All posts tagged Santa Maria Barbecue

Ten Ways to Pimp Your Tailgate Party

What you need to know to create the ultimate tailgate experience. the following represents a guide to the “creme de la creme” of tailgating accessories.   This list can be taken as a whole or it can act as a smorgasbord of tailgating options.  All of the items are certified grilladelic.

EZ UP

Nothing says a party like a large canopy in a parking lot. Practical and cool.  I have used the  EZ UP brand for over ten years and it is a stud.  Sturdy and dependable.  You can also splurge and customize the tops with the name of your favorite team.

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Grill

The toughest category for a grilladelic recommendation due to the shear number of choices.  However, since grilling is not a spectator sport and  it is more impressive to tow a grill then to pull one from your trunk, my recommendation goes to this Santa Maria-style unit. This grill provides you with a charcoal experience for the best of tailgating food: brats, sausages, hot dogs, burgers, fajitas, veggies, etc.   Plus it requires actual grill skills.  In other words, you are the  starting QB, front and center,  in the biggest game of the year.  Work the coals, flip the burgers, sizzle those sausages.


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Gas Powered Blender

Who needs extension cords and a generator? Let ‘er rip.  Game day smoothies, margaritas, daiquiris, and even fresh salsa.  Plus it is an attention getter.  Why else tailgate if you don’t want to show off your spread?

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Table and Chairs

Not too sexy, but reliable.  Lifetime makes good, affordable tables and chairs.  Easy to set up, takes a pounding and quick to clean.

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Music

A very subjective recommendation, but I think you should go with your own tunes.  It’s your party.  Create your play list and then set up you MP-3 player for the duration of the party.  Bose has always served me well.

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Coolers

Mission critical.  Any cooler will actual do, but the cooler the cooler, the cooler the event.  Recommend at least two coolers.  One for beverages and one for food that needs to be cooled.

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Vehicle

I love GM and Chevy trucks.  200,000 miles is not a problem.  I realize big trucks  might not be the most “green” choice today, but you are tailgating for crying out loud!  How else will you tow the grill, store the canopy, chairs, tables, and coolers?  You just need to replace the gun rack with a spice rack.

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Utensils

Made in the USA.  Lamson Sharpe.  Look good, feel good, flip good.  Stainless and redwood.

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Table Settings

I chose these products a bit randomly.  You need to find a middle-ground.  Cheap paper plates are a downer.  Expensive china is pretentious.  Check out treehugger.com for more reviews and ideas.

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Food and Beverages

The nitty gritty.  My first choice is to always support your local butcher, baker and salsa maker.  An early morning stop at the farmer’s market and bakery is ideal.  However these commercial products are fine too.

Bruce Aidell Sausages.  Unique and tasty.

Garden Fresh Gourmet products: salsa, guacamole, chips, hummus.  Nice!

Root Beer: Your choice

Founder’s Beer: A bunch of crazy and deranged fools making good a product.

Boxed Water is Better: Great guys with a great idea!

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Jack's Special - Medium

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Santa Maria Style Barbecue – Part 2

OK- I just posted Part 1, about 20 minutes ago, but when you get on a roll, roll.

The two other reasons that Santa Maria Barbecue is cool:

1. Simple recipes, simple ingredients.  Whether you use the traditional *tri-tip or top sirloin, you are basically using salt, pepper and some garlic (I added a little rosemary in the past for my version).  You are cooking over oak coals.  That’s it.  No trips to the Indian or Asian Specialty market- for spices you might use just once in the next 60 days, just basic stuff.

*I have had a hard time getting tri-tip in Grand Rapids, MI.  The only place I have seen it in the past is the Grist Mill, across from the Honey Creek Inn in Cannonsburg.  If they don’t have it ready, just speak to Gordy.

2.  The grill. A thing of beauty.  Can you imagine having one of these units in your backyard?  Or pulling a trailered rig down the road?  Life on the open grill!

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Santa Maria Grill

Backyard Unit

Backyard Unit

Santa Maria Barbecue- Part 1

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Old news on the west coast, but in the midwest, other than barbecue academics, the Santa Maria BBQ style and techniques really aren’t that well known (or appreciated).

To some extent, the whole Santa Maria “thing” is very appealing to me.  I like working the grill.  More than anything;, having the hot coals (which you worked to get just right- an art form in itself) right in front of you, the meat on the grill- requiring you to flip, move, poke and prod- is the ultimate grill experience.  Traditional barbecue is great too,,,but the “low-and-slow” and “set-it-and-forget-it”, is not an interactive experience.

