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A Conversation with Barbecue King Famous Dave Anderson

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By Cheri Sicard
Posted August 6th, 2007
Famous Dave's Backroads & Sidestreets
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famous dave andersonCheri Sicard: I agree with you that the best barbecue is often at the Mom and Pop's, which is why we were really surprised at the quality of food at Famous Dave's, it wasn't what we were expecting. It was great!
Famous Dave: I think that if you want to make a criteria, we are drawing a line in the sand here, but is it only a Ma and Pa...I agree with you because a lot of the places like Tony Romas are like some corporate deal. We have tried very hard not to be corporate. Not one of our restaurants is like any of the others. They are all different. I really have lived this business. I am not some marketing kid genius that graduated out of some Ivy League school and went to work for a big company like General Mills or Pillsbury and then the whole idea was concocted in some corporate boardroom.
"The same way that Muslims all face Mecca when they pray, all of my ribs, when they are in the smoker, they all face Memphis. To me, the Holy Trinity is meat, sauce and smoke. When I open my doors to my smoker, the smoke comes out. That's nothing more than prayers going up to heaven. That's how passionate I am about barbecue."

I have lived this stuff. I have barbecued in my back yard. I have literally smoked up tons and tons of meat. I have burned up tons of meat. I have made sauces until the sun was coming up. So, to me, I have lived my passion. I have been to every barbecue shrine in America. The same way that Muslims all face Mecca when they pray, all of my ribs, when they are in the smoker, they all face Memphis. To me, the Holy Trinity is meat, sauce and smoke. When I open my doors to my smoker, the smoke comes out. That's nothing more than prayers going up to heaven. That's how passionate I am about barbecue.

Cheri Sicard: You must be a connoisseur of barbecue like other people are connoisseurs of wine?
Famous Dave: I think there's a difference between somebody who is obsessed with barbecue and somebody who is a connoisseur of wine. Connoisseurs of wine don't end up with barbecue sauce all over their faces, dripping down to their elbows. We really give in to this. It's not as refined. People who are connoisseurs of wine are very refined. We're obsessed. We're fanatics. There is nothing refined in what we do.

Cheri Sicard: If you wouldn't have wine, what is the best drink to have with barbecue?
Famous Dave: I think strawberry pop.

Cheri Sicard: Strawberry pop?
Famous Dave: Or a Pabst Blue Ribbon Beer. That's some of the traditional ones, what you would regularly find. I think that at most of your barbecue shacks down in the South, it's probably sugar tea, strawberry pop or cold frosty beer.

famous dave's blackened catfishCheri Sicard: So you obviously must be passionate about road trips as well. From reading your history, you did a lot of travelling on the road and looking for barbecue recipes. Is that something you still do? Do you still just get the car and go?
Famous Dave: Yes! Actually we just came back from Houston where we must have hit twenty barbecue shacks in two days... well, more like ten. Typically, what I will do is fly into a city and we will visit as many restaurants as possible. I typically look for home cooking restaurants.

There are enough fancy restaurants out there, I leave that to other people. What I look for is good home cooking which is similar to my cookbook. It's all the food that we love. It's all the food that we grew up with; it's the memories; it's America's food.

This isn't fancy Italian cooking, this isn't fancy French cooking, this is what every mom does in her kitchen all across America. That's where my heart and passion is. That's how the name of the cookbook came to be, Backroads and Sidestreets, because in my travels I would typically ask a cab driver or a hotel person, 'Who has the best home cooking in town?' They would either send me down some country back road where I would find some road house café or they would send me down some city side street where I would find some storefront restaurant. You knew you were in the right place because when you walked in the door you could see Ma and Pa cutting up fresh onions. Things are still made from scratch, not out of a plastic bag out of some freezer.

Cheri Sicard: The cab drivers always know.
Famous Dave: That's right.

Cheri Sicard: The cookbook that you did is great in that it supports a charity and I want to talk to you about that and let our readers about the great work you are doing.




 

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