SouthernThings.com offers a wide variety of barbecue and grilling sauces including award winning bone suckin' sauce.

    

Barbecue Sauces

Home BBQ Recipes

Click Here to view and purchase from our wide variety of Southern BBQ sauces. Now bone sucking good is an old Southern term to describe something so delicious that you just can't get enough. That is the way we feel at SouthernThings about all of the sauces and Barbecue we offer in our store.

 
North Carolina Barbecue Sauces: For more than two centuries two distinct styles of cooking and serving barbecue have been developing in the Coastal Plain and the Piedmont of North Carolina. In the Piedmont region, where many settlers had German ancestry, pork shoulders became the preferred cut of barbecuing, rather than the whole pig. The Piedmont settlers were also fond of a sweet-and-sour sauce made from apples, which may have been a forerunner of the thicker sweeter "dip" served atop barbecued pork in the center of North Carolina. Tomatoes were found to be safe to eat in the early 1800s and soon found their way into the Piedmont-style BBQ sauce. Bone Suckin Sauce is a prime example of this type of sauce for a dipping and sloping sauce used on top of the pork before it is served. In the flat eastern third of the state, the predominantly English settlers were used to cooking split whole hogs over an open fire and seasoning the meat with common table condiments of the time: vinegar, red and black pepper and a touch of oyster juice. Tomatoes were thought at the time to be poisonous, so no one would have considered adding them to what was essentially America's original barbecue sauce. This fiery eastern North Carolina barbecue sauce has remained essentially the same for 350 years. (Reference: North Carolina "Barbecue 101" by Bob Garner).

Eastern North Carolina Sauce        Eastern NC Recipes

Anyone who has traveled through Eastern North Carolina has seen some of our most popular Barbecue restaurants. Since 1963, Bills World Famous Barbecue & Chicken has been prepared and served at his Landmark Restaurant in Wilson North Carolina and from Coast to Coast. Wilber's Barbecue in Goldsboro North Carolina. Here in Raleigh we don't have to leave the area to eat some of the Best Barbecue that Carolina has to offer. A list of my favorite places in Raleigh to sample Southern Barbecue are: Clyde Coopers Barbecue right in the middle of downtown Raleigh (your plate will include a serving of fresh cooked pork rinds as well), Dillard's Bar-B-Q, Durham, NC, Barbecue Lodge, Raleigh, NC, and Smithfield's Chicken'N Bar-B-Q located throughout North Carolina. One of the best sites that I have found if you are looking for a recommended restaurant to eat some of the best BBQ is Kent's North Carolina-Style BBQ Page.

Since it is difficult to find the eastern style sauce outside of North Carolina, SouthernThings has selected a sauce from Julia's Pantry that you can purchase to get that Eastern NC flavor no matter where you are located. The family recipe sauce package is called Carolina Sassy Sauce and it is inexpensive and shipped free to your home. All you have to do is add a pint of apple cider vinegar to make your own eastern North Carolina BBQ sauce. In fact you can use any vinegar you want and the sauce will take on different characteristics. We like it with red wine vinegar and balsamic vinegar for nice variation. It was first introduced at the Paula Deen at Constant Convocation Centre in Norfolk, VA in September 2008. Customer's who tasted the sauce bought out the entire inventory by mid afternoon of the show. 

Bone Suckin' Sauce        Bone Suckin' Recipes

Bone Suckin' Sauce is the best known sauce made in North Carolina. Bone Suckin is the only Barbecue Sauce Rated A+ Health Magazine, #1 Newsweek, Food & Wine, and House & Garden magazine. Following is a history of Bone Suckin Sauce: 

"Phil Ford, a real estate appraiser and father of four in Raleigh, North Carolina, developed his sauce around 1987 while trying to copy his mother's recipe for a western North Carolina-style barbecue sauce. The resulting all natural, fat-free, fragrant blend includes: tomato paste, apple cider vinegar, honey, molasses, mustard, horseradish, lemon juice, onions, garlic, peppers, natural hickory smoke, natural spices and salt.Folks kept telling him that he needed to do something with the sauce - like bottle it and sell it! People loved it when he gave it away, but Phil never thought anyone would pay for his sauce. His sister-in-law, Sandi Ford, owner of Ford's Fancy Fruits & Gourmet Foods in Raleigh, had years of experience in the gourmet food business and had other thoughts, She encouraged him but to no avail. Then finally in September 1992, Sandi and her husband, Lynn, told Phil they'd like to be his partners in bringing his sauce to market. He'd make it and they'd give it a name and sell it. While driving to Charleston, South Carolina a short time later, Sandi was preoccupied with the task of coming up with a name. She thought about how go-o-o-d it was and how it made her do something she'd never done before -- suck on the bones to get the last little bit of flavor. A name was born and the sauce was launched in November, 1992." article by L. Harrell

