Paul Kirk’s Championship Barbecue: Barbecue Your Way to Greatness With 575 Lip-Smackin’ Recipes from the Baron of Barbecue

July 13, 2014 - Comment

It’s easy for any backyard chef to serve up tantalizing food from the grill! Cook your way to barbecue glory right in your own backyard with a mentor, master teacher, and true practitioner of the art, Baron of Barbecue Paul Kirk!   Recipes include: Terrific T-Bone Steak with Redeye MarinadeThe Baron’s Famous Barbecued BrisketAncho- and

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(as of April 19, 2020 6:41 am UTC - Details)

It’s easy for any backyard chef to serve up tantalizing food from the grill! Cook your way to barbecue glory right in your own backyard with a mentor, master teacher, and true practitioner of the art, Baron of Barbecue Paul Kirk!   Recipes include: Terrific T-Bone Steak with Redeye Marinade
The Baron’s Famous Barbecued Brisket
Ancho- and Chiptole-Rubbed Pork Loin
Smokehouse Spareribs
Garlicky Barbecued Leg of Lamb
Spicy Green Onion Sausage
Barbecued Polynesian Chicken
Black Pepper Shrimp
Smoky Hickory and Brown Sugar Cured Salmon
Grilled Potato Salad
Toasted Sesame Oriental Cabbage Slaw
Barbecued Beer Beans for a Big Crowd

Product Features

  • Paul Kirk’s Championship Barbecue Cookbook
  • THE HARVARD COMMON PRESS/HAROLD IMPORTS

Comments

B. Marold "Bruce W. Marold" says:

Very Good Competition Barbecue Manual. A few days ago, I interviewed a thin, oversized book entitled `The Big Grill’ published by a minor, undistinguished publishing house. The book had all the look about it of a volume destined to go directly from the publisher to the discount stacks, and I found nothing in the book which changed that opinion. The only puzzling aspect of the book is that the thumbnail biography of the author on the back jacket listed some very serious credentials for the author, Paul Kirk. By chance, I soon ran across this volume by the same Paul Kirk, published by the very serious Harvard Common Press, with very high powered blurbs on the back jacket from the likes of John Thorne and Tony Bourdain, plus several luminary barbecue restaurateurs. Like the case with my poor review of one of Nigella Lawson’s lesser efforts, I was anxious to find a genuine source for all this admiration. Therefore, I do this review of a book that is dramatically different and better than `The Big Grill’ potboiler.A…

Robert I. Katz says:

A great book This is a great book. Any cookbook can give a list of recipes, and one can almost always find a few good ones, whether the book is from a celebrity chef or whether it’s put out by the local lady’s club in an effort to raise some money for charity. What sets the really great cookbooks apart is that they give a method, a set of techniques, which if followed, allow the reader to understand the recipes, to play with them, to embellish them, and to invent his own. Books like Julia Child’s The Way to Cook and Madeline Kamman’s In Madeline’s Kitchen come to mind. They make you a better cook. Paul Kirk’s Championship Barbecue is definitely in this company. He gives the theory and technique of barbecue–the essence of which is slow, low temperature cooking with smoke. The book is divided into sections, talking about marinades, sops, mops and bastes, rubs, sauces. In each section he tells why a particular ingredient should be used, always encouraging the reader to use the information…

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