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Barbeque Restaurants Little Rock AR

Barbeque restaurants are eateries that specialize in American styled food. Barbeque cooking uses heat and smoke techniques to prepare meat. The method of cooking can involve one or more of the following: wood, charcoal, and petroleum gas. Depending on the type of wood or charcoal used, it gives the cooked meat flavor. Barbeques is usually done in an outdoor environment; however, restaurants may use a specially designed brick or metal oven. Look below for more information or to find local barbeque restaurants in Little Rock, AR.

Dixie Pig
(501) 753-9650
910 W 35th St
N Little Rock, AR
Walker's Bar B Que Co
(501) 961-9800
15235 Highway 165
Scott, AR
Garry's Drive-In
(501) 315-9555
619 Cox St
Benton, AR
Neel's Jerry Bar Bq
(479) 646-3674
10708 Kent Ct
Fort Smith, AR
Smokehouse Bbq
(501) 764-4227
505 Donaghey Ave
Conway, AR
Jordan's On The Go
(501) 847-8002
3220 N Reynolds Rd
Bryant, AR
No Name Original Bbq
(501) 315-3196
1023 W South St
Benton, AR
Roland's Bbq Co
(501) 625-3079
200 Higdon Ferry Rd
Hot Springs, AR
Lambert's Bbq & Grill
(479) 478-8494
5709 Rogers Ave Ste 36
Fort Smith, AR
Tommy's Famous A Pizzeria
(870) 269-3278
W Main & Famous Pl
Mountain View, AR
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Barbeque Season and Bread - Food Reference BBQ Articles

DENVER, CO — Our ancient ancestors started barbecuing before they started talking—that's how profoundly significant the act of roasting food over an open fire is to very core of who we are. In fact the art and tradition of barbeque is so ingrained and so sacred to some modern men – there is still no talking involved.

 Anthropologists say cavemen may have started roasting meat some 1.4 million odd years ago, but language development didn't occur until 200,000 B.C or later. That's about a million years of not having somebody tell you when to flip the burgers.

One of the greatest barbecue innovations in human history is undoubtedly the creation of bread some 10,000 years ago. For millennia, man enjoyed barbeque with only his hands. Bread changed all that... Consider the hamburger, one of America's most popular barbecue creations. A hamburger would simply be a flat meatball if not for the bun to keep ketchup off fingers.

"Bread is as essential to barbeque as the meat on the grill," says chef Todd English. "Adding the right kind of bread, bun or roll enhances the taste profile of your barbecue creation."

Bread also contributes a low-fat, low-calorie source of energy to the barbecue menu, according to Judi Adams, MS, RD and president of the Grain Foods Foundation. "Grains are essential to a healthy and well-balanced diet, and provide us with the energy we need to enjoy the great outdoors."

Barbecue is the great American class-leveler, and every region of the country has its favorite style of barbecue. Favorites such as "pulled pig" are well-known iconic delicacies of Southern cuisine. Culturally we assume a Southern dominance on the influence of barbecue, but the reality is that folks in the Northeast are the heaviest barbecuers in the nation, according to the Hearth, Patio and Barbecue Association.

The next most frequent barbecuers are folks in the North Central region of the country, followed by the South and the Western U.S.

Not surprisingly, the most popular holiday weekend for barbecuing is July 4th, with Labor Day and Memorial Day close behind, according to the HPBA.

Wherever you find the BBQ enthusiast, you'll find these basic personality types:

• VEG-HEAD: For the vegetarians who always feel somewhat out of place at their family's Memorial Day barbeque.

• BURGERDOG: You know the type – "kids-at-heart" – who can't imagine anything better than the basics: a flame grilled hamburger with ketchup on a plain bun. Getting BurgerDogs to break from tradition may seem impossible – but not with Todd's new recipe.

• FAIRWEATHER GRILLERS: Grilling is good – as long as the weather cooperates. For this group, there is definitely a season for barbequing. These folks certainly wouldn't be caught holding an umbrella at the grill – or worse – grilling in the snow! Fairweather grillers hav...

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