“Food
is an important part of a balanced diet.”
― Fran Lebowitz
― Fran Lebowitz
Q
SPOT BBQ TRUCK
Los
Angeles Area, various locations around town.
818-855-9950
http://theqspotbbq.com
(Note: This link seems to be dead.)
https://twitter.com/theqspotbbq (The Twitter page works.)
Sharon, the more daring part of the duo, suddenly
announced “Let’s do barbeque food trucks!”
So, off we went. Wednesday and
Friday nights in Granada Hills finds a congregation of food trucks on two
blocks of Chatsworth Boulevard between White Oak and Zelza. In a carnival atmosphere you can find almost
any food you desire from a seeming endless array of gourmet grilled cheese
sandwiches (Yes, that’s all one truck sells is grilled cheese and drinks!) to Mexiterranean (Mexican/Mediterranean fusion) for the
adventurous. Many of the trucks are
Southern style or have soul food and have one or two barbecue items per truck,
but there are a few that specialize in barbecue.
First, we stopped at Smokin’ Willie’s BBQ Truck. The menu here is barbecued meatballs, pulled
pork and pulled chicken. This is all
served as sandwiches, sliders, or tacos.
Not exactly traditional barbecue, but we tried samples of the pulled
pork and pulled chicken. They were a bit
over sauced…to the point where you could not tell the difference between the
chicken and the pork. To be fair, the
sauce was great but you can have too much of a great thing so we moved on.
The only truck that had traditional barbecue last Friday
was The Q Spot BBQ Truck. They claim to
have Texas style barbecue, and I won’t dispute that. The truck was parked in front of a store
that had a ledge across the façade that provided convenient seating and we
decided to order and eat there. They
were giving out samples of rib tips so we had a couple of those and made our
order. We ordered pulled pork, brisket,
a hot link, pork ribs, baked beans, and potato salad. That and a couple of drinks came to a little
more than one combo plate at a moderately priced barbecue restaurant. Eating off a truck means portable food. You expect sandwiches.
Pulled Pork
This was served as a sandwich on a fresh hamburger
bun. It was tender, not too fatty, and
full of the flavor of the cherry wood smoke, which I find more subtle than
oak…a pulled pork that should be the minimum standard for any barbecue
establishment. Unfortunately, there are
too many places that do not do it this well.
Q Spot had one interesting little trick.
They put some French’s mustard (for all you traditionalists out there,
like Sharon) and some barbeque sauce (light, not heavy on the sauce) on the bun
and some sweet pickle relish on top of the sauce. The combination of the mustard, barbeque
sauce and pickle relish gave your taste buds the illusion of a Carolina style
barbecue sauce.
Brisket
Again, this is served as a sandwich on a hamburger bun,
but what a sandwich! This is brisket
done by someone that understands brisket.
It is moist and fall apart tender with its beefy flavor enhanced by the
cherry wood smoke. It was not over
sauced so the flavor of the beef came through.
This is brisket that also stands up to the kitty test and burrito from
leftovers test.
Pork Ribs
These are sold by the rib. Bring money!
They were meaty, fall-off-the-bone tender, and just smoky enough. They could possibly be a little moister, but
that is a minor point that most would ignore.
If all pork ribs were this good as these, pigs would be an endangered
species. They come with the traditional slice
of white bread, which came in handy later.
Hot Link
The line on the menu says (Spicy). It’s not kidding. I warned Sharon about this one but she had to
try a bite. It turned out to be a tonsil
scorcher for her. (She still has hers.) The link was served on a fresh hot dog bun,
and if you are not used to a real hot link you will be glad for the bread. It’s a nice fat link with good texture,
flavor, and heat. I’m not saying that
it’s too hot; just know that the description is milder than the link.
Beans
These are killer beans!
They’re just beans in a sauce, but what a sauce. There seems to be brown sugar, molasses,
cayenne pepper, and a few other things that combine to make them the most
wonderful, sweet and spicy beans. Duke,
from the Bush’s Beans commercials, will probably be lurking around to steal the
recipe. That slice of white bread came
in handy here. Both to help cool down
the spicy part of the sauce and to mop up the sauce when the beans were gone.
Potato Salad
You know they made this one and are thankful for it. It is potato salad the way I like it, not too
creamy with distinct chunks of potatoes, combined with bell peppers, and bits
of other vegetables and a touch of cayenne and herbs. This is another side well worth trying.
Rib Tips
The rib tips were not exceptionally meaty, but tender and
not over cooked. This was where they
blew it, in my opinion. It’s traditional
to sauce rib tips but they drowned these.
Enough sauce for a double dipped glaze would have been sufficient.
OK, so it’s not a
restaurant, and you may have to chase it down at lunch time, but it has what would be
damn good Que from a restaurant and not at all what you expect from a food
truck. The carnival atmosphere at food
truck nights in Granada Hills was fun and with food this good we have to give
them an eight.