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 BHey, everybody.
Speaker BWelcome to Barbecue Nation.
Speaker BI'm JT along with leann Whippen, hall of Famer.
Speaker BAs you know, this is the show where we talk about all kinds of barbecue and food stuff, and occasionally we get somebody from Texas on, which is one of my favorite states.
Speaker BAnd today we've got JR Love.
Speaker BJunior hangs out in Houston.
Speaker BThat's where he hangs his hat, as you can see, over his right shoulder there.
Speaker BAnd Junior is the guiding spirit of the Cowboy yacht club.
Speaker BHey, J.R.
Speaker Bhow are you?
Speaker CFantastic.
Speaker CThanks for having me.
Speaker BYeah, you know, I've been to the Houston Rodeo, but not to the barbecue competition back when I.
Speaker BYeah, back when I was covering rodeo stuff.
Speaker BI mean, that was, you know, a different deal.
Speaker BTell us about that.
Speaker BI mean, we hear lots of stories, we see lots of pictures, but it's a big freaking deal.
Speaker DIt is a big one.
Speaker CYeah, it's.
Speaker CIt's the largest from my understanding.
Speaker CSo it started about 1974.
Speaker CI started cooking there in 1976 with my stepdad.
Speaker CIt's grown from about 20 teams the first couple years to 250 teams, a thousand tents, and 250,000 people in three days.
Speaker BWow.
Speaker BNow, how does that stack up, Leanne, to, like, the Royal, The Royal in.
Speaker DThe Open, they have about 400 teams.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker DBut I've not been to the Houston Rodeo, which is shocking to me.
Speaker DActually.
Speaker DIt's on my hit list.
Speaker DBut I understand it's like a totally different vibe there than the Royal.
Speaker CIt's Mardi Gras.
Speaker DYeah, it's Mardi Gras.
Speaker CThe cowboy has some barbecue.
Speaker CYeah, that's best way to describe it.
Speaker BIs that why you're drinking ice water now?
Speaker CWe'll say it's ice water.
Speaker CThe rodeo goes on.
Speaker CSo after the barbecue, the rodeo starts two days after and goes through about 20 plus days of rodeo, and we're in day 15.
Speaker CI've been to the rodeo almost every night because there's a concert after the rodeo and take guests and clients and friends, and it's.
Speaker CIt's.
Speaker CHouston shuts down.
Speaker CIt really is an event.
Speaker BI'm gonna have to come to that one of these days.
Speaker CThat's a lot of fun.
Speaker BTo the barbecue part and the start of the rodeo.
Speaker BWhat kind of.
Speaker BWhat kind of concerts?
Speaker BI know George Strait and Clint Black and those guys have played there a few times.
Speaker CSo let's See I got my list over here.
Speaker COkay, tonight's Post Malone, then Old Dominion.
Speaker CCody Jinx, Parker McCallum, Brooks and Dunn.
Speaker CAnd Luke Bryan ends the show.
Speaker CWe had Reba open up.
Speaker CReba McIntyre open the show.
Speaker CBrad Paisley.
Speaker CI mean, it's just been.
Speaker BWow.
Speaker CIt's been a lot of fun.
Speaker BThat's cool.
Speaker BSo tell us about how did you get started, junior in barbecue and cooking in general.
Speaker BAnd take us through your progression there.
Speaker CI don't want to get too far back, but my mom was, she worked retail so she really didn't get home at night till 10 o'clock at night.
Speaker CAnd if I wanted to eat dinner, I had to learn how to cook.
Speaker CSo I was a latchkey kid.
Speaker CGet off the bus, you know, go home, do my homework, open up, you know, cook my own dinner.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CAnd my wife jokes and calls me a MacGyver in the kitchen because I've never looked at a cookbook.
Speaker CTrial and error, you know, just different spices with different meats and different way of cooking stuff.
Speaker CAnd some of it was absolutely horrible and some was really good.
Speaker CSo that's kind of how I got started cooking.
Speaker CAnd then in college, same group I cook with in cowboy yacht club, but really a bunch of my fraternity brothers, we started cooking for the, you know, the, the weekends and for the, the dad's weekend.
Speaker CAnd that morphed into me starting an outdoor catering company for deer hunting and things for our fraternities.
Speaker CDads, they would take, take me down to South Texas and I'd cook for a bunch of older men, you know, the dads, and cook barbecue while they deer hunted.
Speaker CAnd I get to hunt for free and they'd pay me and that was awesome.
Speaker CAnd my stepdad really taught me how to cook barbecue starting at the rodeo when I was about 10 years old.
Speaker CWe won it in 1976, the second year we won, we won first place in brisket.
Speaker CSo been doing it now for 48 years at the rodeo.
Speaker CHad a blast.
Speaker CI do about four to five competitions a year, mainly veteran driven and charity driven competitions.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CAnd you know, at home all the time.
Speaker CThen do a lot of wild game as well.
Speaker BHow do they run it there at.
Speaker EAt Houston?
Speaker BI mean, is it the same like as a KCBS event where categories and calls at the end or is that very similar or what?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CSo you have brisket, ribs and chicken as you three and then you have Dutch oven and you have an open competition and those are all turned in on Saturday, the last day they tag your meat.
Speaker CThey, you know, you get to cook two pieces of meat for each category.
Speaker CAnd then you have.
Speaker CIt's a blind turn in, and they've got rotating judges of about.
Speaker CI think it's 10 to 15 judges per hour because we've got, like I said, 250 teams, and they're judging all this meat all day long.
Speaker CAnd it's a blind.
