Welcome to Barbecue Nation with JT and Leanne.
Speaker AAfter Hours, the conversation that continued after the show was done.
Speaker AHey, everybody, it's JT and this is a special version of Barbecue Nation.
Speaker AIt is brought to you in part by Painted Hills Natural Beef.
Speaker ABeef you can be proud to serve your family and friends.
Speaker AThat's Painted Hills Natural Beef.
Speaker AHey, everybody.
Speaker AWelcome to After Hours here on the Nation.
Speaker AI'm JT along with Leanne Whippen, and today we're in the hot seat is Allie Romero.
Speaker AWe've been talking about her new book, Gas, Fire, Heat, and the regular show.
Speaker ANow it's time to talk about some really fun stuff.
Speaker AYou ready for this, Ally?
Speaker BI'm ready.
Speaker AYou sure?
Speaker BI am ready as I'll ever be.
Speaker AOkay, well, we'll start easy with this.
Speaker AIf you could cook for and then dine with a historical figure, who would it be and what would be on the menu?
Speaker BI feel like you asked me this question last time and I, like, failed.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AIt'S the easiest one we have.
Speaker BEasiest one.
Speaker BOh, my gosh.
Speaker BWho would it be and what would be on the menu?
Speaker BI mean, historical figure, Like, I mean, the first thing that comes to mind, not a historical figure, but, I mean, I would do anything to have one more meal with my mom or my dad, you know, preferably both of them, but not ever together.
Speaker AYou wanna.
Speaker AYou wanna embellish that a little bit.
Speaker BSo with my dad, I think that, you know, he was really, like, the.
Speaker BMy original inspiration for getting into doing what I do.
Speaker BHe's my original cooking inspiration, I think, sitting down with him with a beautiful glass of BV Cab, which was his favorite, and a big, huge rack of lamb from New Zealand, which was also his favorite, and some roasted potatoes and some glazed carrots and a huge glass of wine.
Speaker BAnd that would make me so happy just to share with him kind of what has happened since he passed away in 2013, which really lit a fire in me, so to speak, to kind of carry it on and be where I am today with my mom.
Speaker BI lost her suddenly a couple of years ago, and so that was something where, you know, again, I just would love to share where I'm at with what's going on.
Speaker BI think that she would be so proud knowing that I had a cookbook out.
Speaker BI think that I got the chance to tell her I was writing it.
Speaker BI think that we got to do that.
Speaker BBut her.
Speaker BIt would definitely be some sort of a comfort food meal.
Speaker BFried chicken and, I don't know, Mac and cheese or something.
Speaker BJust, you know, fun.
Speaker BAnd just to share and.
Speaker BAnd sit down at the table with each of them once again, and would be my.
Speaker BMy ultimate.
Speaker BWho I'd want.
Speaker AYeah, absolutely.
Speaker AHow do you cut your sandwiches?
Speaker AVertically, horizontally, or diagonally?
Speaker BI cut them vertically.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI don't do horizontal, although I can see that.
Speaker BAnd then I've seen recently where people are doing, like, various shapes of triangles.
Speaker BI.
Speaker BI just cut the sandwich, Leanne.
Speaker CWell, I've.
Speaker CI've always cut my sandwiches, and.
Speaker CAnd my family knows this.
Speaker CMy whole entire life, I've always cut my sandwiches into quarters.
Speaker BQuarters, okay.
Speaker CAlways quarters.
Speaker CAnd I don't know why that is, but.
Speaker CAnd it kind of jeopardizes the ingredients.
Speaker CBut over the years, I've been quite good at it.
Speaker BYou know what would be really good in quarters is peanut butter and jelly.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BPeanut butter and jelly in quarters would be fantastic.
Speaker BI feel like with turkey and tomato and lettuce and cheese, like, then it might all kind of fall apart for me, but.
Speaker CAnd grilled cheese, I cut into quarters diagonally, so they're little triangles.
Speaker AThere you go.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker ASo, Allie, do you ever cook your grilled cheese with a pizza cutter?
Speaker BDo I cut it with a pizza cutter?
Speaker BMy grilled cheese?
Speaker BI don't.
Speaker BI've cut a quesadilla with a pizza cutter.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AOh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker CHow to cut a five gallon bucket of ice cream with a pizza cutter.
