It's time for Barbecue Nation with JT So fire up your grill, light the charcoal, and get your smoker cooking.
Speaker ANow from the Turn It, Go Burn it studios in Portland, here's jt.
Speaker BThis is an encore.
Speaker CHey, everybody.
Speaker CWelcome to Barbecue Nation.
Speaker CI'm JT along with my co host, Barbecue hall of Fame member Leanne Whippen.
Speaker CAnd we're coming to you from our respective Turn It, Don't Burn it studios on opposite ends of the country.
Speaker COne in Portland and one in Tampa.
Speaker CWe'd like to thank the folks at Painted Hills Natural Beef, the way nature intended to be.
Speaker CFind out more about Painted Hills, just go to paintedhillsbeef.com well, we're very fortunate to have our friend Chef Ray Sheehan back with us as our first guest of the year.
Speaker CYay.
Speaker CClap.
Speaker CRay's been busy.
Speaker CBesides writing cookbooks and.
Speaker CAnd doing his barbecue stuff.
Speaker CHe had a restaurant and now I.
Speaker CWe're going to find out if he sold it or not.
Speaker CAnd he's been very busy always creating.
Speaker CRay, welcome to the show.
Speaker DWell, what a great way to start the new year.
Speaker DThank you for having me on the Barbecue Nation, one of my favorite shows.
Speaker DThank you.
Speaker CWell, you're welcome, and we appreciate that.
Speaker CSo what's going on in New Jersey?
Speaker DOh, man, it's just been, you know, quite a roller coaster the last year.
Speaker DLooking for bigger and better things in 24.
Speaker DI think the last time we spoke, my book came out Big Green Egg Basics, and I'm here to report that it was Barbecue Book of the runner up Barbecue Book of the Year for the National Barbecue and Grilling association last year.
Speaker DThank you.
Speaker DSo I think Meet Mitch's book was in first place, so I was in great company.
Speaker DSo a lot has happened since then.
Speaker DTowards the end of 22, I a sauce and seasoning company, and I sold the trademark to the name.
Speaker DAnd if in effect, I basically closed that chapter or I was going to rebrand and temporarily closed it.
Speaker DAnd we opened a restaurant called Raised Roadside Kitchen.
Speaker DIt featured handcrafted burgers, Southern fried chicken, and barbecue specialties.
Speaker DAnd we became known for having one of the top bowls of chili in the state, some of the best fried chicken.
Speaker DBut ultimately and unfortunately, the restaurant didn't work out as much effort as we all put into it.
Speaker DHad a few partners, and in the end, we ended up closing.
Speaker DAnd then it.
Speaker DIt got to a point where, you know, I had to do some soul searching, hence the, you know, moniker.
Speaker DChef Ray Sheehan.
Speaker DI went back to my roots.
Speaker DI have 25 years experience in the hospitality and restaurant and food industry.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker DSo, you know, creating recipes and, you know, getting back to my writing, I write for the Barbecue.
Speaker DBarbecue News magazine.
Speaker DI do recipes, articles, product reviews from time to time and, you know, and cookbooks.
Speaker DSo I've tried to get back to that and, you know, doing my.
Speaker DBasically, like, private events, private chef catering and corporate catering.
Speaker DAnd so it's.
Speaker DIt's been a challenge.
Speaker DIt's been a little bit of a challenge.
Speaker DAnd as you both know, with restaurants and sauce and seasoning companies and all that, I mean, it's.
Speaker DIt's.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker DI mean, it's.
Speaker DIt can pose its challenges.
Speaker CSo, yeah, you're.
Speaker CYou're talking to the right group of people here.
Speaker ERay, you also said that keyword partner.
Speaker DYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker DI mean, you know, a partner, a partnership is like a great.
Speaker DIs like a marriage.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker DAnd it's great when it works and when you're both on the same page or however many of the partners there are, are on the same page.
Speaker DBut if any one of the partners, respectively, is in a different direction, it really poses some really, really big issues for your business.
Speaker CSure.
Speaker CYes, it does.
Speaker DEven if there's good intentions, I mean.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker COh, yeah.
Speaker CI think there's always, for the most part, good intentions.
Speaker CBut my experience, and I don't want to go too far in the weeds on this, and like, Leanne can certainly.
Speaker EThat's a whole nother show.
Speaker CThat's a month's worth of shows.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CAnd I'm not just talking about your experience, but.
Speaker EAll right.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CYou know, like you said, a couple of business things I've been in over the years where there were multiple.
Speaker CMultiple partners that never worked.
Speaker CThat.
Speaker CThat just didn't work.
Speaker CBecause fictitious scenario here, if you had three partners and yourself, three of you, as you said, might be on the same page and one wants to go to Botswana or something.
Speaker CYou know what I mean?
Speaker CIt just.
Speaker CYeah, it just doesn't work.