Since that time bone suckin sauce has become popular all over the world. Many folks are familiar with the regular bone suckin sauce but if you stop there you are missing many more great products from this company. The Ford's produce Bone Suckin' Sauce in the original flavor as well as Hot Bone Suckin' Sauce, Thicker Bone Suckin' Sauce, and Hot Thicker Bone Suckin' Sauce. We also carry Bone Suckin' Seasoning, Bone Suckin' Mustard, Bone Suckin' Hot Sauce, and Bone Suckin' Yaki Sauce in our store. 

Alabama White Barbecue Sauces: A traditional Alabama Barbecue Sauce uses Mayonnaise as its base rather than tomato sauce, vinegar, or any of the other traditional barbecue sauce bases. Like many barbecue sauces you want to apply this only at the very end of your grilling or smoking.  Alabama White Barbecue Sauce has a tangy flavor that is a great addition to grilled foods. "It's the only sauce we know here, because it's what everyone grows up on," says world barbecue champion Chris Lilly of Big Bob Gibson Bar-B-Q in Decatur, Alabama. Bob Gibson is credited with concocting white sauce back in 1925. Today, this tangy, mayonnaise-based condiment, traditionally used to dress chicken, is as synonymous with the state of Alabama as legendary football coach Paul "Bear" Bryant. "We marinate with it, use it to baste, plus we use it as an all-purpose table sauce," explains Chris. Yet because white barbecue sauce is such a regional anomaly and because grocery shelves are dominated by the myriad incarnations of tomato-based sauces, many Southerners have never tried it. Well, I'm here to tell you that it's time to get out the chicken and fire up your smoker or grill. (Reference: Southern Living, Aug 2005 by Jones, Scott). Red's White Sauce is a scrumptiously creamy, spicy mayonnaise-based sauce that is great for grilling, baking, broiling or smoking. Simply marinate your favorite meat overnight, and then cook your favorite way while basting with a little extra sauce. Red's White Sauce is tasty on pork, beef, venison and poultry, and is also the perfect complement for fish and seafood. We've fallen in love with Red's White Sauce here at SouthernThings, and we use it as a salad dressing and dipping sauce, on baked potatoes and chicken wings, as a sandwich spread and condiment, mixed into tuna salad and potato salad, and even as a topping for crab cakes. Try our Award winning Red's White Sauce and you will always keep it on hand.  

South Carolina Mustard Barbecue Sauces: If you travel south from North Carolina you will head into mustard country. Here barbecue sauces are thick and yellow (orange sometimes) and to even mention tomatoes can get you more trouble than you want. Sauces made from mustard are perfect for pork. In fact this is the sauce of the South Carolina Pig-Pickin'. These sauces are prepared and set out for the diners to dip into as they pull smoked bits of pork from the whole hog. As with vinegar, which is frequently used by itself, mustard is more than just a sauce. When preparing Ribs try applying a thick coat of simple prepared yellow mustard over the surface of the ribs the night before you smoke them. You will experience a new level in ribs. Whereas tomato sauces can burn on the surface of foods, mustard can be applied at anytime during your smoking or grilling. 

Kentucky Barbecue Sauces: In Kentucky, barbecue also has a long and rich tradition. Mutton is the most notable specialty in Western Kentucky, where there were once large populations of sheep. However, mutton is virtually unknown in  the extreme western Kentucky, where "barbecue" without any other qualifier refers specifically to smoked pork shoulder. A vinegar- and tomato-based sauce with a mixture of spice and sweet is traditionally served with the meat, though not always used in cooking. It did not take long to marry premium Kentucky Bourbon with their BBQ sauces. 

