Lamar? Lamar!

There’s another act just announced for the Sunset Symphony lineup.

The Four Tops and the Memphis Symphony Orchestra are headlining, of course, but Memphis in May just confirmed that the guy known for last year’s accompaniment of Patti Page on her re-recording of her 1950 hit “Tennessee Waltz” will perform. You may actually know him better as the senior senator from Tennessee, former governor, former U.S. Secretary of Education and guy who likes flannel shirts, Lamar Alexander.

He last tickled the ivories at the sunset event in 1982 when he was governor. He may have been too busy to add much material to his rep since he’s doing an encore of the medley of Memphis music he did back then.

But that’s OK. Any politician who can be associated with the Tennessee Waltz and come out looking good is going to be a crowd pleaser.

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Barbecue Fest Winners and Links

Here are the top winners of the 2008 Memphis in May World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest in the main categories.

Grand Champion

Natural Born Grillers, Olive Branch

Whole Hog

First: Natural Born Grillers, Olive Branch

Second: Gwatney Championship BBQ Team, Cordova

Third: Yazoo’s Delta Q, Nesbit, Miss.

Shoulder

First: Sweet Swine o’ Mine, Olive Branch

Second: Southeastern Smokers, Cumming, Ga.

Third: The Ques Brothers, Memphis

Ribs

First: Rib Ticklers, Batesville, Ark.

Second: Sassy Sows, Brandon, Miss.

Third: Smokin’ Razorbacks, Little Rock, Ark.

Patio Porkers

First: Got Pig?, Memphis

Second: Smokin Spiders, Memphis

Third: Here for the Beer, Little Rock, Ark.

People’s Choice*

First: Rhoda Brown’s Smokie Fatties, (#31), Monroe, La.

Second: Rock ‘n’ Roll BBQ (#55), Lakeland, Fla.

Third: Wizards of Que (#14), Hot Springs, Ark.

*The numbers are provided so participants will know whether the barbecue they voted for in the blind tasting, which were numbered and not named, won.

Links

All winners of the 2008 Memphis in May World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest.

Jennifer Biggs’ wrap up of the contest.

Article about how the 2008 Mrs. Piggie contest only had 2 competitors. Sad.

Commercial Appeal Editor Chris Peck sees the Fest as a casual way to make important connections.

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Estonia does barbecue and does it yummy

In my years of chowing down on barbecue, I’ve never had any as good as two servings I had today. The Pink Ladies had the most melt-in-your-mouth Berkshire shoulder, the sort of experience to make you shout hallelujah. Then I zeroed in on the booth of the Estonian barbecuers from Turi and I’ll tell you that between the flight attendants and the firefighters, I’m glad I didn’t have to choose. The Estonians whole hog was robust and meaty and moist through and through. OK, now I’m hungry again and they’re leaving town. I’ll let Roland Ounapuu, president of the Estonian Barbecue Association tell it.

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The pig party begins

Walking around cuetown is a visual feast, along with the other kind (if you’re connected with a team). Here are a few choice scenes as the MIMWCBCC gets underway.

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The Big Cookout on the River

Our cooking team reconvened back in January to gird ourselves for the 2008 Memphis in May World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest. Some readers might remember the story I wrote last year about putting together a pit crew from scratch.

A quick recap: we were a swarm of barflies who drunkenly thought it’d be a great idea if we convinced 30 friends or so to pitch in $200 and try to beat some of the best pork smokers in the country. Scroll down or click here to read last year’s posts.

In spite of a huge case of overconfidence, our team, The Ques Brothers, placed 12th in the country in the pork shoulder category. For first timers, that is what anyone would call outstanding. It made a great story, at least. We were all happy: the team, the sponsor, the readers.

And then came The Ques Brothers’ sophomore slump. This year we’re cooking by the hem of our aprons.

I was talking to Diane Hampton, executive vice president of Memphis in May, and she laughed when I told her some of our financial problems. “You’re finally realizing how good you had it the first year,” she said. “Nobody, comes out of chute like you guys did.”

With a price tag of around $15,000, a good-looking barbecue team is not for those with light wallets. Not unless you manage to land a corporate sponsor. Businesses sponsor BBQ cooking teams for different reasons. Last year our sponsor gave us a huge chunka change to make the front of our booth a billboard for the company. We also had to feed employees on “sponsor night.”

Some big companies like Valero Refined (who came in 11th place) hire contractors to build party pavilions for employees and investors. It’s a prestige thing.

We found no corporate sponsors this year. The past week, we’ve gone through an agonizing reexamination of the budget. We are now hacking away amenities in terms of kegs of beer (1 keg=$40). As in, “Can we do without these $90 team buttons?” “Hell yeah, that’s two kegs right there.”

Everyone on the team, however, refused to buy the idea that we could do the fest with just a tent, a bar and a smoker. We are luxury hogs, all of us.

“We have to have a second level!” was the unanimous declaration at a planning meeting last week. Barbecue Fest is not your domain if you don’t have an upper deck upon which to stand and look over it.

Fortunately, one of our team members had a giant steel structure sitting in a field down in Mississippi. We just had to go pick it up — all 800 pounds of it. And put it together. And weld handrails onto it. And make it structurally sound. And paint it. And lay a plywood deck.

I feel most sorry for Danny, a general contractor and millwright, who joined our team for some much needed relaxation and vacation and ended up spending the last four days constructing our booth with a handful of others. Last night, at 9:30 p.m., I was popping his back atop the unfinished deck. “Usually I leave this to my chiropractor,” he groaned.

We’re all hoping to have most of it finished by tonight (Wednesday) — for friends and family night — when, to get things started, we’re smoking a half-dozen turkeys just for fun. For everyone else, the contest kicks off on Thursday.

Meanwhile, here are some links to whet your appetite as all the teams get their smokers in gear for the Super Bowl of Swine.

General overview of Barbecue Fest Events.

Jon W. Sparks writes about a cooking team from Belgium.

Food critic Jennifer Biggs blogs from Barbecue Fest.

Fellow Ques Brother and Downtown blogger Paul Ryburn’s drunk posts from the Fest.

Artists on team Sow Luau create crazy pig heads.

Story about company that rents monster tents to barbecue teams.

List of 2008 BBQ teams and where from.

 

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