Speaker CA blind draw, and you have a turn in time and a window, and that's.
Speaker CThat's how it works.
Speaker BHave you won it since?
Speaker CNo.
Speaker CSo I think there's a little politicking involved when it gets in the upper echelon.
Speaker CBut for this year, we got 24th in ribs, which is top 10%, which is pretty good.
Speaker CLast year I got 26 and brisket.
Speaker CSo we're always up there on one of the categories or not.
Speaker CWe have not won the overall, except for when I was a kid.
Speaker BLeanne, you wouldn't say there's ever any politics in barbecue, would you?
Speaker DNo.
Speaker CI'll give you an example, and I won't name names, but if a title sponsor of the rodeo also has a barbecue team, they happen to win, you know.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CIt makes you kind of wonder a little bit.
Speaker BOh, it's just one of those, you.
Speaker DKnow, it's just coincidence.
Speaker BYeah, I'm sure it's one of those life coincidences.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CNow, I did go to lunch with one of judges last week after the barbecue, and he's been judging brisket for 10 or 15 years, and he said this year's turn in was probably the best brisket he's ever had.
Speaker DWow.
Speaker CSo it, The, The.
Speaker CThe.
Speaker CThe game has been upped every year.
Speaker CIt used to be just a big drinking party, and you happened to turn in some.
Speaker CSome competition.
Speaker CNow it's pretty serious.
Speaker CThe last five to 10 years, been real serious.
Speaker BIt's still a big drinking party, though, isn't it?
Speaker BThat didn't go away.
Speaker CIt's Mardi Gras.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CWith barbecue.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo, you know, brisket being of divine providence in Texas, how I say that?
Speaker BBecause I can't tell you how many people we've talked to, and everybody from Texas thinks that they're brisket, and rightly so, in a lot of cases is absolute best.
Speaker BAnd then, you know how it spreads out across the country.
Speaker BWhat's the secret, jr, to Texas brisket?
Speaker CWell, you gotta look at the history of that.
Speaker CI mean, that's.
Speaker CWe were a cattle state, and brisket was a cheap cut of meat, and it fed a lot of people.
Speaker CAnd there.
Speaker CWe just perfected it over the last Hundred something years.
Speaker CAnd I've read brisket a lot of other places and it doesn't compare to, in my opinion, yeah, Texas brisket.
Speaker CThe secret is dry rub.
Speaker CIt's a dry rub, slow and low smoked, a little bit of hickory, post oak and, and mesquite wood, which I think gives it a good pop.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker BSo, Leanne, you've judged all over the place as a professional judge, which you are, among other things.
Speaker BHow can you always tell if there's a team like let's say at the Royal or the Jack?
Speaker BCan you always tell if it's a team from Texas?
Speaker BYou don't know who they are, but the way they season and the way.
Speaker DIt'S cooked, not really.
Speaker DI'm headed down to Texas in the middle of April.
Speaker DHave you ever heard of the Syndicate Smoke down in Fort Worth?
Speaker DI have, yeah.
Speaker DSo I'll be judging there and I look forward to that because it's Texas brisket.
Speaker DI mean, in most of the contests that I judge it's kcbs and a lot of the guys are just following the KCBS tried and true method in rubs.
Speaker DSo I can't say I can really tell the difference because it's usually like KCBS style.
Speaker DWe'll call it the best brisket that I've had has been down in Texas for sure.
Speaker CYou know, speaking the rubs, a Texas rub, I think we, especially in Houston, we're really blessed with some great barbecue places.
Speaker CI think there is a Cajun and a little bit of Spanish, Mexican, Tex Mex hint to the brubs.
Speaker CLike I put cumin in my rub.
Speaker CI put Tony Sachere in my rub.
Speaker CSo there's, I think there's a little bit of nuance there compared to other places.
Speaker CEven North Texas doesn't really do the, the Tex Mex kind of spices, but we tend to do that here in Houston, in my opinion at least.
Speaker CI do and I like.
Speaker CBut you know, it's weird going from what we used to cook back at the rodeo.
Speaker CThirty years ago, you wouldn't even, it wouldn't even score.
Speaker CNow it's a, it was a wet mopped and it had vinegar and all kinds of different things.
Speaker CNowadays it's a dry rub, simple.
Speaker CYou better have a good smoke ring and a good, you know, good bark to it or you're not going to score well.
Speaker BWell, I know Leanne likes to eat good brisket because I do.
Speaker BShe may be little, but she knows what she's talking about with a, with a fork in her hand.
Speaker DIt seems like a Lot of the brisket that I have down there is just really kind of salt and pepper.
Speaker DMaybe it's a place that I'm going.
Speaker DI'm not picking up the Mexican influence.
Speaker DBut again, it could be where I eat.
Speaker CSo I like to make mine a little spicier, a little more flavor.
Speaker CThat's just me.
Speaker CI like spicy, and it's not spicy.
Speaker CAnd we don't use a lot of sauce, and we don't actually put no sauce on the meat.
Speaker CI really don't ever put sauce even after it's done.
Speaker DSo when you're a brisket, are you picking prime or does it matter what competition we're using?
Speaker CEither prime or wagyu.
Speaker DOkay, same thing.
Speaker DOkay.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CAnd then, you know, we, we tend to.
Speaker CWe have a big hickory rotisserie for our team for Cavalry Yacht Club.
Speaker CAnd we, we do about 30 to 40 briskets a night.
Speaker CFor our, our tent, you know, to serve our people.
Speaker CWe serve about 750 people a night on Friday night and about 1200 on Saturday night.