Speaker BThat's a great idea.
Speaker CI'm not kidding.
Speaker CIt gives you really nice.
Speaker CFive wedges of ice cream.
Speaker AThere you go.
Speaker BI love that.
Speaker AThere you go.
Speaker BUse what you got.
Speaker AUse what you got.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWhat.
Speaker AWhat do you think you've learned so far living in Texas?
Speaker AAnd this doesn't have to only pertain to food, but, you know, you were below the equator, and then you were in Hawaii, and you were in the Bay Area and all that, and now you're deep in the heart.
Speaker AWell, you're in the northern part.
Speaker ADoesn't matter.
Speaker ADeep in the heart covers everything in Texas.
Speaker ABut what do you think you've learned most about living in Texas?
Speaker BI have learned how to slow down a little bit.
Speaker BI think that the people here are incredibly warm and friendly, like, noticeably warm and friendly there.
Speaker BYou can feel the sense of pride of people who live in Texas.
Speaker BBut I think that that's the overwhelming thing is just, I.
Speaker BI mean, there's times where I go to the grocery store and I'm zooming around for 20 minutes, and the same two people are chatting in the front of the store from when I entered the store, and it's like, it's just kind of taking time to kind of slow down a little bit and be a little bit more in the moment.
Speaker BThe barrier was a pretty fast pace compared to.
Speaker BI feel like it's a little bit slower here, but like, in a good way.
Speaker AOkay, who is, who is someone that's really grabbed your attention in the food world this last, say, year or two?
Speaker BI mean, I look up to so many people.
Speaker BI feel like for me it's always about kind of like who's doing something new, but not like the tick tocky new stuff where, you know, it's more like assembling food and that sort of thing.
Speaker BI mean, for me, it's still about the food and the ingredients.
Speaker BAs far as someone who's new on the scene who's kind of grabbed my attention, I, you know, there's a number of people I've followed on Instagram for, for a while that, you know, have put out various cookbooks.
Speaker BI mean, I don't know that I could narrow it down to just one person.
Speaker BIt's okay.
Speaker BThere's so much inspiration from so many people.
Speaker BSo many people are doing such great things.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AWould you recommend a career like yours for somebody who's just getting started?
Speaker BYes, if you are completely fine with being totally self driven and also, you know, not afraid to self promote.
Speaker BThere's a lot of self promotion that has to go into this job just to kind of like put your, again, put yourself out there.
Speaker BIt's just for some reason, I've never been afraid of just kind of putting it out there and if it doesn't work out, it doesn't work out.
Speaker BAnd then maybe something else comes along.
Speaker BBut I don't ever kind of like take that too personally.
Speaker BI mean, there's obviously occasions where I take it more to heart than others, but I think that I would recommend it.
Speaker BBut you have to have the love and the passion.
Speaker BLike it has to be all the things together that.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BIt's like I said, nobody wakes you up in the morning and says, okay, here's the things you need to do.
Speaker BLike you need to study who's doing this and who's doing that and how do I emulate that type of success?
Speaker BOr how do I get to be this there?
Speaker BOr how can I get to write a book?
Speaker BLike, how do I go about this?
Speaker BAnd then really just figuring it out.
Speaker BYou have to be self driven.
Speaker ASure.
Speaker AWhat's the worst thing you've ever eaten?
Speaker BThe worst thing I've ever eaten.
Speaker BI mean, I remember from My childhood, like, I think I had to try like liver and onions.
Speaker BI think that probably wasn't my favorite.
Speaker BI think that's probably still tops the list of like worse things.
Speaker BNot my favorite.
Speaker ATastes like dirt.
Speaker BYeah, pretty, pretty bad.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BAnd lima beans, I'm not a big fan of.
Speaker AI'm with you there.
Speaker AI'm with you there.
Speaker AMy mom used to make.
Speaker AWe got time here because it's after hours.
Speaker AI, when I graduated from college, I moved back to the, our home ranch.
Speaker AMy brother and his wife were living there because they're, they were building a house right up the road.
Speaker AThey just moved out of town and, and from town, I should say.
Speaker AAnd so it was one big, I won't say happy family, but it was one big family.