Speaker CAnd so you try to reign them in, and then that undercurrent starts to wear on the other partners.
Speaker CAnd, you know, if.
Speaker CIf you're the managing partner or whatever, it can still erode the enthusiasm and stuff, and it's very, very difficult.
Speaker CSo I commend you for giving it a big, good old college, Princeton try there.
Speaker CThe reason I say Princeton is because we watched Oppenheimer the other night.
Speaker CSo I've been thinking about New Jersey.
Speaker CBut the point is, is restaurant business, food business is tough.
Speaker CIt's very tough in its own right.
Speaker CIt's very tough.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker DAnd I was the managing partner the day to day and it just, there's so many reasons why a business will succeed or fail and having great food is really just the start.
Speaker DThere's so many other things that need to be in place.
Speaker CWell, I, I liked it.
Speaker CWhat I read about it.
Speaker CI've never, I never got to go to it, Ray, but of course, but what I liked about it is you were a, and you kind of address this at the opening of the show.
Speaker CYou were kind of a home style restaurant with a, with an accent of barbecue, not a barbecue restaurant with an accent of home style.
Speaker CAnd that last description, if you will.
Speaker CAnd I'd like Leanne's take on this.
Speaker CThat's what a lot of barbecue restaurants do.
Speaker CA lot of pit stops and stuff.
Speaker CThey're like, hey, we've got barbecue, but we've also got grandma's macaroni and cheese here.
Speaker CAnd yet when I looked at your menus and stuff a few times, it was always, we've got the fried chicken, but we've got a touch of, you know, bourbon sauce or something.
Speaker CSo I, I, I really liked that motif, if you will.
Speaker DYeah, I mean, it was basically somewhat of a country style comfort food really.
Speaker DI mean, and on, you know, Saturdays we feature, well, Fridays and Saturdays we had slow smoked brisket, we had our pulled pork on the menu.
Speaker DThen we used the pulled pork to do slow smoked Cubano sandwich and, and then, you know, like the homey kind of comforting Mac and cheese and, and then we would do some, some nice special.
Speaker DSo we, we weren't a diner like a New Jersey diner, but we had a little something for everybody for lunch and dinner type place.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CLeanne, when you're, you've done this a lot.
Speaker CI know when you put together a menu like that, I mean, we're all very familiar with, with food and restaurants and stuff here today.
Speaker CBut when you're looking at putting a menu together, how do you decide the direction of the, the offerings on a menu?
Speaker CI mean, because that really is the tale of what the restaurant is about.
Speaker ERight.
Speaker EPeople are looking for what they're in the mood for, you know, Italian, Greek barbecue.
Speaker ESo you have to focus on what the name of the restaurant is and what it represents.
Speaker EYou can certainly add things to the menu.
Speaker EI mean, you know, vegetarian craze, you know, in order to get a group that's going to come in that has vegetarians, you got to put a couple veggie items on there so that they will come because that one person might, you might lose that Group.
Speaker ESo you have to think about things like that.
Speaker ESpecials are always a good Dr.
Speaker EBut you do have to focus on, you know, the specialty that you're trying to or the cuisine that you're trying to convey.
Speaker EBecause if you get into that too much mishmash, you're going to lose your identity and you're going to turn into a diner, you know, and you.
Speaker DAnd that's what happens.
Speaker DYou can't.
Speaker DA lot of the diners here in Jersey, the menus are so big and I do love diners, but it's.
Speaker DWhen you have a huge menu like that, it's really hard to keep everything fresh.
Speaker DSo try to keep it a little bit smaller of a menu.
Speaker DAnd like our burgers were ground fresh every day.
Speaker DWe didn't use a frozen patty.
Speaker DYou know, those types of things I feel like make a difference if you're able to have a butcher do that for you every day.
Speaker DYeah, I mean, I would.
Speaker DThat's what we wanted to do.
Speaker CSo I got to ask you guys, when I go sit down at a restaurant and Leon's been in the little town I live in, and you can go to them and they're, they're fine, they're there.
Speaker CSome of them are diners, some of them are a little better.
Speaker CNot much, but you go there and you look at the thing and you look at the menu and like you said, the menu is a little lofty, a little bigger than, you know, what you were directed at and yours or Leanne's.
Speaker CBut I look at that and I'm reading that and I go, okay, that comes from Cisco, that comes from Food Services America.
Speaker CYou know, I look at.
Speaker CThat comes from cash and carry.
Speaker CAnd I doubt if too many people sitting at the restaurant when my wife and I are there are thinking in those terms, but that's the way I look at menus anymore.
Speaker CBut when I go to a diner like yours, Ray, and they say, you know, we grind our, our burger every morning, you know, or right, you know, we, we go to the fish market every morning.
Speaker CSomething like that.
Speaker CThat gets my attention.
Speaker EWell, it's just like I love onion rings.