Speaker CAnd that's just one tent.
Speaker CJust one little tent in the hole.
Speaker DThat's awesome.
Speaker CYeah, it's.
Speaker CIt's crazy how many people are up there.
Speaker CBut we tend to, you know, pull them at about 180 and then put them in a.
Speaker CI'll give a shout out to our head.
Speaker COur head cook is named Reed Johnson, who I went to A and M with, and so did our friend from Oregon.
Speaker CHe invented a liner that goes down into the igloo coolers that seals it even better.
Speaker CAnd we, we steam them in those coolers for about three hours.
Speaker CThey get up to 200, 205 while they're sitting in those coolers.
Speaker CAnd it makes it really tender.
Speaker CIt doesn't make them mushy.
Speaker CKeeps the juices in.
Speaker CIt works really well, and it's easy to do.
Speaker CWow.
Speaker BOkay, we're going to take a break.
Speaker BWe're going to be back with JR Love from the Cowboy Yacht Club fame in Houston right after this.
Speaker EEverybody.
Speaker EIs Jeff here?
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Speaker EJust go to heritage steel.us and find out more.
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Speaker BWelcome back to the nation.
Speaker BI'm J.T.
Speaker Bwe want to thank the folks at Painterdale's Natural beef.
Speaker BBeef the way nature intended.
Speaker BAnd it's good beef in Fact, I gotta tell you this, Junior, they, their son left eastern Oregon and went to school in Lubbock.
Speaker BAnd he, and he also went to work in a meat plant there on, you know, after school to earn money and stuff.
Speaker CSo.
Speaker COut there.
Speaker CTexas Tech.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CI won't say it's the redhead stepchild because I'm an Aggie, so.
Speaker BWell, of course you are.
Speaker BSo before I want to talk some more about the Cowboy Yacht Club, but before we do, I want to ask about your cowboy hat there.
Speaker BYour hat.
Speaker COh, yeah, yeah, that's, that's, this is.
Speaker CSo there's all my pins for being a cook the last 15 years.
Speaker BThere you go.
Speaker CIt's my cooking hat.
Speaker CIt's fairly old.
Speaker CIt's about a 40 year old Stetson I've had and I cooking it and it's nice.
Speaker CIt's, it, it, it's, it smells like barbecue.
Speaker DWell, it looks relatively clean, I must say, for it being the color that it is.
Speaker CIf you saw it up close, like those are grease stains.
Speaker DThere you go.
Speaker BIf you look at, look inside the liner there, you can see the sweat stains and stuff.
Speaker CIt's pretty.
Speaker CIt's old.
Speaker BI like it.
Speaker CI've got rodeo tonight.
Speaker CAfter, after our podcast is finished, I'm going out to the rodeo, so I have to have my hat.
Speaker BThere you go.
Speaker BOkay, let's talk about the Cowboy Yacht Club.
Speaker BWho came up with the name?
Speaker CSo that's, that's kind of interesting too.
Speaker CSo my, my wife Wendy, she, before this is, before we were married, she started it with a group of friends in 1989 and it's been there ever since.
Speaker CWe have the same spot in the parking lot.
Speaker CWe've always been there and I'm not quite sure who came up with the name, but I'm going to credit my wife for that.
Speaker BAnd I mean, and how, I mean, you don't think of cowboys and yachts.
Speaker CAlthough we're only 50 miles from Galveston and yeah, her, her dad always had a boat and a lot of our buddies have boats and so.
Speaker CAnd I believe there was an old country song about a Cowboy yacht club.
Speaker CSo that's where it came from is they would, you know, you're down on the coast wearing cowboy hats and fishing on the coast and, you know.
Speaker BAbsolutely, I get it.
Speaker DDoes everyone on the team have to have a boat in order to get into the group?
Speaker DYes, yes, yes.
Speaker COr have a friend that has a boat, which is even better.
Speaker BYeah, that's kind of like USA Insurance.
Speaker BIf somebody in your heritage was in the military, you're in.
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI like that.
Speaker BOut of all the stuff you do, Junior, I was going to call you Robert, but then that would tip my hand to Andy, so I'm going to call you Junior.
Speaker BAll right.
Speaker BOf all the stuff you do, what gives you probably the biggest smile when you're done with cooking in Houston?
Speaker BI know you do a few other ones, but not.
Speaker BYou're not on the circuit in that.
Speaker BBut I just.
Speaker BHouston to me really is, with my background.
Speaker BIt is the, the big deal in barbecue.
Speaker CYou know, the, the rodeo itself.
Speaker CThe world cook.
Speaker CThe world barbecue cook off at the Houston rodeo.
Speaker CIt's.
Speaker CIt's having all your friends there and it's a lot of fun.
Speaker CIt does go to charity.
Speaker CIt does go to scholarships.
Speaker CHonestly, one of my favorite things I do is the PTSD barbecue here in Houston.
Speaker CIt's for Camp Hope.
Speaker CCamp Hope is a facility for PTSD sufferers and they don't just treat the veteran.
Speaker CThey bring in the whole family and they live there.
Speaker CAnd that barbecue raises money to build more facilities.
Speaker CWe do it every year on Veterans weekend or Veterans Day, and that one is about 40 teams.
Speaker CWe usually have a really good country artists come in.
Speaker CLike last year we had marchesnut.
Speaker CWe've had some really good talent.
Speaker CIt brings in a lot of money.
Speaker CI'm really proud of that one.
Speaker CIt's a lot of fun.
Speaker CI do several other charity cook offs that I like to cook, but also like it to have a purpose, not just to win a trophy.