 

SouthernThings, Inc. Selects and features award winning Southern Barbecue Sauces

BourbonQ barbecue sauce

Fighting Cock barbecue sauce

Kentucky BourbonQ® Brand


Years ago, we started as a little country store in Prospect, Kentucky. Shane and Tracy Best were the last owners of the old Prospect General Store. Having been in the custom cut retail meat business, we brought years of experience to the old store and the combination couldn't have been any better. Over the years we acquired a tremendous reputation for uncompromising quality on all our food items, so a common request among our customers was "Now if you would just come over and cook for us..." This led to the creation of our catering division, which we called the Kentucky Cookout Company.
While still operating out of the General Store, the New York Times selected us as having the BEST country hams available for mail order, which certainly added to our notoriety. But we weren't finished yet -- we had already turned our passions towards barbecue and the tremendous growth potential in that industry.
As our popularity grew in the catering business, word of our success began to reach promoters of barbecue competitions. One of the first contests we cut our teeth on (no pun intended) was the World Invitational Rib Championship in Richmond, Virginia. Stacked against 20 of the BEST rib cooking teams from around the world, eight small-town hillbillies packed up their goodies on pickup trucks, and not only did battle with the world's BEST, but conquered and returned home as World Invitational Rib Champions
More recently, we have turned our attention to barbecue sauces and spices. With Shane's expertise, Kentucky BourbonQ® Brand was rewarded with one of the food industry's most respected awards -- the 2001 Scovie Award, accepted internationally as the top award for spicy foods. Additional awards for packaging have come from the National Barbecue Association (NBBQA), as well. And most recently, we've been honored with another Scovie Award, this time for the 2004 judging. Finally, Shane is extremely proud of his sweep of First and Second Place People's Choice Awards for BEST Barbecue Sauce at the 2004 International Zesty Food Show in Fort Worth, Texas!

Red's White sauce for meats and veggies

White barbecue sauce was born in Alabama, and Red's White Sauce is the real deal. Created by an Alabama native now living in North Carolina, Red's White Sauce is a scrumptiously creamy, spicy mayonnaise-based sauce that is great for grilling, baking, broiling or smoking. Simply marinate your favorite meat overnight, and then cook your favorite way while basting with a little extra sauce. Red's White Sauce is tasty on pork, beef, venison and poultry, and is also the perfect complement for fish and seafood. We've fallen in love with Red's White Sauce here at SouthernThings, and we use it as a salad dressing and dipping sauce, on baked potatoes and chicken wings, as a sandwich spread and condiment, mixed into tuna salad and potato salad, and even as a topping for crab cakes.

Gluten-free, zero trans fat. A Goodness Grows in NC product.

 

Saw's Sauce featured in Sourthern Living

Saw’s Sauce is the product of many late nights that Chef, Mike Wilson and his buddies, spent around the backyard barbecue pit.  Maybe that’s why the flavor always reminds Mike of the good times and good friends of days gone by - savory sweet – with just the right amount of kick!  As a vinegar-based sauce, Saw’s is not only a superior barbecue sauce, but also excellent for marinating, pickling, dipping, dressing, mixing and such.  Saw’s Sauce adds a hearty “Yessir!” to any dish. Saw's sauce will be featured in a Southern Living publication in July 2007.
As best I can determine the following is credited to North Carolina Barbecue: a Primer by Terry Mancour It is by far the best article I have found for those who want to understand the serious interest  in North Carolina BBQ. Until I moved to North Carolina from Georgia, I had never heard the term "pig pickin". In Georgia the emphasis was on making up the sauce and we barbecued just about any meat.

A History of North Carolina Barbecue

North Carolina’s contributions to the history of modern civilization encompass many aspects of culture, politics and cuisine. From the Wright Brothers to world renowned Colleges, Universities and research centers to ACC basketball, Andy Griffith and Barney Fife; NC has given its best; but to this day, the institution known as North Carolina Barbeque remains the most misunderstood and hotly debated. NC Barbecue enjoys a long and distinguished history in North Carolina, and has come to be synonymous with political campaigns, fund raising and any celebration of merit that warrants its inclusion. It is the stuff that has inspired songs, stories and volumes of essays and literature. Barbeque is to North Carolina what crabs are to Maryland and lobsters to Maine. North Carolina Barbecue with its evolution and contributions from many cultures has cut across the lines of race, class and generational change. To understand NC Barbecue’s prominence it is necessary to draw a distinctive line between roasted meats served in North Carolina and that of the rest of the nation. 

It's the sauce...