Speaker AAnd my mother would make these big ass pots of lima beans and I, I came home from the, we had three ranches there on this one road and I came home from the one I worked at and walked in and looked at those lima beans and immediately jumped in the shower, ran upstairs, changed my clothes, went out.
Speaker AAs I was coming out the back door, my brother was coming in.
Speaker AHe said, where are you going?
Speaker AI said, I'm going to go to eat Chinese food because mom's got lima beans.
Speaker AHe says, give me two minutes, I'll meet you out front.
Speaker ASo he went up on the other side of the house, changed his clothes.
Speaker ANow the table was all set, everything was all ready to go.
Speaker AAnd he snuck out the back, the front door, jumped over the hedge, met me on the road.
Speaker AWe drive down to the end of the road.
Speaker AWe lived on a dead end road.
Speaker AWe drive down to the open end of the road.
Speaker AAnd my dad was coming home from work at that time, and he goes, where are you two going?
Speaker AGoing?
Speaker AAnd he said, mom's cooked lima beans.
Speaker AAnd he goes, well, wait.
Speaker AI said, we don't have time.
Speaker AAnd we left.
Speaker AAnd he was, he was mad at us for a week.
Speaker AThose were.
Speaker BI don't explain.
Speaker BI gotta go.
Speaker AYeah, gotta go, gotta go.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AHave you ever come across something in the food world that you just could not master to make it the way you wanted to?
Speaker BI mean, there's a number of things in the barbecue world, or, you know, smoking specifically, that are.
Speaker BIt's trial and error.
Speaker BI mean, brisket, right?
Speaker BBrisket is like, everybody asks all the time, you know, how do you do the perfect brisket?
Speaker BAnd there's so many people out there, so many experts who will give you their opinion and give you this and give you that and tips and tricks.
Speaker BAnd all of that, but that, that takes a while.
Speaker BI think that now I've got it.
Speaker BBut that took longer than a lot of indoor cooking.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BThat sort of thing.
Speaker BAs far as something else I haven't been able to master, baking is a little bit of my nemesis.
Speaker BSo I don't know that I, you know, have mastered everything in the baking world.
Speaker BI, I, it's not my favorite.
Speaker AGot it.
Speaker AIf you could teach a politician how to barbecue, cook, whatever, who would it be?
Speaker BA politician?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BOh, I don't, I don't know if I want to hang out with any of those people.
Speaker AGood answer.
Speaker AGood.
Speaker BI mean, who?
Speaker BI, I don't know.
Speaker BThat's a special kind of person, right?
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI don't, I don't, I don't have anybody for that.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BNone of them.
Speaker BNone of the above.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker AVery.
Speaker AI will accept that.
Speaker AWhat's your least favorite activity in the world to do?
Speaker BLeast favorite activity is running.
Speaker BI hate running.
Speaker CThat's mine.
Speaker CThat's mine too.
Speaker BRunning is.
Speaker BNo, it's, I mean, I do it because I have to do it, but like, I, I, I watch the timer and I just wait till I'm done.
Speaker BYeah, I hate running.
Speaker COkay, me too.
Speaker ADo you remember the first thing you ever got in trouble for as a child?
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BI was a good kid.
Speaker BI, I was a rule follower.
Speaker BI still am, but I was always afraid to, like, get in trouble.
Speaker BI, but I lived in a small town, so I grew up in Sebastopol, which is 6,000 people.
Speaker BLiterally at that point.
Speaker BThere was one stoplight.
Speaker BIt's in Sonoma county in the Bay Area.
Speaker BAnd it was a game day.
Speaker BAnd on game days, the cheerleaders wore their cheerleading outfits.
Speaker BSo it was a game day.
Speaker BI had my cheerleading outfit on.
Speaker BI was with my friend Wendy.
Speaker BAnd we didn't even cut class.
Speaker BWe cut brunch, which is like a 15 minute.
Speaker BIt was like a rainy day.
Speaker BAnd we, all we wanted to do was go get a hot chocolate.
Speaker BI mean, this is like, right?
Speaker BLike really terrible stuff.
Speaker BSo we left school.
Speaker BIt was our senior year.
Speaker BWe went downtown.
Speaker BWell, the sheriff of the town happened to be married to the secretary of the school.
Speaker BWe're obviously standing out like sore thumbs.
