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History of Barbeque
Every American past time has a beautiful history
The History of Barbecue started in the Southern
States
The Etymology of Barbecue
The roads of the Southern United States are lined with a
succession of grinning pigs, advertising the availability of
barbecue in countless restaurants. The origins of barbecue
in the South, however, are traceable to a period long before
the smiling pig became a fixture on Southern roadsides. The
etymology of the term is vague, but the most plausible
theory states that the word "barbecue" is a derivative of
the West Indian term "barbacoa," which denotes a method of
slow-cooking meat over hot coals. Bon Appetit magazine
blithely informs its readers that the word comes from an
extinct tribe in Guyana who enjoyed "cheerfully spitroasting
captured enemies." The Oxford English Dictionary traces the
word back to Haiti, and others claim (somewhat implausibly)
that "barbecue" actually comes from the French phrase "barbe
a queue", meaning "from head to tail." Proponents of this
theory point to the whole-hog cooking method espoused by
some barbecue chefs. Tar Heel magazine posits that the word
"barbecue" comes from a nineteenth century advertisement for
a combination whiskey bar, beer hall, pool establishment and
purveyor of roast pig, known as the BAR-BEER-CUE-PIG. The most convincing explanation is that the method of
roasting meat over powdery coals was picked up from
indigenous peoples in the colonial period, and that "barbacoa"
became "barbecue" in the lexicon of early settlers.
Barbecue Before the Civil War
The history of barbecue itself, aside from its murky
etymological origins, is more clear. For several reasons,
the pig became an omnipresent food staple in the South. Pigs
were a low-maintenance and convenient food source for
Southerners. In the pre-Civil War period, Southerners ate,
on average, five pounds of pork for every one pound of
beef. Pigs could be put out to root in the forest
and caught when food supply became low. These semi-wild pigs
were tougher and stringier than modern hogs, but were a
convenient and popular food source. Every part of the pig
was utilized-- the meat was either eaten immediately or
cured for later consumption, and the ears, organs and other
parts were transformed into edible delicacies. Pig
slaughtering became a time for celebration, and the
neighborhood would be invited to share in the largesse. The
traditional Southern barbecue grew out of these gatherings.
William Byrd, in his eighteenth century book writings The
Secret History of the Dividing Line Betwixt Virginia and
North Carolina has some pretty snippy things to say about
some Southerners' predilection for pork. He writes that hog
meat was:
"the staple commodity of North
Carolina . . . and with pitch and tar makes up the whole of
their traffic . . . these people live so much upon swine's
flesh that it don't only incline them to the yaws, and
consequently to the . . . [loss] of their noses, but makes
them likewise extremely hoggish in their temper, and many of
them seem to grunt rather than speak in their ordinary
conversation."
At the end of the colonial period, the practice of holding
neighborhood barbecues was well-established, but it was in
the fifty years before the Civil War that the traditions
associated with large barbecues became entrenched.
Plantation owners regularly held large and festive
barbecues, including "pig pickin's" for slaves. In this pre-Civil War period, a groundswell of regional
patriotism made pork production more and more important.
Relatively little of the pork produced was exported out of
the South, and hog production became a way for Southerners
to create a self-sufficient food supply-- Southern pork for
Southern patriots. Hogs became fatter and
better cared-for, and farmers began to feed them corn to
plump them up before slaughter. The stringy and tough wild
pigs of the colonial period became well-fed hogs. Barbecue
was still only one facet of pork production, but more hogs
meant more barbecues.
In the nineteenth century, barbecue
was a feature at church picnics and political rallies as
well as at private parties. A barbecue was a popular and relatively
inexpensive way to lobby for votes, and the organizers of
political rallies would provide barbecue, lemonade, and
usually a bit of whiskey. These gatherings were
also an easy way for different classes to mix. Barbecue was
not a class- specific food, and large groups of people from
every stratum could mix to eat, drink and listen to stump
speeches. Journalist Jonathan Daniels, writing in the
mid-twentieth century, maintained that "Barbecue is the dish
which binds together the taste of both the people of the big
house and the poorest occupants of the back end of the
broken-down barn". Political and church barbecues
were among the first examples of this phenomenon. Church
barbecues, where roasted pig supplemented the covered dishes
prepared by the ladies of the congregation, were a
manifestation of the traditional church picnic in many
Southern communities. Church and political barbecues are
still a vital tradition in many parts of the South. Usually, these restaurants grew out of a simple
barbecue pit where the owner sold barbecue to take away.
Many of the pit men only opened on weekends, working
(usually on a farm) during the week and tending the pit on
weekends. The typical barbecue shack consisted of a bare
concrete floor surrounded by a corrugated tin roof and walls. Soon, stools and tables were added, and the
ubiquitous pig adorned the outside of the building. Few pit
men owned more than one restaurant-- the preparation of the
pig required almost constant attention, and few expert pit
men were willing to share the secret of their sauce
preparations. The advent of the automobile gave the barbecue
shack a ready-made clientele-- travellers would stop at the
roadside stands for a cheap and filling meal. As
the twentieth century progressed, barbecue pits grew and
prospered, evolving into three distinct types. According to
barbecue scholar Jonathan Bass, the three kinds of barbecue
restaurants are black-owned, upscale urban white, and white
"joints" (more akin to honky-tonk bars). These racial
denotations, however, do not mean that barbecue restaurants
catered to a specific racial clientele. Good barbecue drew
(and draws) barbecue fans of every color and class.
Perhaps because much of its trade
consisted of take-out orders, the barbecue restaurant was an
interracial meeting place long before the forced integration
of the 1950's and 1960's. When these restaurants first appeared,
many were owned by black Southerners, and "whites, in a
strange reversal of Jim Crow traditions, made stealthy
excursions for take-out orders". In the 1950's
and 1960's, much of this comity was lost. Many barbecue
joints became segregated by race. Barbecue has even made it
into the annals of legal history, with the desegregation
battles at Ollie's Barbecue in Alabama and Maurice's Piggy
Park in Columbia providing often-cited case law as well as a
stain on the fascinating history of barbecue. In the case
Newman v. Piggy Park Enterprises, the court ruled that
Maurice Bessinger's chain of five barbecue restaurants
unlawfully discriminated against African-American patrons.
The varied history of barbecue reflects the varied history
of the South. Sometimes shameful, but usually interesting,
the history of barbecue can be seen an emblem of Southern
history. For the past seventy-five years, the barbecue joint
has flourished. Although local specialties and the
time-intensive nature of barbecue preparation have insured
that real barbecue (as opposed to defrosted and microwaved
meat) will never be a staple at chain restaurants, barbecue
has endured. Aside from its succulent taste, delicious
sauces and the inimitable, smoky atmosphere of an authentic
barbecue joint, barbecue has become a Southern icon, a
symbol that is cherished by Southerners. Without the racist
subtext of the Stars and Bars, the anachronistic sexism of
the Southern belle, or the bland ennui of a plate of grits,
barbecue has become a cultural icon for Southerners, of
every race, class and sex. |