXAS BAR-B-Q Houston
Address: 5109 Kirby Drive, Houston Phone: (713) 522-2530 Established: 1977 Owner: Jim Goode Best Bites: beef brisket, sausage, potato salad, jambalaya, homemade breads, pecan pie, chocolate cream pie Payment: credit cards
Jim
Goode was an artist above all else. It just took him a few years to
discover he was meant to paint his greatest works with smoke. By the
mid-1970s, Jim had trained as a commercial artist and taken up
residence in a Houston studio with a handful of others similarly
inclined. In those days, Jim was in the habit of stopping for barbecue
at a little mom-and-pop place that had served Houston since the 1950s.
One day when he stopped, mom was struggling visibly, with pop nowhere
in sight. Jim asked the woman if her husband was around, only to learn
he had passed away. Clearly, running a barbecue place alone was not
high on this mom’s personal wish list, Ownership of the place
changed just before Labor Day 1977. Over that long holiday weekend, Jim
and various family members worked around the clock to get the
restaurant in order: deep cleaning in the kitchen, general
sprucing and maintenance in the dining room, plus a new look in all
public areas achieved more with style than substance. Old license
plates, weathered concert posters and various hunting trophies became
the décor of Goode Co., and they remain so to this day. An uncle who
had cooked in the Army during World War II came in to assist for a
while, making foods and also helping Jim refine his recipes. Opening
on a shoestring, and a short one at that, Jim had virtually no money
for mainstream advertising. His focus for the first two or three years
in business, according to his son, was on being his own best
perfectionist—experimenting with wood ’til he settled on green mesquite
(higher moisture content, less harsh flavor), trying different spice
blends for a dry rub until he had one worth setting in stone,
auditioning purveyors until he gave up and decided to make almost
everything himself from scratch. This included not only turning
out Goode Co.’s four kinds of barbecue sauce, but grinding and stuffing
his own sausage and even baking his own bread. Wonder of wonders, Goode
Co. not only bakes its own specialty breads—like the immensely popular
onion buns and jalapeño cheese loaf—but the most traditional, arguably
least interesting bread of all time, plain Texas white. The
payback, on the good days anyway, was near-complete control over
quality. Over time, the even bigger payback came to be word-of-mouth,
soon spilling the cafeteria line all around the dining room and out the
front door. The moral of Goode Co.’s story is that once you hear opportunity knock, you probably need to keep listening.
RUTHIE’S PIT BAR-B-Q Navasota
Address: 905 W. Washington (Highway 105 West), Navasota Phone: (936) 825-2700 Established: 1976 Owners: James and Ruthie Henley Best Bites: beef brisket, pork shoulder, Elgin sausage, potato salad Payment: cash and checks
According
to Louis Charles Henley, his parents, James and Ruthie—still listed on
the menu as owners—were traveling around Texas nearly 40 years ago and
stopped in some out-of-the-way county seat for a sandwich. Apparently,
the sandwich was an epiphany. “My mama said, ‘We got this house. We
gotta open up a barbecue place.’ ” Louis was pit boss at Ruthie’s
from Day 1, learning his craft for two years from his Uncle Clyde, who
came in from Austin. With his uncle and others helping, Louis worked
the old house into shape to serve as a restaurant and built a brick pit
out back for smoking. Louis hasn’t just smoked all the meat
himself with a blend of post oak, pecan and mesquite. He has
chain-sawed and chopped all the wood to make the smoke. For wood,
there’s mostly post oak, with just a little bit of pecan and mesquite
for flavor. For dry rub, there’s something simple, little more than
seasoned salt, black pepper, and garlic powder. For meat, there’s beef
brisket that cooks 12 to 13 hours in the pit, plus the pork shoulder
Louis calls by its grocery store name, Boston butt, smoked until it
shreds and crumbles into tender piles of flavor. There’s Elgin all-beef
sausage, smoked a long time “until the grease all runs out, not like
they do over there in Elgin.” And there’s “mutton,” a different touch
in Texas to be sure: ribs of older lambs, something older customers
line up for and eat ’til it’s all gone. One thing there definitely
isn’t at Ruthie’s Pit Bar-B-Q is marinade for the meat. That may be
cookin’, but it ain’t barbecuin’. In barbecuin’, it’s the smoke that
tells the tale.”
