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, everybody.
Speaker AWelcome to After Hours here on the Nation.
Speaker ABarbecue Nation.
Speaker AI'm jt, along with my co conspirator, Leanne Whippen, hall of famer, I might add.
Speaker AAnd today we're talking with Terry Pringle from Peg Leg Workers in Nashville.
Speaker AKerry has graciously given us his time today.
Speaker AHe's a very busy guy, but it's been a lot of fun.
Speaker AHe's got a great story, super story.
Speaker AI think it's actually one of the best stories we've.
Speaker AWe've heard that we've had a chance to talk.
Speaker BI will.
Speaker BI will agree with you.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo, Carrie, this is the part of the show where we ask you some kind of fun, sometimes off the wall questions.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AAnd just, you know, go with your first response.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker COkay.
Speaker AAll right, let me.
Speaker AHold on, I gotta flip this over.
Speaker ASorry about that.
Speaker BI'm getting a little feedback from you.
Speaker BI don't know why.
Speaker AFrom me?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BCarrie, are you.
Speaker CI'm not getting feedback.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BOh, okay.
Speaker BMaybe it's my connection on the Internet.
Speaker BI'm just getting a little distortion, but it's coming and going.
Speaker BBut it's.
Speaker AIf it's not on your end, actually, it's your distortion.
Speaker BOh, okay.
Speaker BI'm just.
Speaker AOkay, so that's.
Speaker ALet's start out with something fun.
Speaker ACarrie, if you could cook for and then dine with a historical figure, who would it be and what would be on the menu?
Speaker ACan be anybody.
Speaker CGosh, I don't know.
Speaker CMaybe Ronald Reagan.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CYeah, I like that.
Speaker CI would like to probably cook for Reagan and I not have to probably put barbecue on the menu, you know?
Speaker AOh, he'd go for that.
Speaker CHe'd probably like that.
Speaker AOh, yeah, I think so.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AHe liked to eat.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AHis wife didn't like.
Speaker AHe beat too much.
Speaker ABut I know that.
Speaker AI know personally that he liked to eat.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AIf you could work with one of your barbecue heroes that you haven't worked with yet, who would that be?
Speaker COh, gosh, I.
Speaker CI don't know.
Speaker CBecause I've been lucky to work with a lot of.
Speaker CWith a lot of talented bitmasters and.
Speaker CAnd, you know, I.
Speaker CI guess maybe.
Speaker CMaybe Charlie Burgess.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BThere you go.
Speaker BYeah, that's a good one.
Speaker AGary, if you could erase one mistake from your past, if there is one, what would it be and why?
Speaker CYou know, I don't know that I would.
Speaker CThat I would erase mistakes.
Speaker CI think that they shape who you are, and I think that the reason that we're successful here at Peg Leg Porker is because of the mistakes that I've made in the past and I've learned from.
Speaker CAnd so, you know, my father taught me that nothing is ever a complete failure if not to serve as a bad example.
Speaker CAnd so I kind of took that to heart that, you know, mistakes are.
Speaker CIt's okay to make mistakes as long as you learn from.
Speaker AI think that's one of the best answers we've gotten.
Speaker AI really do.
Speaker AIf you were declared by Leanne, the supreme ruler of barbecue for one day, what would you, as supreme ruler, decree?
Speaker CBarbecue is a noun and not a verb.
Speaker AOkay, well, then the next one.
Speaker AOn a scale of 1 to 10, how much barbecue do you actually eat on a regular basis?
Speaker CYou know, I eat a fairly good amount of barbecue.
Speaker CI eat barbecue a couple times a week at least, and so I'm pretty full up on barbecue.
Speaker AOkay, what's your.
Speaker AOutside of barbecue?
Speaker AWhat's your other favorite type of food?
Speaker CYou know, I love all types of food, but I love.
Speaker CI love a good steak, but I find myself the older I get, the less of that steak I can eat.
Speaker CI love steak, but I can eat less and less of that red meat the older I get.
Speaker AOkay, I can agree with that.
Speaker AWhat does a fantasy day look like for Kerry Bringle?
Speaker CYou know, I think a fantasy day for Kerry Bringgo is spending time with another business leader that's more successful than me.
Speaker CI'm, you know, I'm an entrepreneur at heart, and I really like to focus on my business and the.
Speaker CAnd the business of running my business.
Speaker CAnd it's something that I'm very serious about growing as a businessman and growing the brand globally.
Speaker CAnd so being able to spend time with somebody who's more successful and learn from what they've done is a.
Speaker CIs a great fantasy day for me.
Speaker CCool.
Speaker AYou remember the first thing that you ever like, grilled or smoked?
Speaker CYeah, there were a couple things I either.
Speaker CMy grandfather Jack used to do smoked hamburgers, and I would sit with him, and he would.
Speaker CAnd we also did country back ribs.
Speaker CWe didn't know, you know, we weren't.
Speaker CThey didn't have much money.
Speaker CYou know, we didn't have a lot of money, so we would cook country back ribs as the first rib I probably ever had.
Speaker CAnd then my Uncle Bruce, who competed in the very first Memphis in.
Speaker CMy first thing I learned how to cook from him was a smoked turkey.
Speaker AThere you go.