Speaker EAnd the first thing I'll ask is, do you make the onion rings in house?
Speaker EAnd they have to tell you.
Speaker EAnd so obviously, if you want Cisco onion rings, they do not.
Speaker CYeah, they look at you and go, no, but we got a 50 pound bag back there in the freezer for you.
Speaker CYou know, we can whip some up.
Speaker EBut you know, five guys, they focus on their fries being fresh cut and made, you know, to order, you know, those are the draws.
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker EYou know, makes it more home cooked than it is out of a box.
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker CAnd I do that.
Speaker CAnd I, and I also look at that.
Speaker CI don't eat too many of them or drink too many of them.
Speaker CBut if they offer milkshakes, for example, and it's summertime, I want to know if it's not a powdered confectionery, if they're actually putting a real ice cream in there that doesn't come out of a soft serve.
Speaker CYou know what I mean?
Speaker CIt's not formulated.
Speaker CThey put real strawberries in there.
Speaker CThey have to put something a little sweeter sometimes in real strawberries, for example.
Speaker CI like strawberry milkshakes.
Speaker CBut when you look at that, that, that's a sale for me or from me, you know, like that.
Speaker CI look at that.
Speaker CWe're going to take a break.
Speaker CWe're going to be back with chef ration and Ms. Whippen here on Barbecue Nation.
Speaker CI hope you all had a great holiday season and a good new year.
Speaker CI made black bean soup for New Year's.
Speaker CAnyway, we'll be right back.
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Speaker BHey, everybody, it's Jeff here.
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Speaker CYou'll love it.
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Speaker BThis is an encore.
Speaker CWelcome back to the Nation Barbecue Nation.
Speaker CI'm JT along with Leanne Whippen.
Speaker CReal quickly, if you want to email us, you can just go to the website which is barbecue nation, jt.com There's a contact icon there.
Speaker CYou can do that.
Speaker CYou can also send it to info @becue nation jt.com you follow us on Facebook.
Speaker CBoth Leanne and I and Ray also we have, you know, large Facebook paces pages, got other platforms.
Speaker CX formerly known as Twitter and Instagram.
Speaker CLeanne's big on Instagram.
Speaker CI know that.
Speaker CAnd so just go out there, follow us, have some fun.
Speaker CWe're talking with chef Ray Sheehan today.
Speaker CAnd Ray's been on the show before.
Speaker CBefore.
Speaker CHe's.
Speaker CIt's my first show back, so I'm getting a little tongue tied here.
Speaker CI haven't talked this much in five weeks.
Speaker CI want to follow up with just one more thing on the restaurant.
Speaker CRay, what's the biggest thing you learned out of that experience?
Speaker CNow, you had plenty of experience going in with, you know, being a chef, being a caterer, being in food service for a while.
Speaker CWe don't have to date ourselves this morning.
Speaker CBut what.
Speaker CWhat's the biggest thing you think you learned out of that?
Speaker COn the food side.
Speaker CLet's keep it positive on the food side.
Speaker DAbsolutely.
Speaker DI think on the.
Speaker DOn the food side.
Speaker DYou know, when I.
Speaker DWhen I sat down with the partners to come up with the concept for the restaurant, the concept became like, comfort food, a take on, you know, with some barbecue specialties.
Speaker DAnd, you know, the burgers were big and the fried chicken.
Speaker DIn this area, there wasn't a lot of fried chicken.
Speaker DAnd we.
Speaker DWe created.
Speaker DI created this, like, the dredge that you would dip the chicken into, and it was.
Speaker DHad a real nice Southern crispiness to it.
Speaker DBut I guess my biggest takeaway would be stick with what you're known for.
Speaker DI am known in the barbecue space.
Speaker DAnd everyone that walked through the door wanted to know why there wasn't more barbecue on the menu.
Speaker DAnd when it came clear to us that we should pivot, not.
Speaker DWe.
Speaker DWe didn't pivot in the.
Speaker DIn the right way to.
Speaker DTo make that happen.
Speaker DSo I think sticking to your guns, to what you.
Speaker DWhat you know or what you believe in your heart will work.
Speaker DThat would probably be one of my biggest things going forward.
Speaker CWas there anything on the menu that you thought would be a hit that was kind of halfway to where you expected it?
Speaker CYou know, you didn't.
Speaker DSo in.
Speaker DBelieve it or not, I. I mean, I don't know one particular thing, but, like, we.
Speaker DPeople would walk through the door.
Speaker DThis place had been a breakfast lunch place for so long.
Speaker DPeople would walk through the door and order breakfast.
Speaker DI mean, or they would order stuff that wasn't on the menu, or they would.
Speaker DWouldn't even look at the menu.
Speaker DAnd that was just really frustrating.
Speaker DLike, if someone just walks in your door and it starts ordering, but they don't even look at the menu.
Speaker DThat was really hard.