NEW ZION MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Huntsville
Address: 2601 Montgomery Road, Huntsville Phone: (936) 295-3445 Established: 1979 Owner: New Zion Church, operated by Horace and May Archie Best Bites: pork ribs, beef brisket, half chicken, smoked sausage, potato salad, buttermilk pie Payment: cash and credit cards
Since
1979, when Annie Mae Ward dragged a pit onto the property and started
cooking lunch for workers building the church, the place has become an
offbeat landmark. When your platter of barbecue lands in front of you
on a table plastered with furniture and lawyer ads, it’s easy to forget
any and every other reason your life might bring you to Huntsville. Though
the barbecue served by New Zion is mainstream delicious, some of the
techniques are definite departures from the mainstream. For one thing,
Horace Archie is one of the few pit masters in Texas who doesn’t smoke
his brisket overnight, preferring to come in each morning about 5:30 to
get the wood going and cook his briskets in a single 6- to 8-hour
stretch. Quite often, he serves it sliced or chopped the same day it
starts out on the smoker. As a result, the fork-tender beef at New Zion
is less smoky-tasting than most other examples—a matter of personal
preference—featuring instead the char-grilled flavor associated with
steak. Other items, like the half chickens and pork ribs, seem to
carry more smoke than the brisket, while the spiced blend of pork and
beef in the sausage would probably still taste good if it saw no smoke
at all. Side dishes are extremely spartan: a scoop of mustard-yellow
potato salad and a pool of mild red beans, plus a deli pickle and a
slice of onion. Desserts, however, seem heaven-sent. All baked here,
best-selling sweets include pies of sweet potato, buttermilk, and
pecan. Just those few items, ordered at the counter and served to
you at one of New Zion’s 52 seats, are enough Wednesday to Saturday to
attract a line that often stretches out the door, past the smoking pit
and around into the parking lot behind the sanctuary. “It all helps
out the church,” Horace emphasizes. “I love to see all the people
eating and telling me how great it is and coming back again and again.”
He smiles broadly, tongue softly touching cheek. “It might even help me get to heaven.”
WEST TEXAS STYLE BAR-B-QUE Silsbee
Address: 3078 Highway 96 North, Silsbee Phone: (409) 385-0957 Established: 1985 Owners: Richard and Nita Nolen Best Bites: beef brisket, pork ribs, Cajun rice, potato salad, homemade yeast rolls, fresh-baked pies Payment: credit cards
“Good Food…Mean Women” promises a sign right beside the front door. These
days, that promise is being kept better than ever. West Texas Style
Bar-B-Que is one of the few such places in which the entire experience
is delivered by women. Richard Nolen, known to all as “Chockie,”
started this place with his wife, Nita, more than two decades ago. He
called it “West Texas” not because he forgot this was East Texas but
because he wanted to smoke with mesquite, a technique few cooks in the
area would support. Still, that doesn’t hold back the line that forms
here every lunch and dinner—and it doesn’t keep Chockie or,
increasingly now, his daughter, Alma, and her husband, from driving all
the way to West Texas to fill a trailer with the deep red wood. Nita
passes through the dining room constantly, asking customers if their
food is all right or offering to refill their coffee. Behind the
counter, she’s a whirlwind as well. For a trip through the kitchen
and out to the smoker, Alma takes over, making sure to point out each
thing that’s being made from scratch along the way. And there, on
crusty racks inside the long black smoker, brisket after brisket
breathes in the heat and smoke of a Texas far from Silsbee. For
dessert, West Texas Style Bar-B-Que bakes its own pies. The result is
close to irresistible, sitting atop the counter for all the world to
think it’s 1947. There’s perfect pecan, coconut cream, lemon and
chocolate under golden-browned peaks of meringue, pumpkin during any
cool weather and leading up to the holidays.”
JAWS BAR-B-QUE Port Arthur
Address: 1448 7th Street, Port Arthur Phone: (409) 985-6601 Established: 1984 Owner: Punarbassi Sandy Best Bites: beef brisket, hot links, pork neck bones, potato salad Payment: cash
If
there could ever be such a thing as a typical Texas barbecue cook, it’s
a safe bet Punarbassi Sandy would not be it. Born in Guyana, the
English-speaking British colony at the top of South America, Miss Sandy
went in and out of one marriage and started raising seven kids by
herself before she met her husband—and, by a tangled path, found her
future in Texas barbecue. “At first we cooked the food we liked to
eat in Guyana and Trinidad,” Miss Sandy recalls with a knowing smile,
looking much younger than her 60-plus years. “We made rice and peas
just like back home, with plenty of sweet coconut milk...curry goat—now
I can totally make that—and roti like they do in Trinidad. We fixed
some wonderful foods, but unfortunately they didn’t become very popular
around here.” “Then somebody suggested we try American food, and
we figured that in Port Arthur, Texas, American food had to mean
barbecue. We cooked it and took it around to supermarket parking lots
and to the refineries and the shipbuilding places at lunch. Before
long, we were extremely popular. One day, we sold 700 barbecue
sandwiches in Jasper. I don’t never see people eat so much barbecue.” The
emphasis is on barbecue’s version of soul food, especially on their
spicy rendition of beef homemade links and the pork neck pieces known
in these parts as “bones.” All meats are seasoned and smoked on
premises by Miss Sandy, who sends Styrofoam boxes to her cluster of
tables inside, her picnic tables outside or to any of the cars waiting
for takeout in the gravel parking lot.
From the June 2012 issue.
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