BARBEQUE WHERE SMOKE IS NOT LEGAL
“If more of us valued food and cheer
and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.”
―
―
DR HOGLY WOGLY’S TYLER TEXAS BBQ
8136 Sepulveda Boulevard
Van Nuys, CA 91402
818-782-2480
(1)
The provisions of this rule shall not apply to
wood-fired cooking devices designed and used for commercial purposes.
This would seem to apply to the rule stating that no one can
install a new wood burning device in any new construction permitted after 2009. So, her remark was puzzling. I checked the county and city requirements
for barbeque restaurants and could not find any air pollution rules that
applied to wood burning barbeque pits and stoves that would keep this
restaurant from moving to a new location.
One reason is that, apparently, there are no practicable engineering
solutions to reducing emissions from a wood fired barbeque. A bit more research revealed another reason
for the exemptions.
Back in the 1990s the AQMD tried to enact rules that would
have required barbecue restaurants to install expensive exhaust scrubber
equipment or change to using gas fired grills or pressure cookers and liquid
smoke. Barbeque restaurant operators
were faced with citations from the AQMD and some installed expensive equipment
that broke down and caused more fines from the AQMD. It seemed that the temperature and grease
from wood fired barbeque pits were more than conventional restaurant charbroiler
filter systems could handle. The AQMD
attitude was that there was one rule for restaurants and since these are
restaurants they will be covered by it. When
the AQMD put out figures that the 50, or so, barbeque restaurants produced as
much pollution as thousands of cars the barbeque restaurant owners called them
on it. The AQMD had to admit that they really had not quantified how much the
barbeque restaurants contributed to the air pollution in the area.
Then it got really political. Many of the barbeque restaurants are operated
by African-Americans. The discussion
became about discrimination against ethnic cuisine. Is barbeque an ethnic cultural cuisine,
regional cuisine, or American cultural cuisine?
Is it barbeque if it isn’t smoked?
The AQMD drew protests from African-American politicians. The debate raged, back and forth, between
environmental controls, race relations, and what constitutes barbeque. Finally, a state assembly person, Gwen Moore (D-Los Angeles), sensibly
said, “It is crazy that they're even going to all this trouble, for 50 little
companies. Just think of how much money and how much time is going into doing
this. It's regulation for regulation's sake, with no real impact." That seems to be where it ended. Which still begs the question, why did the
server say they were stuck at that location because they could not build a new
pit barbeque anywhere else? I’m going to
call the SCAQMD and inquire myself.
DR. HOGLY WOGLY’S BBQ --- Again!
I did say that the last
few times we went to Dr. Hogly Wogly’s were disappointing. The disappointment was that lunch time
portions seemed to be smaller than they had been. This time the portions were
what we expected. Sharon ordered a Two
Beef Ribs lunch and I ordered a Pulled Pork Sandwich.
Beef Ribs
One rib was all that
Sharon could finish. The rib was tender,
tasty, very meaty, and not the least bit stringy, just as we had experienced in
2012. The other rib and some of the
steak fries that were with it came home as leftovers. Sharon was still full after work so I had the
other one for dinner. I microwaved it
along with the steak fries and it was great.
Pulled Pork
It occurred to me that I
had never ordered Pulled Pork at Dr. Hogly Wogly’s. The sandwich arrived on one of their fluffy
buns with coleslaw on it. The portion
was more than enough. In fact, it overflowed
the sides of the bun. And, it was so wet
that I could not pick it up and eat it as a sandwich! When I pointed it out to the server that what
I had was a knife and fork pulled pork sandwich she told me that they put a big
splash of the cooking juice on it before they put it on the sandwich. She said that many people order the bun on
the side and assemble the sandwich themselves.
Really?!! The other thing was
that the pork was not as flavorful as I expected. Don’t get me wrong, it was good, but not what
I expected compared to the other meats here.
I have had better pulled pork.
What happened here? My guess is a change of generations, a new
generation of servers and a new generation in the kitchen. Dr. Hogly Wogly’s is
still destination barbeque, but considering the pulled pork we are going to
have to down grade them from a 10 to a 9.
Sharon and I are getting
back into the barbeque groove. There are
at least three places we intend to visit and review (or re-review) in the next
couple of months.