Speaker DThat was.
Speaker DYeah, that was like, you know, that was challenging.
Speaker CI know one thing that when I do get to come to New Jersey and see you in person, I want you to cook that part.
Speaker CThat fried chicken for Me, that stuff looked phenomenal.
Speaker DThank you very much.
Speaker DYou know, I've had to go back to my roots and in a way, reinvent myself.
Speaker DFor the last 10 years, I've had, you know, a barbecue business of some sort.
Speaker DAnd one of the things that I've gotten to do that was pretty fun, that I didn't have time to do before is occasionally, now I'm a guest co host on the Baseball and Barbecue podcast.
Speaker DSo that's really.
Speaker DYeah, that's really fun to me.
Speaker DAnd something that I'm working on that I'm writing.
Speaker DI've gotten to do a lot more writing.
Speaker DI've gotten to interview a lot of people in the.
Speaker DIn the barbecue space and a lot of hall of Famers.
Speaker DAnd one of the people that I got to talk to was Dave Raymond, and he gave me some advice about sauce business and if I was to rebrand, and I mean, like, I don't know what other community would be so helpful in every, every single way possible.
Speaker DLike, here's someone who built their sauce company into a behemoth and then sold it and is just so gracious to help others.
Speaker DI mean, you know, I can really appreciate that, and I hope one day I'm in a position to help others as well.
Speaker COh, absolutely.
Speaker CDave's been on this show.
Speaker CHe was a hoot to talk to, and that was quite a journey he's had, I'll put it that way.
Speaker CLike that.
Speaker CAre you a big baseball guy?
Speaker DI love baseball, yeah.
Speaker DI mean, I haven't had as much time to watch it as I used to, but, yeah, I do love baseball.
Speaker CSo, Ray, we got a couple minutes before we got to go to break.
Speaker CYou were talking about kind of rebranding and getting back to your roots.
Speaker CWhat are you working on right now?
Speaker CAnother book or anything?
Speaker DWell, I do have.
Speaker DI'm working on a book proposal, and I'm also working on a big writing project which will probably discuss later this year, but it's.
Speaker DIt has to do with barbecue sauce.
Speaker DSo I'm.
Speaker DI'm doubling down on the barbecue sauce, doubling down on writing about barbecue in.
Speaker DIn every way.
Speaker DLike, with the barbecue news, I'm trying to expand my.
Speaker DLike, not just submitting a recipe, but also, you know, upping my article, my content creation.
Speaker DSo, Yeah, I mean, 20, 24, I have a couple.
Speaker DI have.
Speaker DI'm going to be featured in some other people's cookbooks.
Speaker DOne is going to be a pretty big one, and the other one is a friend of mine who's got a great book coming out on mushrooms.
Speaker DIt's called Mushroom Gastronomy.
Speaker DThat one is coming out this spring and I have, you know, a little feature in there.
Speaker DSo I'm.
Speaker DI'm really just trying to focus on me as a brand.
Speaker DMy website's going to be up probably in the next month or so, ration.com where you'll be able to get recipes and tips and tricks and info, information on events and classes and stuff like that.
Speaker DAnd there'll probably be some products at some point.
Speaker DI just.
Speaker DI'm not ready to jump in with both feet just yet.
Speaker DDefinitely you'll be able to get my cookbooks on there.
Speaker DAnd I've also gotten to spend some time creating content for company other companies and working with other companies like Forge to Table Knives and Bear Mountain BBQ and Magna Chef and some of these other companies that I really can appreciate their products.
Speaker DI know you guys from when I was listening to your show that you're going to be working with some great companies as well.
Speaker CYeah, yeah, we are.
Speaker CWe're going to take another break.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker COh, yeah, we're going to take another break.
Speaker CSo we're going to step away for a couple minutes.
Speaker CBe back with chef Ray Sheehan right after this.
Speaker CYou're listening to Barbecue Nation.
Speaker BHey, everybody, it's JT And I have eaten.
Speaker CIf you've ever looked at me, you know that.
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Speaker BIf you want to learn more about Oregon Dungeness crab, just go to oregondungeness.org.
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Speaker BThis is an encore.
Speaker CWelcome back to Barbecue Nation.
Speaker CThank you for being with us today.
Speaker CWe appreciate that very, very much.
Speaker CIt's the first show of 2024, and I know Leanne and I and Ray, I hope you have a wonderful 2024.
Speaker CI never thought when I was 30 years old that I would ever say the date 2024.
Speaker CIt just didn't ever occur to me.
Speaker CAnyway, we would like to thank the folks at Painted Hills Natural Beef Beef the way you are, nature intended.
Speaker CAnd you will like, you can go to their website@painted hills.com and you can order online there and come right to your door.
Speaker CAnd also, drumroll, please.
Speaker CPig powder.
Speaker CPig powder was voted the best rub on the planet.