Speaker CSo we, we do four or five charitable cook offs a year and then we'll do a couple of different competitions as well.
Speaker BCool.
Speaker BVery cool.
Speaker BI like, I like Mark Chestnut, by the way.
Speaker COh, yeah.
Speaker CGreat guy.
Speaker BIs he okay?
Speaker BHe had a heart, heart problem or something earlier.
Speaker CYou know what?
Speaker CHe's.
Speaker CHe sat on a stool and banged out for an hour and a half on stage.
Speaker CHe was great last year.
Speaker BOh, good, good.
Speaker BSo what's the favorite thing you cook?
Speaker BI know you do brisket that's.
Speaker BYou've got to.
Speaker BOr you can't be considered a barbecue guy in Texas.
Speaker BBut, but you know, you do ribs and chicken and then when you're not competing, you do other stuff.
Speaker BWhat's your.
Speaker BWhat's your favorite to do?
Speaker CBrisk is probably my favorite.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CIt's probably what I'm best at.
Speaker CBut I think I mentioned earlier, I do a lot of wild game cooking as well.
Speaker CI love sandhill crane ribeye in the sky.
Speaker CWe hunt those quite a bit down here on the coast and they are absolutely delicious.
Speaker CIf they're.
Speaker CIf they're reverse smoked, seared.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CDo a lot of white tail deer, do a lot of elk, you name it.
Speaker CIf it's wild game, we cook it.
Speaker CBut brisket's probably my best.
Speaker CWe have a.
Speaker CWe have.
Speaker CSo our team is kind of split up in divisions.
Speaker CWe have eight guys that cook, and I think six of us are all fraternity brothers from 30 years ago.
Speaker C35 years ago.
Speaker CAnd so we have one guy, John Benton, that does a great job on the ribs.
Speaker CReed Johnson's really good on chicken.
Speaker CTyler Gurney, who is on our team, he's a new addition.
Speaker CHe's a pit boss at Pinkerton's here in Houston.
Speaker CSo he's really good at overall, and he's also a classically trained chef.
Speaker CSo we all have kind of a specialty, and we lean on those guys to do what they do best for the competition.
Speaker DWhen you do chicken, do you have to turn in a half chicken?
Speaker CCorrect.
Speaker DOkay.
Speaker DSo it's different than kcbs.
Speaker CThat's.
Speaker CYeah, I like that one half chicken.
Speaker CIt's not quarter nine.
Speaker CIt's a half a chicken.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker BI wonder how the chicken feels about that.
Speaker CProbably not very good.
Speaker BBy the way, I'm going to reach out to Tyler after the rodeo's over.
Speaker COh, good.
Speaker BYeah, I will get to him.
Speaker BWe're in the middle of a bunch of stuff up here.
Speaker CSo he does 60 to 80 briskets a day.
Speaker DWow.
Speaker CEvery day.
Speaker BThat's a lot of brisket, man.
Speaker BA lot of brisket.
Speaker CPinkerton's is a great restaurant.
Speaker CGreat, great barbecue place here in Houston.
Speaker BOne of the first shows I ever did in Texas was in Beaumont, Okay.
Speaker BAnd I went to Downtown Browns over there in the Holiday Inn because I.
Speaker BI heard the George Jones song.
Speaker BSo I had to go see Downtown Browns, right?
Speaker BAnd I.
Speaker BAnd I had a friend, he lives up here now, actually.
Speaker BHe takes me way out in the boondocks out there somewhere in this little, like, gas station type thing.
Speaker BAnd I.
Speaker BAnd I.
Speaker BThat really.
Speaker BAnd that was in, like, 1982 or something.
Speaker BIt really made me change my thinking about.
Speaker BBecause, you know, we're Yankees up here, right?
Speaker BAnd so all the barbecue has a lot of sauce on it and all that stuff, but it really changed the way I was thinking about it.
Speaker BAnyway, we got to take another break.
Speaker BWe're going to be back with JR from the Cowboy Yacht Club in Houston right after this.
Speaker EHey, everybody, it's JT And I have eaten.
Speaker EIf you've ever looked at me, you know that.
Speaker EBut I have eaten seafood all over the world.
Speaker EAnd I can tell you there's no place better than here in Oregon and our Dungeness crab.
Speaker EIf you want to learn more about Oregon Dungeness crab, just go to oregondungeness.org find out how to cook it, how to catch it, where to buy it, and the sustainability of what they're doing there in the Oregon Crab Commission.
Speaker BCheck it out.
Speaker BWelcome back to the Nation.
Speaker BOne of the people that always supports this show because she is on the show is Ms.
Speaker BWhippen right there.
Speaker BAnd she's got stuff.
Speaker BShe's got a lot of stuff.
Speaker DYes.
Speaker DMy dad's award winning, and it really is.
Speaker DIt won the best.
Speaker DI think it's one of the biggest awards, best robe on the planet.
Speaker DAnd it is sweet with a little bit of heat, and you can use it on multiple things.
Speaker DAs you know you've done it.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker DAnd I won awards with it.
Speaker DAnd there are teams out there right now winning lots of awards with it.
Speaker DAnd it's available@pigpowder.com There you go.
Speaker BAnd you got some spicy, spicy pig powders coming out.
Speaker DYes, I keep saying that, but it's getting closer and closer.
Speaker DI'm thinking the delivery will be mid April, to be realistic.
Speaker BI'll be expecting some up here in Yankeeville.
Speaker DWe'll get some for sure.
Speaker BYou got to try some of hers, J.R.