Speaker AThere you go.
Speaker AWhen you were competing and stuff, Carrie, where was the worst place you ever had to cook?
Speaker CYou know, a parking lot.
Speaker CI mean, I've gone to several parking lots.
Speaker AWhen it's 110 outside.
Speaker CYeah, when it's 110, 120, it sucks.
Speaker AUnderstand that.
Speaker AWhat is your least favorite activity in the world?
Speaker AWhat's something you just dread doing?
Speaker AYou know you got to do it, but you don't want to.
Speaker CPaperwork.
Speaker APaperwork.
Speaker AThat's legal.
Speaker AThat's legal.
Speaker AYou remember the first thing you ever got in trouble for as a kid?
Speaker CIt wasn't the first thing, but I remember I took my mama, I had a neighbor, and she brought some strange guy, I didn't know him into our yard.
Speaker CAnd they were.
Speaker CAnd my sister, they were playing, and I told him to get out of my yard and.
Speaker CAnd he wouldn't.
Speaker CAnd I went and got my mama's.
Speaker CI knew where my mama had a.22 rifle.
Speaker CAnd I went and got it.
Speaker BOh, my God.
Speaker COut of the sewing room.
Speaker CAnd I took it to the front door and I held it and I.
Speaker CI pointed at that boy.
Speaker CYou get out of my yard now.
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker CAnd then I proceed to get my ass whipped by my mama with a pancake spatula and got grounded for probably two weeks, so.
Speaker AOh, that's great story.
Speaker AThat's great.
Speaker ASpeaking of getting their ass whipped, Carrie, if you could teach a politician to.
Speaker ATo barbecue, who would it be?
Speaker CYou know, I don't.
Speaker CI like.
Speaker CI spent some time some with Senator Hagerty out of here in Tennessee, and he's a really good guy, and I think he's a really intelligent person and so.
Speaker CAnd he was a very successful businessman.
Speaker CSo I think teaching him how to cook barbecue and maybe learning from him, from his business acumen in the past would be a good day.
Speaker AThere you go.
Speaker AThere you go.
Speaker AWhat would you change, if anything, on food shows on television?
Speaker CI would say they don't have to all be about.
Speaker CThey don't all have to be a competition.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AOkay, very good.
Speaker AIf we put your skills to music, what would the music be?
Speaker CI think the music would be blues and soul.
Speaker ACool.
Speaker ACool.
Speaker CFor 10 years here at Peg Leg, starting from day one, we had very white Wednesday, where every Wednesday was very white, all day and all night.
Speaker CMy staff knows every Barry White song ever made.
Speaker BThat's awesome.
Speaker AI Love that.
Speaker AIf you were an animal, what animal would you be?
Speaker AProbably not that bear behind you on the wall there?
Speaker CI would be.
Speaker CI would be like the animals that I own, which are English bulldogs.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker CLike them.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker CNot a far stretch.
Speaker AI got it.
Speaker AI got it.
Speaker AWould you describe yourself as corn fed or grass fed?
Speaker CI'd say corn fed.
Speaker AYou're a good man.
Speaker AI like that.
Speaker ABoxers or briefs?
Speaker CBoxers.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AOne thing you miss about your 20s.
Speaker CMy stamina.
Speaker AI like that, too.
Speaker BHe'll leave it at that.
Speaker AHe'll leave it at that.
Speaker AYep, yep, yep.
Speaker AYou got a favorite movie?
Speaker CI got a lot of favorite movies.
Speaker CI.
Speaker CI really like Clint Eastwood movies.
Speaker CSo, you know.
Speaker ACool.
Speaker AYou.
Speaker AWhat would you say was the worst thing you've ever eaten?
Speaker COh, gosh.
Speaker CWow.
Speaker CI don't know.
Speaker CI've had some bad fish dishes.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AAnd last question, Jerry.
Speaker AWhat would be your last meal if you were on death row?
Speaker CMaybe chip beef on toast.
Speaker CWow.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AThey used to call that SOS well.
Speaker CYou know, people get that mixed up.
Speaker CUsually, SOS Is ground beef and gravy.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CBut chip beef on toast is chip beef.
Speaker CThey're totally different.
Speaker CYou know, you're right.
Speaker AYou're right.
Speaker CBeef on toast fan.
Speaker AThat's true.
Speaker AThat's true.
Speaker AI actually like chip beef on toast, so I love.
Speaker AIt's good stuff there.
Speaker AAnyway, Carrie, Bringle from Peg Leg Porker, thanks for.
Speaker AThanks for playing along with this part of the show today.
Speaker AAnd we really appreciate you being on the Nation.
Speaker CYeah, yeah.
Speaker CThank you both.
Speaker CI really appreciate your time.
Speaker CIt's always great to see you.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AAnd we will send off the appropriate links when the show's ready and to the all your folks there and so you can see what kind of nonsense we really do here.
Speaker AHow's that?
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker BAll right, Carrie, take care, and thanks for taking the time.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker CYou'll have a great weekend.
Speaker AYou, too.
Speaker AThanks for listening, folks.
Speaker AWe'll be back next week with another edition of After Hours.
Speaker AGo out, have some barbecue ticks, take care of yourselves, and remember, turn it, don't burn it.