Speaker CPig powder is, I won't say, the creation of Ms. Whippen.
Speaker CIt was the creation of her father, but she is the general at the helm now of pigpowder.com and by the.
Speaker EWay, it did really help me win on the Flay vs. Simon show and Bobby Flay.
Speaker EI've been on two shows, a throwdown with him also, and in both times, he commented on the Pig Cutter how much he loves it.
Speaker CI was going to tell you after the show, I actually used it in some other dishes over the holidays just to kind of mess around with stuff, and it worked out very well.
Speaker CBut I. I don't want to take up the time here in this show and tell you that because it may be something you can incorporate into one of your recipes or something.
Speaker CAnyway, we are talking with chef Ray Sheehan.
Speaker CRay's been on the show a number of times over the years.
Speaker CWe always appreciate his time and efforts to be with us.
Speaker CSo you were talking before we went to break, Ray, about you might bring out some products, some sauces or rubs or something like that.
Speaker CSo I'm going to pose a hypothetical to you.
Speaker CDo you think there are too many at this point that people get confused about them?
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker DYeah, I mean, so that's kind of my hesitation.
Speaker DSo, I mean, I did it for a long time, and I've won a lot of awards for the sauces, but, you know, I feel like you really have to have some money behind it and you have to be able to continuously reinvest into it.
Speaker DAnd from what Dave Raymond tells me, you have to buy shelf space, which I never did.
Speaker DYeah, but you have to buy shelf space.
Speaker DSo, you know, I don't want to be on a hamster wheel and just sell enough to be able to buy more like, you know, been there, done that.
Speaker DAnd, and, yeah, I mean, there's a lot of sauces, but there's a lot of great sauces.
Speaker COh, yeah, too.
Speaker DI mean, and I feel as though I really had something good to offer or great to offer the barbecue community with my sauces.
Speaker DIt's really just a matter of how much or how deep I want to get into it again.
Speaker DLike, I've gotten help, two other brands with their products, and I really kind of like that.
Speaker DLike, I like, you know, being able to help a brand bring their product to market.
Speaker DAnd so I'd really like to get a licensing deal with my sources.
Speaker DThat would be great.
Speaker DLike a big company that wants a private label.
Speaker DYou know, these sauces, maybe the seasonings as well.
Speaker DBut that, that.
Speaker DThat's very appealing to me.
Speaker CI can.
Speaker CI Can give you a prime example of what you're talking about there, Ray.
Speaker CThere's a lady that lives down in Philadelphia.
Speaker CShe's a.
Speaker CShe's a minister, and she follows me on.
Speaker COn Twitter and stuff.
Speaker CShe's a very nice lady.
Speaker CI don't want to throw her name out on there.
Speaker CAnd she makes some great sauces.
Speaker COne day in the.
Speaker CThe UPS guy brought me these three big jars, Mason jars of sauces.
Speaker CAnd I tried them, and they were wonderful.
Speaker CBut she doesn't really have any money.
Speaker CShe doesn't have the licensing and the branding and all that.
Speaker CAnd I know that she's hoping, like a lot of people, that Kraft or McCormick or somebody comes by and says, that's great, we got to have it.
Speaker CChances are that.
Speaker CAnd I, I actually called her on the phone one day because she asked me for help, and I said, you can, you know, you can hope for that, but that's.
Speaker CChances of that are pretty slim, really.
Speaker BBut how.
Speaker CHow do you break through?
Speaker CHow do you break through if you're an individual like that?
Speaker CI mean, Leanne's big power.
Speaker CShe's got her dad's name as the inventor.
Speaker CShe's got her name on it.
Speaker CShe's got notoriety.
Speaker CHer dad had notoriety.
Speaker CBut that's a.
Speaker CThat's a long road, too, you know.
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker CI mean, how do you break through?
Speaker DFirst of all, I have to order some pig powder.
Speaker DI haven't tried it yet, so there's that.
Speaker EI will ship you, but I definitely have that.
Speaker DGod bless you.
Speaker DBut, but it's you, you know, it's a lot of work.
Speaker DEven, like I said, Dave Raymond even told me is as popular as Sweet Baby Rays was, as it was a growing company.
Speaker DHe would do ride alongs and go with the distributor and talk it up to the stores and then do demos.
Speaker DI mean, you really have to work it.
Speaker DIt has to be.
Speaker DOther than now, other than having your regular job and making money, doing the sauce has to be your number one priority or, or, or seasoning.
Speaker DIt's.
Speaker DIt's a lot of dedication.
Speaker DThere's a lot of influencers to think, oh, you know, gee, I'm going to have a rub or a sauce.
Speaker DAnd.
Speaker DAnd then they do it and it goes nowhere because they don't realize that, yes, you may be popular right now, but there's people that maybe haven't seen you on that show, and you need to get it out there.
Speaker DYou have to get people to try it.