Speaker Bjust for fun.
Speaker DIt really is good.
Speaker BIt's very.
Speaker CWhat kind of heat are we talking about?
Speaker DWell, it's got a little chili pattern, cayenne, and it's subtle back heat.
Speaker DBut the rub itself is a beautiful rub because it, you know, when it caramelizes, it's, you know, really gives your meat.
Speaker DThe mahogany.
Speaker DIt's best on pork and chicken, in my opinion.
Speaker DIt's.
Speaker DI mix it with more of a salt and pepper rub when I'm doing brisket, but it's veggies, seafood.
Speaker DYeah, it's great.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CTo try it.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI use it on green beans, scallops, eggs, the whole thing.
Speaker BIt's really good.
Speaker BThere's, you know, a unsolicited pitch there for me, but I'm telling you, it's.
Speaker BIt's really good stuff.
Speaker BAnyway, Junior, back to, back to your cooking there.
Speaker BOne of the things that sold me on having you on the show was you do a lot.
Speaker BYou touched on it the last segment.
Speaker BI do a lot for charity and, and I'm big on helping veterans, as Leanne knows.
Speaker BAnd also, you know, trade school scholarships for kids.
Speaker BThey don't all have to go to law school or get a degree.
Speaker BIn science, you know, whatever it is like that.
Speaker BBut I want to reach or pick your mind a little bit.
Speaker BExcuse me.
Speaker BAbout what made you decide to start supporting, like, the PTSD camps and that type of thing.
Speaker CSo my.
Speaker CMy former in laws were all military, and, you know, even though they're my former in laws, I got divorced.
Speaker CBut I still love them, and they're great people, and I got to see a lot.
Speaker CI got to see a lot of PTSD survivors that were friends with my family.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker CSo that really got me thinking, how can I do something towards that with something I like to love to do as well?
Speaker CSo another fraternity brother, I have a pretty strong network of fraternity brothers here in Houston, was on the board at the ptsd, and he said, hey, we're thinking about starting this barbecue.
Speaker CWhat do you think?
Speaker CI said, great idea.
Speaker CI'm in.
Speaker CSo I was the first team that joined that was, I think, 15 years ago.
Speaker CSo it's grown from five or six teams now to 40 or 50 teams.
Speaker CLike I said, Mark Chestnut came out last year.
Speaker CThey donate back their money usually.
Speaker CSo it's.
Speaker CIt's a really good cause.
Speaker CYou get to see.
Speaker CHere's some really great success stories.
Speaker CIt just makes you feel good, you know, and to give back to those guys, it's worth it.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BDo they ever get a chance at the camp to actually, like, cook with you guys?
Speaker COh, yeah.
Speaker CThey have their own teams now.
Speaker CThey'll.
Speaker CThey'll.
Speaker CThe.
Speaker CA lot of the PTS guys that live at the camp, at Camp Hope will put together their own teams to compete.
Speaker CAnd that's.
Speaker CThat's a lot of fun to see that.
Speaker CAnd then, you know, we also.
Speaker CWe donate the meat that we're cooking at that barbecue.
Speaker CWe turn in some for competition, but the rest of the rest of it, the teams have to cook a certain amount that no donate to the public food booth.
Speaker CSo friends and family of all these people that live there, I mean, there's several thousand people there.
Speaker CWe're cooking for all of them.
Speaker CAnd just to see the group get together, get to see those families together and friends, and then they have testimonials of these people that were, you know, near suicide on the street, living on the street, things like that, to see them stand up and testify and talk about what Camp Hope's done for them, it's just.
Speaker CI'm getting choked up thinking about it.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BDo they live there?
Speaker BDid the families live there for.
Speaker BI mean, does it go on for a long time?
Speaker BOr are they there for a month or two?
Speaker COr what they usually rotate them out in between six and six weeks and six months.
Speaker CIt just depends on the veteran.
Speaker CBut the whole family moves in and they have, I think over 60 therapy sessions a week.
Speaker CThey have guidance, counsel, career counseling.
Speaker CThey have, you know, if you need to help write a resume, they help do that.
Speaker CIt's really all immersive and getting that person out of that mindset of, I've been in Iraq for five years, back to the real world.
Speaker CBecause these young kids didn't know anything else other than going in there and kicking indoors, you know?
Speaker BRight, right.
Speaker BIt was very similar in a lot of respects to what we did in Vietnam.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BDifferent side of the world, but a.
Speaker CLot of young, they just.
Speaker CThe rules of engagement there were completely different.
Speaker CWhat they're used to the normal world over here, and they just got to get a reset.
Speaker CAnd helping them do that, that's great.
Speaker BI love that.
Speaker BI absolutely love that.
Speaker BWhen you're cooking, is it just a party atmosphere for you guys the whole time?
Speaker BPretty much.
Speaker C90% of the time, yes.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CI mean, let's say we take an hour out of the day to trim the briskets, rub them down and put them on the pit.
Speaker CAnd after that it's, you know, it's pretty much game on time to crack.
Speaker BOpen some beverage there, I think.
Speaker CSee our tent?
Speaker CIt's like I said, we have a very small tent compared to some of the others.
Speaker CI mean, some of these tents spend a million dollars in three days.
Speaker DWow.
Speaker CI mean, it's insane.
Speaker COpen bar, live music, dance floors, you name it.
Speaker CWe're very basic.
Speaker CWe're one of the few non corporately owned are funded tents.
Speaker CWe're members only.
Speaker CThere's anywhere from 55 to 75 members every year.
