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It’s football season: Barbecue ideas for your game day food experience

Smoked queso and pulled pork nachos I made recently. Here’s a “before” picture. (草莓传媒/Mike Jakaitis)
An “after” picture of the smoked queso. (草莓传媒/Mike Jakaitis)
And the finished product 鈥 pulled pork nachos with the queso drizzled on. (草莓传媒/Mike Jakaitis)
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And the finished product 鈥 pulled pork nachos with the queso drizzled on.(草莓传媒/Mike Jakaitis)

The summer is upon us, and grills and smokers all over the DMV are heating up as well. For the series 鈥淔ired Up with Jake and John,鈥 草莓传媒鈥檚 Mike Jakaitis and John Domen talk with some of the region鈥檚 best pit masters about their methods, with the goal of helping you level up your barbecue game.

Labor Day has come and gone, which means the unofficial end of summer 鈥 but that doesn’t mean it’s time to put away your grill or smoker.

It’s football season, so it’s still prime time barbecue season. The first full week of the college season is in the books, and the pros kick off this week. That means tailgating or football gatherings over the next several months.

There’s nothing wrong with your basic hamburger or hot dog, but if you want to enhance the game day food experience, there are some things you can do that will impress your friends or family.

“Cook a pork butt overnight,” said Drew Darnielle, the owner of Smoke Craft Modern BBQ in Arlington, Virginia. “You can feed a lot of people with pulled pork sandwiches, pulled pork nachos.”

And speaking of nachos, Darnielle has this suggestion to impress the hungry crowd: “You can smoke queso. Smoking your own queso to have a giant make-your-own nacho bar, that’s something that’s really cool and it’s going to have that little bit of something that somebody else can’t do.”


Fired Up with Jake and John


Staying with the pork playbook, Darnielle says people will love pork belly burnt ends.

“You get pork belly, cut them up into cube. When you render those down, those are some of the things people go crazy for.”

Darnielle also suggests bacon-wrapped jalape帽os, buffalo chicken dip and, of course, a football food staple: wings.

“You have to have them on game day.”

He brines and smokes whole wings before cutting them.

“By keeping them whole, they smoke better and I can keep them in a little bit longer.”

Darnielle smokes his wings for about an hour-and-a-half at 250 degrees using hickory wood before flash-frying for about a minute to crisp up the skin.

“If they were cut in half, if I had flats and drums, then it would only take about 45 minutes.”

And speaking of time, the 鈥淲inningest Man in BBQ鈥 has this suggestion so you don’t miss the game or pregame festivities because you are cooking,

“I would pick proteins that are a short cook,” Myron Mixon said, from his self-named restaurant in Old Town Alexandria. “You want to do things that cook fast, like pork loin cooking in an hour and 45 minutes, ribs in two-and-a-half hours 鈥 bacon wrapped tenderloins, you can do those in an hour and 15 minutes.”

Mixon says by picking things that cook fast, you’ll have more time to have fun.

“You don’t want everybody eating up your food, drinking your liquor while you’re manning the pit all day.”

Enjoy the season!


聽to the 鈥淔ired Up with Jake and John鈥 podcast on Podcast One.


 

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