Speaker DAnd it is a lot.
Speaker DA lot of work, a lot of money and a lot of time.
Speaker DSo it's the same thing as a restaurant.
Speaker DHaving a great recipe is really step number one.
Speaker DThere's a lot of steps involved, and you have to be willing to put the time and the work in.
Speaker CAs they say, fame is leading and not being disparaging to anybody.
Speaker CBut I think your point there is well taken, that you may be an influencer.
Speaker CGood for you.
Speaker CI hope you're doing well.
Speaker CBut are you still going to be that person a year and a half from now when you've got $10,000 worth of product sitting in your garage and it's not going anywhere?
Speaker CYou know, it's very difficult.
Speaker CAnd I've done store demos.
Speaker CI know Leanne has done store demos.
Speaker CWe still do them if the right people ask us to do it.
Speaker CAnd you get out there, and that makes a huge difference.
Speaker CBut you got to cover a lot of ground, not only with a particular individual store, but with a chain or a geographic region to get started.
Speaker CIt's a lot of hard work.
Speaker DYou know, I think that the mistake that a lot of people that I talk to that are trying to build us a brand, a sauce brand, one of the things they say is, oh, well, I got my product in five stores in my county or whatever in my area, but I really want to get the next state over.
Speaker DI really want to get two states over from there.
Speaker DWhat you need to do is start and get a nucleus and build that nucleus and build that momentum and get like, you know, the first couple miles around you and then build out from there.
Speaker DYou don't have to be in California.
Speaker DYou have to sell.
Speaker DYou have to be in 240 stores, let's say, in your area first.
Speaker DDon't worry about getting, because shipping the product, that's a whole nother issue.
Speaker DLike getting it.
Speaker DLike, I had glass bottles, they were heavy.
Speaker DThere's breakage, you know, and if you, if you sign with a distributor, there's all kinds of rules that you have to go by.
Speaker DIf the customer drops a bottle, you bought it.
Speaker DIf they return it for any reason or no reason at all, you bought it.
Speaker DSo focusing on, like, I focused on independence because they could, the decision makers, you didn't have to pay for shelf space.
Speaker DThey can decide whether they want to bring you in.
Speaker DIt's easier to set up demos, but start with that nucleus and work your way out versus worrying about getting it in, you know, 10 states away where you have to ship it.
Speaker CI have some folks that I know here that created some barbecue sauces.
Speaker CThey were pretty good marketers but when they went to what is now part of the Kroger world up here, and the gentleman was telling me this, he said, yeah, he said, you know, they're taking, you know, four cases for these 10 outlets and blah, blah, blah.
Speaker CAnd I said, how many cases do they want for free?
Speaker CYou know, and, and he said, well, four.
Speaker CSo you're, you're talking only four.
Speaker CYou're talking eight.
Speaker CWell, we're really talking eight.
Speaker CWell, you know, when you got eight cases times 10, that's 80 cases.
Speaker CPretty soon those numbers add up to be, you know, huge is the best way to put it.
Speaker CHuge.
Speaker CIt's a tough gig if you make it.
Speaker CI think, you know, anybody that's made it has done a remarkable job.
Speaker CBut selling that at the retail level, I think sometimes I think if you've got a big enough deal, big enough claim to fame and all of that, just doing the online sales, or maybe even the Amazon sales, you know, are much better.
Speaker DI, I did a lot with, with my online store and, and then I, you know, I had some business owners who, like, say builders or car salesmen who had a lot of clients that of, like, I had one guy who had a roofing business, and every time he did a job, he would mark down, okay, they like barbecue.
Speaker DI don't know how he asked them, but at the end of the month, every month, I would get like an order for like one dozen or two dozen gift boxes.
Speaker DAnd that paid the bills, that kept the lights on, you know, like over and over.
Speaker DIf you have a couple of people like that, I mean, the more you can sell yourself to sell the product yourself, the more money you're going to make.
Speaker DRetail is very difficult.
Speaker DYou know, it going with all the rules, like you said, the paying for shelf space, the returns, the, oh, we're opening another location.
Speaker DWe want, you know, two cases of each SKU that you have and say if you have five SKUs, that's 10 cases.
Speaker DI mean, you know, yeah, it adds up.
Speaker CYeah, it's a tough gig.
Speaker CMy hat is off to people that finally make it and can get even if it's regional distribution, if they really want to do that.
Speaker CBut I think, like, the way Leanne does it and what you have been talking about here, that may be the smarter way to go, because all of a sudden you do not have 10 layers of bureaucracy and rules and regulations between you and the, the deposit slip.
Speaker DYou might say, you know, and also too, you're, you know, the, the sauce manufacturers, you know, they have minimums.
Speaker DI had A bottler who started me at 50 cases, and by the time we were done, there were 600 cases of each flavor.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker DAnd I'm like, I'm out.