Speaker CEverybody chips in their, their quota and we have a little $35,000 party.
Speaker CIt's great.
Speaker BHow big's the tent, Junior?
Speaker C40 by 40.
Speaker DThat's decent.
Speaker CBig white, you know, Big white, you know.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker COurs, I think it's 40 by 40.
Speaker BWhere do you put all the people, though?
Speaker BI mean, so you said that.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CSo what we do is we.
Speaker CWe have a corner spot and so we have cocktail tables on the outside of the tent also.
Speaker CBut we serve from seven to nine.
Speaker CAnd we serve a thousand people from seven to nine.
Speaker CAnd as you eat, you get up and give up your seat to somebody else.
Speaker CAnd at 9 o'clock, food's gone.
Speaker CWe fold up the chairs and all the tables and we have a DJ and we turn into a dance floor and we, we hit the Party going.
Speaker BI gotta come hang out there.
Speaker DThey have it down to a science.
Speaker DIt sounds.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, it does.
Speaker CWe've got it down.
Speaker CIt's, it's really, I mean, you know, like I said, our team is all volunteers.
Speaker CWe don't have any corporate sponsorship.
Speaker CSo we have a tear down team, we have a setup team, we have a cook team, we have a trash team, we have the beer team, we have, you know, everybody has a job in the tent, so it runs very smoothly.
Speaker BAnd do people, you said it's members only.
Speaker BDo they.
Speaker BIs there an admission fee or a fee to come eat?
Speaker CSo roughly it's $500 per member.
Speaker CAnd then for that Friday and Saturday night you get eight wristbands to give the guests.
Speaker CThat's how you get about 750 to 1,000 people.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CThe other tents, it's, I mean, we're, we're cheap.
Speaker CWe're.
Speaker CWe just.
Speaker CIt's a basic party, have a good time.
Speaker CA lot of these other tents are, like I said, they spend hundreds of thousands of dollars and it's, it's insane what, what they, what they do.
Speaker CBut it's, it's all part of the experience.
Speaker CYou know, you've got the carnival going on in between the rodeo.
Speaker CIt's just, it's like I said, There's 250,000 people in three days there.
Speaker BHow, how do people do that?
Speaker BBack up a second.
Speaker BDo people ever, you know, bow out and give up their space?
Speaker BI wouldn't seem like the guys that are really rare.
Speaker CYeah, unfortunately, we had a big dropout this year.
Speaker CJack Daniels withdrew.
Speaker CThey've been a big sponsor of a big tent for 25, 30 years.
Speaker CThey weren't there this year.
Speaker CI heard they withdrew from the Vegas rodeo and from Dallas or Fort Worth barbecues.
Speaker BWow, I didn't know that.
Speaker CThat was a big shock to us.
Speaker CBut like my tents, two, two down from United, United Airlines.
Speaker CI mean, there's some big sponsors out there.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BWow.
Speaker BThat's.
Speaker CBut once when someone does drop out, they get snatched up quick by the tent next to them to expand their tent because there's a finite, there's finite room.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker CSo.
Speaker BSo you like kind of give us a visual here, junior.
Speaker BIs it, you know, the serving area?
Speaker BBut are the, are your pits out back?
Speaker CNo, your pit's got to be contained in your space.
Speaker BReally?
Speaker CReally.
Speaker CSo we have a, we have a nice little old hickory rotisserie smoker.
Speaker BRight, you said that 8 by 8.
Speaker CBy 8 foot by 8 foot box on a 12 foot trailer.
Speaker CAnd it's, it's.
Speaker CIt's basically the front side of our kitchen.
Speaker CAnd the kitchen goes behind the pit on the, on the long side of the.
Speaker COf the tent.
Speaker CAnd then the rest of the tent is.
Speaker CWe have some restrooms in one corner.
Speaker CWe have the beer in the back and tables out in the, in the main area.
Speaker CI mean, a friend of mine has a pit on his tent.
Speaker CHe has six spaces and his.
Speaker CHis pits.
Speaker C43ft long on a gooseneck trailer.
Speaker CIt holds 100 briskets at a time.
Speaker C200 racks to ribs at one time.
Speaker COn.
Speaker COn one in a fire by.
Speaker CIt's an offset firebox.
Speaker CIt.
Speaker CIt holds almost a half a quart of wood.
Speaker CIt's the biggest darn thing you've ever seen.
Speaker DWow.
Speaker CIt's just.
Speaker CIt's insane.
Speaker BThat's incredible.
Speaker CYeah, there's.
Speaker CAnd they serve, I don't know, I think 3,000 people a night.
Speaker BThat's a lot of wristbands.
Speaker CIt's a lot of wristbands.
Speaker BNo, it's all good.
Speaker BBut it just, you know, not being campy here.
Speaker BBut everything's bigger in Texas and I.
Speaker BIt doesn't surprise.
Speaker BIt doesn't surprise me to hear you describe your friends pit coming in on a gooseneck and, you know, I mean.
Speaker C40Ft long, triple axle.
Speaker CIt's huge.
Speaker CI mean, it's.
Speaker CAnd like the barbecue itself, it takes up all of NRG stadium's parking lot.
Speaker CIt's a tent city.
Speaker CIt goes up in a.
Speaker COn Sunday before we start on Wednesday, and it comes down on Sunday at noon that.
Speaker CThat week.
Speaker CI mean, it's.
Speaker CIt's amazing how they put this thing up and get everything in and out of there.
Speaker CIt's.
Speaker CI don't know how they do it.
Speaker BWow, that's incredible.