Speaker BOne stoplight town in our cheerleading uniforms, running across the street to get our hot chocolate.
Speaker BWe didn't even skip class.
Speaker BWe got back and, and he followed us back and, and reported us right in.
Speaker BAnd I remember at that point, it was like mail stuff.
Speaker BIt was not like email.
Speaker BSo I had to, like, keep checking, checking the mailbox to make sure I could, like, get the notice out before my mom saw it, because I always knew she was going to be so mad.
Speaker BThat's like the first thing I can really think of where I was like, oh, my gosh.
Speaker BLike, I'm.
Speaker BI'm done.
Speaker BI'm done for.
Speaker AOh.
Speaker BI was a good kid.
Speaker AI know that.
Speaker AThat.
Speaker AThat was just a Tuesday for me.
Speaker AThat was.
Speaker AWhat are you talking about?
Speaker AWhat's your absolute favorite non barbecue food or dish?
Speaker BNon barbecue food.
Speaker BIt's gotta be, I mean, Mexican food.
Speaker BJust in totality.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BAll of it, except the right.
Speaker BI don't have to eat the rice and beans like I want.
Speaker BI make these carnitas bowls where I've got, you know, just kind of.
Speaker BEverybody makes their own.
Speaker BAnd I make like a cilantro lime rice, and I make the carnitas and I make the tomatillo salsa and the pickled red onions and the limes, the cilantro, the cotija cheese, and.
Speaker BAnd I do like crispy tortilla strips on top.
Speaker BAnd the kid.
Speaker BEverybody makes their own.
Speaker BAnd it is.
Speaker BIt's one of my favorite things.
Speaker BAnd what's even better is the leftovers for lunch the next day.
Speaker BI love, okay, leftovers.
Speaker AWhat's one thing you miss about your 20s?
Speaker BI miss the kids being little because at that point I was just starting to have.
Speaker BMy first baby was at 28.
Speaker BSo I miss that stage because it's like you want them to get older, but then you kind of want them to be little again.
Speaker BDifferent stages, different problems that come along with each of those.
Speaker BI miss that and I miss.
Speaker BI don't know, I think just the way the world was.
Speaker BI feel like in my 20s, that was before social media and cell phones and all of that, and it was just simpler and it was just less complicated and it was just more free.
Speaker BI think just that stage in life I miss.
Speaker AUnderstandable.
Speaker AIf you were an animal, what animal would you be?
Speaker BI would definitely be a bird or a dog, because our dog gets more love than, like, I think anybody in this family.
Speaker AName something that your spouse was absolutely 100% correct about.
Speaker ABut you still think he was wrong.
Speaker AYou're blushing.
Speaker BNo, because he.
Speaker BWe always have these back and forth where he's like, I was right.
Speaker BI'm like, I don't know if I'm gonna admit it.
Speaker BWhat was he right about?
Speaker BThat I.
Speaker AYou still think he was wrong?
Speaker BI mean, I'm pretty much right a lot of the time.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BA Few times, but they don't come to mind.
Speaker AAll right, all right, what.
Speaker AIt's kind of a personal thing.
Speaker AWhat is the biggest change you think should be made, if any, in food advertising?
Speaker BI think that it's important to know the source of where things are coming from and how they are being produced.
Speaker BAnd if there are, you know, things or pesticides or antibiotics or, you know, I think more of that needs to possibly be more available to customers just to.
Speaker BTo make sure that we're eating what's healthy for our bodies.
Speaker BYou know, I mean, it's like you go over to Europe and all of a sudden you feel great, and yet you're eating pasta and bread and butter and cream dishes or, you know, in Italy and cheeses and wines and all these things, and.
Speaker BAnd suddenly you don't feel it.
Speaker BAnd I think that there's something to be said.
Speaker BIt's definitely a difference.
Speaker BEven though you're eating kind of the same types of foods or even dairy or carbs or whatever, but they translate different in different countries.
Speaker BAnd I don't know exactly why that is, but as far as food advertising, I would say it's just a matter of, like, being forthcoming with what is.
Speaker BIs going into our foods that we eat.
Speaker AOkay, we're almost done here.
Speaker AWhat's your favorite movie?
Speaker AMine is Casablanca.