What is Santa Maria BBQ?  Here is an article written by the famous Merle Ellis:

The Story of Santa Maria Style Barbecue

by Merle Ellis

There are places in this country where barbecue means more than just a way to cook a piece of meat over coals. It is Tradition with a capital “T.”

Such is the case in the city of Santa Maria on California’s central coast. The history of Santa Maria Barbecue dates back to the early 1800s, when the mainstay of the Early California economy was cattle and America’s first cowboys, the colorful vaqueros, held large beef barbecues at the rancho following every cattle roundup.

Throughout the years, the tradition has been kept alive by groups and organizations in the Santa Maria Valley who have made the barbecue a specialty of all major events. Traditionalists will tell you that it cannot be done for fewer than 100 people, but that’s not true. You can do it in your back yard.

The only secret of the Santa Maria Barbecue is its simplicity — no special sauces or magic ingredients. It consists of thick cuts of beef, seasoned with nothing but salt, pepper, and garlic salt, and cooked over Santa Maria Valley red oak coals. It’s all served with toasted sweet French bread to sop up the natural juices from the serving pan.

The cut of meat called for in an authentic Santa Maria Barbecue is a 3-inch thick cut of boneless top sirloin weighing 3 to 4 pounds. If that is a bit more meat than you need, there is another cut of sirloin that works well, the tri-tip. The tri-tip has become the most popular cut for family barbecues in the region. It weighs only about 1 1/2 to 2 pounds, a far better size for a small family. See also: History of the tri-tip.

The traditional combination of side dishes consists of pinquito beans, macaroni and cheese, tossed green salad, toasted sweet French bread, salsa, coffee, and a simple dessert. The pinquito bean, a small pink bean that retains its firm texture even after long slow cooking, is unique to the Santa Maria Valley, as is the red oak.

This is excerpted from an article in the April 22, 1988 Los Angeles Times.




Santa Maria Style Beef
 1 tablespoon salt
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
1/2 teaspoon garlic salt
  1 top sirloin steak (3" thick), or tri-tip
    red oak logs, or charcoal and oak chips (soaked in water)

Combine salt, pepper, and garlic salt, and rub mixture over the meat. Place the meat on grill and adjust so meat is 2 or 3 inches from the coals. Sear each side of meat over hot coals 5 to 8 minutes to seal in juices, turning once.

Move meat to 6 to 8 inches from coals. Cook 20 to 30 more minutes, turning every 7 or 8 minutes until beef is cooked to desired degree of doneness, 130 degrees for rare. Slice and serve.


Santa Maria Style Salsa
  3 medium tomatoes, chopped
1/2 cup celery, finely chopped
1/2 cup green onions, finely chopped
1/2 cup mild green chiles, finely chopped
  2 tablespoons cilantro, fresh
  1 tablespoon vinegar
  1 dash Worcestershire sauce
  1 pinch garlic salt
  1 pinch dried oregano, crushed
  a few drops hot pepper sauce

Combine all ingredients in a bowl, cover and let stand at least 1 hour to blend flavors. Makes 3 1/2 cups.


Santa Maria Style Beans
  1 pound pinquito beans
  1 strip bacon, diced
1/2 cup ham, diced
  1 clove garlic
3/4 cup tomato puree
1/4 cup red chile sauce*
  1 teaspoon dry mustard
  1 tablespoon sugar
  1 teaspoon salt
  1 pinch MSG or Accent (optional)

* Las Palmas brand, not to be confused with chili sauce, which is like hot catsup.

Pick through beans to remove any small stones. Place in pot, cover with water, and let soak overnight. Drain beans, cover with fresh water, and simmer for 2 hours, or until tender.

Saute bacon and ham until lightly browned. Add garlic, saute 1 to 2 minutes longer. Add tomato puree, chile sauce, sugar, mustard, salt, and MSG (if using it).

Drain most liquid from beans and save. Stir in the sauce and simmer for 1/2 hour. Add some of the saved liquid if they get too dry. Makes 6 to 8 servings.

Another article, in the recent Gourmet Magazine discusses Santa Maria BBQ too.  Good reading.

Originally Published October 2008

A cameo in the movie Sideways may have made the Hitching Post II a household name, but the real star here is the sirloin.

The Hitching Post II's steak

The Hitching Post II, in California’s Santa Ynez Valley (remember the movie Sideways?), has the secret of Santa Maria barbecue all tied up.

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