Speaker BHey, we're going to take another break, come back and wrap up the show with Junior Love from Houston, the Cowboy Yacht Club.
Speaker BBut Junior is going to stick around for after hours.
Speaker BI didn't tell him about that.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BWe'll be right back.
Speaker EHey, everybody, it's jt.
Speaker EYou know, I talk about Painted Hills all the time, and we always say beef the way nature intended.
Speaker EBut it's more than that because each bite of Painted Hills will make your taste buds explode.
Speaker EPut a big, bright smile on your face, and whoever is at your dinner table will have a big bright smile on their face.
Speaker EAnd you can thank me for that later.
Speaker EJust go to paintedhillsbeef.com and find out more.
Speaker EYou won't regret it.
Speaker EHey, everybody, J.T.
Speaker BHere.
Speaker EI want to Tell you about Hammerstall knives.
Speaker EHammerstall combines German steel with beautiful and functioning designs.
Speaker EThey're part of the Heritage Steel Group, which also does their pots and pans.
Speaker ESo go to heritagesteel US Check out the Hammer Stahl knives.
Speaker EIf you're really into cooking, I think you're really gonna like them.
Speaker BWelcome back to the nation.
Speaker BThat's Barbecue Nation.
Speaker BI'm JT along with Ms.
Speaker BWhippin, who's gonna be in Texas here in about a month, I guess, roughly about a month.
Speaker BMaybe you can swing down and see J R in Houston on your way home.
Speaker DApril 11th is when I'm headed down there.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker CCome on, see us.
Speaker DYeah, I'll take you on a bar in a day, though.
Speaker DI do the event, and then I have to come back, so I'll take.
Speaker CYou on a barbecue pub crawl.
Speaker DOh, I would love that.
Speaker DMaybe I will.
Speaker DMaybe I'll stay longer.
Speaker CI've got about 10 of my favorite barbecue places in Houston that are famous, that we could just go and taste each one.
Speaker DIt'd be so fun.
Speaker DIt would be my flights.
Speaker DWe'll.
Speaker DBroadcaster.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BSo, J.R.
Speaker Bare they, I think, the last.
Speaker BWell, the guys from grabbing the brisket, they're friends of ours.
Speaker BAnd I had told them one time that I said they didn't know this.
Speaker BI said, back in the early days when I was first starting to go to Texas, the tradition was if there was a dead armadillo, they put a Lone Star beer.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BIn this little paws alongside the road.
Speaker BThey thought I was crazy, but I'm not.
Speaker BAnd I knew what I was talking about.
Speaker BThey still do that?
Speaker CYes.
Speaker CAnd I have one taxidermied in my house.
Speaker CI really do.
Speaker BPerfect.
Speaker BYeah, perfect.
Speaker CI've actually eaten one of those, and it's absolutely disgusting.
Speaker CYeah, I mean, I lost a bet, let's put it that way.
Speaker BYeah, we.
Speaker CWe barbecued it, and it was absolutely the worst thing I've ever eaten in my life.
Speaker DWow.
Speaker CThat tastes like chicken, let's put it that way.
Speaker BNo, it doesn't taste like.
Speaker BIt doesn't taste like gator or anything like that.
Speaker BNo, no.
Speaker CIt's, like, greasy, stringy, anyway.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BWell, that's kind of like people who, you know, once in a while, I.
Speaker BI'm sure there's people still in the country that eat possum.
Speaker BNot this cowboy.
Speaker BNo, I'm not doing that.
Speaker CHey, my brother hunts squirrels in Florida.
Speaker CThey're pretty darn good if you cook them right.
Speaker DSquirrel's good.
Speaker BSquirrel's not bad, but possum, I just I can't do it.
Speaker CI just, I have not, I have not had a possum, but I have eaten armadillo and it's absolutely disgusting.
Speaker BOkay, well, we won't ask you to share that when we come to Texas.
Speaker BHow's that?
Speaker CGood?
Speaker BIt's all good.
Speaker BYou said you either use prime or wagyu.
Speaker BIs that readily available?
Speaker BI'm sure it's the, all the good.
Speaker COh yeah, I mean there's available down there some really good meat, meat purveyors that have their own wagyu stock.
Speaker CAnd then there's several good barbecue, barbecue stores that, you know, kind of sell as a loss leader.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CGet you in the store to buy a barbecue pit.
Speaker CSo, yeah, there's several places to get really good wagyu.
Speaker BHow, how long does it take you guys to prep?
Speaker BI mean, when you get it?
Speaker BBecause we talked to a lot of these competitors from time to time and they're, they're prepping before they le home.
Speaker BYou know, they're trimming, some of them are rubbing already, you know, doing those things.
Speaker BBut are you guys more of an on site crew?
Speaker CYeah, absolutely.
Speaker CWe, you know, we get, we get our, get our prime brisk.
Speaker CSo we cook prime for the everyday cook for our, for our guests.
Speaker CAnd that's we.
Speaker CSo when the party's over at about 10:30, 11:00 at night, we cut the crab ax, we trim the meat, we rub them down and it's an assembly line and we put them on the rotisserie, the old hickory turn on the, you know, we have the pit going and leave them all night and come back next morning ready to go.
Speaker BWhat time's your turn in down there?
Speaker CSo they stagger that the turn in for the turn in for the competition, which we, we do on a separate pit, by the way.
Speaker CWe use some, we use short barrel smokers for the, for the competition.
Speaker CThey're easier to control.
Speaker CAnd you know, I don't have people coming in and out of the big pit, you know, hurting my heat.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CSo like our brisket turn is usually around 3:00.