Speaker AI'm just giving you an example.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BMine is Ferris Bueller's Day Off.
Speaker AOkay, good one.
Speaker AI think that's the first time we've heard that one, Leanne.
Speaker CI don't know.
Speaker CI don't know.
Speaker AYeah, maybe.
Speaker AI think so.
Speaker AWhat's the first thing you do when you get up in the morning?
Speaker BMake my bed.
Speaker AOh, my God.
Speaker BThat's what you're supposed to do, right?
Speaker CLike, I.
Speaker CI feel like that is a theory.
Speaker CYou're supposed to start the theory.
Speaker AI like that.
Speaker BYou know why?
Speaker BBecause I.
Speaker BBecause messes, like, messes equate to.
Speaker BI have enough to worry about, especially with the 3K that, like, if the more things can just be organized, then I don't look at and go, I still have to do that.
Speaker BI still have to do that.
Speaker BI still have to do that.
Speaker BOr maybe you don't do that and you just walk past it and you're fine with that.
Speaker BThat's great, too.
Speaker BBut I'm just not that person.
Speaker AOkay, all right, all right.
Speaker AThis is kind of an esoterical question, but do you think cooking could help kids who have trouble in math?
Speaker BYeah, I mean, I think that there's lots of ways that you can kind of Evoke different types of learning styles.
Speaker BSo why not know?
Speaker BI mean, it's kind of that creative outlet.
Speaker BEverybody learns differently.
Speaker BSo, you know, maybe.
Speaker BMaybe it could.
Speaker BI mean, especially with different measurements and things like that.
Speaker ASure, sure.
Speaker ATwo more.
Speaker AName one book that should be mandatory reading for everybody.
Speaker BThis one.
Speaker AThere you go.
Speaker AI like it.
Speaker BThere you go.
Speaker AWalk right into that.
Speaker AI love that.
Speaker AOkay, last one.
Speaker AWhat would your last meal be on Death row?
Speaker AIt would be very hard for me to imagine Ali Romero on death row, but if you were, for whatever reason, if you ever got to that sides.
Speaker BIt'S still out to get me.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWhat would your last meal be?
Speaker BMy last meal would definitely involve courses.
Speaker BIt would be some sort of, like, a magnificent seafood appetizer with crab and shrimp and lobster and maybe even a few oysters.
Speaker BAnd then it would morph into, like, the best steak of my life.
Speaker BProbably a.
Speaker BA cowboy ribeye or a.
Speaker BOr a tomahawk steak.
Speaker BSome sort of a bone and ribeye and then.
Speaker BAnd with some maldon salt on top and.
Speaker BAnd some truffle mashed potatoes.
Speaker BAnd I think I would just skip the veg at that point.
Speaker BAnd then I would go straight to a dessert, and it would have to either be something chocolate or it would have to Fruit crumbly.
Speaker AThere you go.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker BWith.
Speaker AWith ice cream, you don't have to worry about cholesterol or caloric value that day.
Speaker CShe's stalling death with all of her courses.
Speaker AI know.
Speaker BYeah, exactly.
Speaker BI gotta.
Speaker BYou gotta give me time to get through them.
Speaker BI want like, the French Laundry style, like, Death Row.
Speaker BI want, like, 20 courses, all with their own wine pairing, and then I'm ready.
Speaker BWell, I'm, you know.
Speaker AYeah, I get it.
Speaker AI get it.
Speaker AAllie Romero, her new book, Gas Fire, Heat.
Speaker AThis one.
Speaker AThat's the one right there.
Speaker AThat's my little note that's in there.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker AYou've been.
Speaker AYou've been excellent and a lot of fun and good luck with it.
Speaker AAnd if we can help you in any way, just let us know.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker BThanks so much for having me.
Speaker BThis was a lot of fun and I appreciate the support on the new book.
Speaker ANo problem.
Speaker AWe'll be back next week with Meathead.
Speaker ALike we said, Father's Day show.
Speaker AAnd it kind of just doesn't seem like it's should be that time of year already.
Speaker AIt's so going by so fast.
Speaker AAnyway, for Leanne, Allie, and myself, thanks for listening and remember our motto here.
Speaker ATurn it, don't burn it.
Speaker ATake care, everybody.