Sep
10
Good Eats S7E2P2: Q
Filed Under (Entertainment) by admin on 10-09-2009
Tagged Under : Alton Brown, Cue, Flower Pot, Patience, Recipes
LikeTheHat asked:
Host Alton Brown thinks he’s cracked the code to true ‘cue: brined pork, a flower pot, a trashcan, hardwood smoke and a lot of patience. Recipes featured in this episode: Pulled Pork.






How can you make sure that there are no harmful chemicals in the Terracotta? Now a days with everyone spraying things down with stuff Im just wondering
I would think if there were then it would get into the meat.
Thanks!
God Bless you, Alton Brown.
Well, since you wanna get technical, Ford didnt invent anything as he is only 3 years old(my neighbor timmy Ford).
Ford invented a “thing” and called it charcoal. Who the heck are you to say he cant call it charcoal? You’re not the boss of words!!
I case my rest!!! No bout a doubt it!
Ford invented charcoal briquets, sawdust compressed, like the briquets you buy at the store,
People were using charcoal for smelting iron and other materials millennia before Henry Ford was even a sperm in his fathers gonads, or an egg in his mothers ovary and for cooking just as long. We now use coke, processed coal, for the former, but we still use charcoal for the latter.
Ford did invnet charcoal. You can invent it or discover it. He invented his.
Whats that you msay? You cannot invent something after it has already been “discovered” ?
tell that to the astroturf people,
the morton salt people,
and the wright bros.. Im pretty sure things were flying way before they built an airplane.
lol
He’s referring to mass production.
I used to think that alton was a pussy but I figured out that he isn’t and that I’M the pussy.
Henry Ford did invent charcoal briquettes, mother nature invented charcoal since its just burnt wood
About time they put it out….they didn’t for a long, long time…
ACtually, they *do* sell Good Eats DVDs. Maybe they figure watching these eps will introduce people to the show so they’ll buy the DVDs. It worked for me!
Ahh thanks. I’m not well versed on the origins of cannibalism but logically that tidbit makes some sense.
What is the specific time of the human flesh bit? I watched this several times and didn’t see it.
Just that if you want to debate the truth of a statement, the human flesh bit is way juicer.
Doh.
Noticed the comment below after I posted.
Well, ditto.
Henry Ford invented charcoal?
I don’t think so….pretty sure charcoal has been around for centuries. Woodcutters used make charcoal as an extra income source.
I was talking about the charcoal briquettes bit, not the human flesh bit.
I believe both of them are just pots…each having the same size lip.
After he pulls the pork, you’ll see the tidbit about human flesh.
How so? What do you mean?
I’d be more concerned as to the source of the trivia tidbit on human flesh.
‘Henry Ford invented charcoal in the early 1920’s’
He most assuredly did not, charcoal has been around since people started burning wood incompletely. Charcoal BRIQUETTES are are credited as Ford’s invention, co-invented by my man Edison, but people really need to look for historical accuracy before taking something as fact.
Where do you find the lid? At first I thought the lid was for the planter bottom (saucer) to sit on and it was just used as a top, but the bottoms I see in the Lowes stores are all small and no way can be used as a lid.
Whats the deal?
ooooh where does he say sammich
alton brown is awesome