Speaker CYou know, chicken's usually the first thing we turn in at 11 and then the ribs usually at 1 o'clock and then brisket at 3.
Speaker BThere you go, there you go.
Speaker CAnd that's all, that's all on Saturday.
Speaker CAnd beer at 4, at 4am 4pm 4:30, whatever time.
Speaker BYeah, well, I like that.
Speaker BHey, you want to give a shout out to our old friend Andy Black up here?
Speaker CI would.
Speaker CHey, Andy, love you, brother.
Speaker CThanks for Getting me on the show.
Speaker CCan't wait to see you this summer.
Speaker BI'll have to meet you when you come up if.
Speaker CAbsolutely.
Speaker CI think we're going to come back through.
Speaker CWe went halibut fishing last summer up there and really had a good, good time.
Speaker BThat is some fine fish we have.
Speaker BWe have an abundancy of that up here, but it's great.
Speaker CI cook a lot of fish too, being on the Gulf coast, so it's.
Speaker CIt's fun.
Speaker BYou ever do mud bugs?
Speaker COh, I had them yesterday.
Speaker BThat a boy.
Speaker CI mean, it's.
Speaker CIt's crawfish season.
Speaker CWe eat them all the time.
Speaker BI love them once a week.
Speaker BMan after my own heart, man.
Speaker CLove it.
Speaker BI'm telling you, I love mud bugs.
Speaker BOf course I love seafood because you know where I come from.
Speaker CAbsolutely.
Speaker CBut like I said, the Gulf coast has great, great seafood too.
Speaker CAnd Cowboy Yacht Club, we all have boats.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CSo we go offshore and catch our own stuff and, you know, mahi and all kinds of good stuff.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYou know them golf prawns?
Speaker COh, yeah.
Speaker CSo funny.
Speaker CQuick story about the shrimp down here.
Speaker CWe go offshore in our boat.
Speaker CWe always take a bottle of Jack Daniels and a carton of smokes.
Speaker CAnd you pull up to the shrimp boats and the shrimpers will.
Speaker CIf you give them a bottle of Jack Daniels or a carton of smokes, they'll just pour shrimp into your 120 quart cooler for you.
Speaker BWow.
Speaker CFresh, alive and.
Speaker CAnd you just spin off from them and keep going.
Speaker CIt's awesome.
Speaker BI'm really gonna have to come down there.
Speaker BNot so much.
Speaker BNot so much for the Jack Daniels, just the, the seafood.
Speaker CI didn't say we drank it.
Speaker CI said we traded.
Speaker CFor sure.
Speaker BI know, I know, I know.
Speaker BIt's all good.
Speaker BMakes me on the side make.
Speaker BYeah, I can do that.
Speaker BMakes me sad.
Speaker BI gave up smoking.
Speaker BSo, Robert, is there a place people can find out more about the Cowboy Yacht Club, Facebook or any of the social platforms?
Speaker CAbsolutely.
Speaker CHave a Facebook page called Cowboy Yacht Club and it shows.
Speaker CIt's a great place to go look at all our fun pictures and have a great time.
Speaker CAnd you want to become a member?
Speaker CYou can direct message the Cowboy Yacht Club and if you live in the Houston area or not, we have people.
Speaker CWe have people come from Napa Valley, California.
Speaker CWe've got people that come from Montana.
Speaker CWe've got people from all over the country that come to our club.
Speaker BI love that.
Speaker BSee, Leanne, we gotta find another event to meet up in Houston.
Speaker DThis one is the one I can tell already.
Speaker CJoin the club.
Speaker CCome on, Lynn.
Speaker DSo we have to do.
Speaker DI don't have a boat, though.
Speaker DMy son in law has a boat.
Speaker CI live in Florida.
Speaker CThat's perfect.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CShe loves around you.
Speaker BShe loves to fish, too, Junior.
Speaker CWe.
Speaker CWe fish a lot.
Speaker BYeah, she loves to fish.
Speaker BYou'll see those pictures on her Facebook and stuff.
Speaker BShe's out there.
Speaker DI haven't done anything recently, though.
Speaker BWell, you've been busy.
Speaker CWait till June.
Speaker CWait till June.
Speaker CIt heats up.
Speaker BThere.
Speaker BThere you go.
Speaker BThere you go.
Speaker BJ.R.
Speaker Blove from the Cowboy Yacht Club in Houston, barbecue extraordinaire, recovering attorney and just a great guy.
Speaker BJunior has been.
Speaker BGreat to meet you today.
Speaker DYeah, great to meet you.
Speaker CFantastic guys.
Speaker CGreat to meet you guys.
Speaker CAnd look to see, look to see Leanne in person.
Speaker CI'm gonna take you on a barbecue pub crawl.
Speaker DI want to do that.
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker CI'm gonna see Jeff when I come up to Oregon.
Speaker BThere you go.
Speaker BThere you go.
Speaker DWe're gonna get out of here at the same time.
Speaker DWe can have a little powwow.
Speaker BWe can do that.
Speaker BWe got to get out of here.
Speaker BWe're out of time.
Speaker BBut I want to thank Junior and of course, Leanne.
Speaker BAnd we'll be back next week with another edition of Barbecue Nation.
Speaker BAnd if you do, the podcast version of this after hours will be right up.
Speaker BThanks, everybody.
Speaker BRemember our motto, turn it, don't burn it.
Speaker BTake care.
Speaker ABarbecue Nation is produced by JTSD LLC Productions in association with Salem Media Group.
Speaker AAll rights reserved.