Ram4 wrote:Do they let you know what the upcoming specials are going to be ahead of time?
Thanks!Octarine wrote:Ram4 wrote:Do they let you know what the upcoming specials are going to be ahead of time?
They will post them on their FB page.
Ram4 wrote:Thanks!Octarine wrote:Ram4 wrote:Do they let you know what the upcoming specials are going to be ahead of time?
They will post them on their FB page.
JimTheBeerGuy wrote:I stopped by this place once last September, hoping to try the Pit Beef special. Unfortunately, they were not serving it that day, so I did what any reasonable person would do and ordered El Jefe instead.
I was not prepared for them to announce the presence of this sandwich upon its emergence from the kitchen, nor for the thunderous applause that accompanied it. The sandwich is an imposing presence. However, I was able to power through it.
JimTheBeerGuy wrote:I stopped by this place once last September, hoping to try the Pit Beef special. Unfortunately, they were not serving it that day, so I did what any reasonable person would do and ordered El Jefe instead.
dodger wrote:I got there at 2 PM Sunday (5/19). They were closed with a “Sold Out” sign on the door. Wow.
D.
It's pretty much accepted in Texas that BBQ is almost a breakfast meal or at least late morning when the meat is ready to serve and why many of the most popular and famous joints are closed by mid-afternoon. Demand usually outweighs supply and that is simply because there is only so much room on the smokers. This place is the same type of situation.dodger wrote:I got there at 2 PM Sunday (5/19). They were closed with a “Sold Out” sign on the door. Wow.
D.
Ram4 wrote:It's pretty much accepted in Texas that BBQ is almost a breakfast meal or at least late morning when the meat is ready to serve and why many of the most popular and famous joints are closed by mid-afternoon. Demand usually outweighs supply and that is simply because there is only so much room on the smokers. This place is the same type of situation.dodger wrote:I got there at 2 PM Sunday (5/19). They were closed with a “Sold Out” sign on the door. Wow.
D.
Katie wrote:But for bigger operations (I'm thinking, for example, of what I've seen on TV about Franklin BBQ in Texas), couldn't you stagger the start times in different smokers to spread out the number of hours during which you could serve food?
Katie wrote:You misunderstand me; I'm not criticizing, just wondering what's the reason for the narrowness of the window --- I know how hot it gets in Texas even early in the morning. Is that the reason, or is it just tradition?
dodger wrote:I knew I was close, just took a chance.
As I was walking to the front door, a women told me they were closed. She had bought what they had left, pulled pork and had just put it her truck.
D.
diversedancer wrote:Or when almost nothing left, might they just split it up among the workers?
Dave148 wrote:Moving to a new location in Palatine.
https://www.dailyherald.com/news/202003 ... e-location
"I think it's time to grow up," said Greg Gaardbo, who with wife Kristina co-owns the cozy joint at Northwest Highway and Quentin Road. "We started with whatever and did weekends and now it's time to be open six days a week. And we can have a lot more fun in this (new) place."
scottsol wrote:It will be a miracle if they can retain the current quality and consistency.
ronnie_suburban wrote:scottsol wrote:It will be a miracle if they can retain the current quality and consistency.
I think you've voiced what many of us were thinking but you've got to give them the benefit of the doubt, right?
=R=