Speaker DI can't.
Speaker DWhere am I going to put it?
Speaker DWho's going to finance it?
Speaker DI mean, it's 600 cases.
Speaker DYou know, it's only good for two years.
Speaker DYou got to move it.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CIt's a lot of sauce.
Speaker CIt's a huge amount of work.
Speaker CWe're going to take a quick break here.
Speaker CWe're going to be back with chef ration and Ms. Whippen hall of Famer, right after this on Barbecue Nation.
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Speaker BHey, everybody, it's jt.
Speaker BYou know, I talk about painted hills all the time, and we always say beef the way nature intended.
Speaker BBut it's more than that because each bite of Painted hills will make your taste buds explode.
Speaker BPut a big, bright smile on your face, and whoever's at your dinner table will have a big, bright smile on their face.
Speaker BAnd you can thank me for that later.
Speaker BJust go to paintedhillsbeef.com and find out more.
Speaker CYou won't regret it.
Speaker BHey, everybody, J.T.
Speaker CHere.
Speaker BI want to tell you about Hammerstahl knives.
Speaker BHammerstahl combines German steel with beautiful and functioning designs.
Speaker BThey're part of the Heritage Steel Group, which also does their pots and pans.
Speaker BSo go to heritagesteel us.
Speaker BCheck out the Hammer Stahl knives.
Speaker BIf you're really into cooking.
Speaker BI think you're really gonna like them.
Speaker CForeign.
Speaker CThis is an encore.
Speaker CWelcome back to Barbecue Nation.
Speaker CI'm jt.
Speaker CWe'd like to thank the Oregon Crab Commission.
Speaker CThey're supporting this show and the golf show.
Speaker CExcuse me.
Speaker CIn fact, Leanne got taste of Oregon Dungeness crab.
Speaker EAmazing.
Speaker CThe first time this year, this last year.
Speaker CIt's a new year.
Speaker CI gotta do that.
Speaker CIt's great stuff.
Speaker CAnd you can go to the Oregon Crab Commission, their website, and take a look at how it's harvested and all that stuff.
Speaker CBut you can find it in most major retailers all over the world, actually.
Speaker CSo, anyway, we do that.
Speaker CAs I said, we're talking with chef Ray Sheen today.
Speaker CWhere do you think?
Speaker CGo ahead, Leanne.
Speaker EI was.
Speaker ESo do you have a new book?
Speaker EYou're doing a proposal.
Speaker ESo it hasn't been accepted yet.
Speaker EYou're just working on it, correct?
Speaker DYeah, I see.
Speaker DI've.
Speaker DSo the first two books that I did, I did Unagented, and it's my desire to seek an agent now.
Speaker DSo in order to do that, I'm contractually obligated to show my publisher this proposal first because they have right of first refusal.
Speaker DBut I really want to try to get this agent that I have in mind.
Speaker DSo I want to really do a great proposal, and then I can, you know, so if it doesn't work out, to go with the current publisher, which I hope it does, but if it doesn't, then it can be shown to various other publishers.
Speaker CThat's not an easy.
Speaker CYeah, that's not an easy gig either, Ray.
Speaker CWriting books.
Speaker DWell, no, I mean, honestly, the way we did the first two, it was easier to just.
Speaker DThe proposal process for that was so much easier than writing.
Speaker DLike, this proposal has to be so much more thorough because it's the business plan for the book, so.
Speaker DBut I love to do it.
Speaker DI honestly, like, I just get in a zone.
Speaker DI love to write and I've.
Speaker DIt.
Speaker DIt's a process of revision.
Speaker DSo it's kind of like you're molding, like, a piece of something down into something more concise and, you know, understandable and great for the reader.
Speaker CDo you.
Speaker CDo you find it sometimes it's hard to get inspired or just things just pop into your head and.
Speaker DNo, things just pop into my head.
Speaker DIt's almost like there's too much, like.
Speaker DBecause you could sit there, right?
Speaker DLike, I'm sure Leanne could think of 20 things she could write a book about.
Speaker DRight?
Speaker DShe could write, you know, ribs, tailgating, you know, women in barbecue.
Speaker DI mean, there's so many things that you could do.
Speaker DBut then when you sit down, you have to say, okay, which one of these things is relevant today?
Speaker DAnd what do I think is going to sell?
Speaker DBecause by the time you're done, it's going to take almost two years.
Speaker DSo in two years from now, what is going to be something that people are interested in, you know, and purchasing, and why do they need it as a book as opposed to a news, newspaper or magazine article or, you know, what makes it a book versus that?
Speaker DSo, you know, there's.
Speaker DThere's a lot that goes into the thought process of, like, you know, so it's just I.
Speaker DThere's just so.
Speaker DSo many things that I have thought of, but Then I'm like, okay, well, that's not really a book.
Speaker DYou know, like, that's.
Speaker DThat's more like a.
Speaker DA splash.
Speaker DThat's not a.
Speaker CWell, there's a trend.
Speaker CLeanne and I have talked about this a little bit at times off the air, but there's a trend that you can do shorter abridged versions, if you will, and sell them as an ebook, for example, for Kindle.
Speaker CI'm just giving you that.
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker CAnd there.
Speaker CAnd, you know, some of them can sell for 99 cents, and you think, well, that's not much money.
Speaker CBut if you sell, you know, 15,000 of them, that 99 cents adds up.
Speaker CAnd it's very easy for people to, you know, if they're into the Apple stuff or whatever, their.
Speaker CWhatever platforms and stuff they use is irrelevant.
Speaker CYou make it available on all the platforms.
Speaker CAnd I know Meathead has done that a few times with, you know, he wrote a little quick book about sous vide because he's a sous vide savant, but he.
Speaker CHe did that, but it sells a lot, you know, and then he moves on to the next one.
Speaker CBut that original is still there and available for people as time goes on.
Speaker CSo I don't.
Speaker CI don't think we'll ever get away from hardcover books, if you will.
Speaker CI'm still a guy that likes to hold a book in my hand and read it and put it on the shelf when I'm done.
Speaker CBut sometimes that if you.
Speaker CI don't know.
Speaker CI want to sound like a dinosaur here, but the new age way of doing things is a.
Speaker CActually affords a quicker return, I'll put it that way.
Speaker CSo I don't know if you ever considered that, Ray, but.
Speaker DYeah, I've definitely thought about it.
Speaker DBut I think ultimately right now, I'm like.
Speaker DYou like?
Speaker DI prefer.
Speaker DI like.
Speaker DI love going to the bookstore.
Speaker DMy wife and I.
Speaker DThat'll be like a hot Friday night.
Speaker DWe'll go to the bookstore and go to the cafe.
Speaker DIt's like, you know, get a new book and, you know, a coffee.
Speaker DI mean, I love coffee.
Speaker DI'm into roasting coffee now, too.
Speaker DOh, it's one of my favorite things.
Speaker CBut maybe that's a book.
Speaker CYeah, maybe that's a way you tie it in.
Speaker CYou tie coffee with barbecue and Starbucks backs, the whole thing.
Speaker CYou never know.
Speaker CYou never know.
Speaker CIt could do that.
Speaker CWhere do you see yourself, hopefully four or five years from now?
Speaker DFour or five years from now?
Speaker DHonestly, I would like somehow to be making a bigger contribution to the world of barbecue.
Speaker DI mean, that's something that the paper that I'm working on right now, which we'll be able to discuss probably around June, that's going to be a big piece of it.
Speaker DAnd.
Speaker DAnd I, like, I. I want to be.
Speaker DI want to be somebody who made a contribution to, not just, like, to help other people, not just to, like, oh, what am I going to get out of it?
Speaker DYou know, so, yeah, that, to me, that's.
Speaker DThat's where in.
Speaker DIn four or five years, whether it's more books, this paper teaching, more like getting, you know, I. I love the future of Q with.
Speaker DThat's put out by Barbecue News Magazine.
Speaker DI love the fact that it's inspiring our next generation of pit masters and grillers and keeping it going.
Speaker DAnd I'm not the type of person that, like, if I learn something great about brisket, I'm going to keep it to myself.
Speaker DI want to be able to share it with others because I would like there to be more great brisket, not just, you know, in certain places, like in the south or in the West.
Speaker DI mean, so to me, that, that.
Speaker DThat means more than anything that I would accomplish.
Speaker DJust like, for me personally, you know, that would be rewarding.
Speaker DEnjoy barbecue.
Speaker DAnd I think right now we're in a very good place.
Speaker CYeah, I think so.
Speaker CYou know, what do you think, Leah?
Speaker EAlways.
Speaker EWe're always in a great place, and there's always new things, technology, people, their twists, you know, on barbecue.
Speaker CThat's going to be it for the time of this part.
Speaker CWe're going to do after hours in a second, but we want to thank chef Ray Sheehan.
Speaker CWhen's your website going to be ready?
Speaker DShould be ready by Valentine's Day.
Speaker DRation.com.
Speaker COkay, so that, that.
Speaker CThat's not too far away.
Speaker CSo we want to thank Ray, and I want to thank Leanne, as always.
Speaker CAnd you can go to our website, barbecue nation, jt.com or leanne's got a website.
Speaker CAnd I've got another.
Speaker CI got a couple other websites, so you can check them all out.
Speaker CBut we will be back next week here on Barbecue Nation with another edition of the show.
Speaker CUntil then, remember our motto.
Speaker CTurn it, don't burn it.
Speaker CTake care, everybody.
Speaker ABarbecue Nation is produced by JTSD LLC Productions in association with Salem Media Group.
Speaker AAll rights reserved.