They are two different animals and despite the use of the term 'barbecue' in other parts of the country, in North Carolina the word means roast pork, often the entire pig. While in the mid-west, south west and Deep South the emphasis is usually on the sauce, but in the Tar Heel state the phenomena of barbecue revolves as much around the process of cooking the meat as it does the ingredients of the sauce – although considerable discourse has been rendered as we shall see, about just what constitutes authentic North Carolina barbecue sauce. It is impossible to know just how far back the barbecue tradition goes – whether it can be traced to the feasts of African slaves, the traditional Scottish/Irish Boar Roast, Native American cooking techniques passed along to the first settlers (The earliest colonists in Jamestown and Tidewater Virginia, similar in geography and culture to Northeastern North Carolina, certainly used the technique, and Jamaican natives were observed using a similar technique as far back as 1661) , or to the pirates and sailors who frequented our shores. Interestingly enough, the term buccaneer, a 17th century adventurer or sea privateer, comes from the technique, called "boucan" or the process of curing meat by smoking it slowly over a fire. Its French practitioners hence were called "boucaniers." It is not unlikely that the technique combined with Bahamian and Jamaican variances was transferred from the Caribbean to eastern North Carolina. It is perhaps a combination of all of them, or a naturally occurring phenomenon, in consideration of the ease with which hogs have been raised in this state. 

NC Pig Pickin'

Today North Carolina produces the second highest number of hogs in the country, providing a wide selection of roasting carcasses. What is certain is that the practice has almost always included a slow-roasting process, over a low fire of oak or hickory, which lasts most of the day. The hog roast, or "pig pickin'", is perhaps the heart of North Carolina culinary culture. The process begins in the wee hours of the morning, when one or two stalwart souls (usually men – for no particularly good reason pig roasting is an art dominated by men) dress the hog carcass and light the fires. (This method also includes the use of alcoholic beverages and the telling of stories which seem to get more outlandish as the consumption of alcohol increases.) For the last hundred years pigs have been roasted over wood and charcoal fires, but for the last two decades more and more barbecuers have switched to cleaner burning propane flames, which some argue deprive the pork of its traditional smoky flavor. For either method the roasting is almost always done in a "pig cooker", a fuel oil drum which has been sawed in half, welded to an axel and a trailer hitch, and otherwise altered for the purpose. These cookers can get quite elaborate, and almost as much breath is wasted on the merits of particular designs as on the proper way to roast and season the hog. The hog is laid upon the grill over the flame, doused with sauce, the lid is closed, and at that point invariably someone breaks out some liquid refreshment and for the remainder of the day the roasting team stands around the big black steel tank and "watches the pig" – though little actual watching goes on. Every hour on the hour the lid is raised and the carcass is again liberally doused with sauce, inspected for progress, and then closed up again. The men spend the time between inspections chatting about the news of the day, the weather, sports, politics, and all other subjects that arise from the confluence of roast pork and beverages on the strong side of lemonade. In a traditional pig pickin' the woman are far from idle while the men accomplish the arduous chore of watching the pig and drinking. The side dishes at a pig pickin' are legendary. It is an opportunity for everyone to pull out old favorite recipes, some handed down from grandmothers on deathbeds, to delight the palate and impress friends and neighbors. Various salads, casseroles, pickles, preserves, and a whole host of desserts are prepared for the event. Some items are mandatory. Cole slaw, for instance, must be served, although the exact recipe varies from region to region and family to family. Boiled potatoes, with a cup full of barbecue sauce added to the water is also obligatory. Of course the bread accompaniment is the ubiquitous hushpuppy, the fried cornmeal staple of Southern life since Colonial times. And gallons and gallons of fresh brewed sweet iced tea, sometimes flavored with lemon, complement the usual selection of beverages. 

Two Sauces...

A word or two about the sauce: There are two different styles of Barbecue in North Carolina, Eastern and Western. In both cases the sauce is a vinegar-based concoction, heavily seasoned; the largest difference is that the Western or Lexington style of barbecue adds a small amount of tomato-base to the sauce, and also roasts pork shoulders in preference to the whole hog. That's it. That's the difference. Yet these tiny differences have caused near blood feuds between proponents of the two different styles. In both cases the vinegar base is augmented by a variety of secret herbs and spices – some favorites are salt, pepper, red pepper, cayenne pepper, onion powder, garlic, nutmeg, molasses, whiskey, and brown sugar. The specific potion is often a closely held secret, or varies depending on the ingredients at hand, but the sauce is thin, unlike most commercial tomato-based barbecue sauces. No roaster in their right mind would put that sweet, ketchupy stuff on a perfectly good pig. The essence of the pig pickin' experience is the pure flavor of slow-roasted, well-seasoned pork. Often chopped by hand into a fine pulp and seasoned to taste with more sauce, the resulting product is the source of rapturous delight for thousands every day. The pig pickin' has been used by hundreds of churches as a fund-raising technique, and there was even a Barbecue Presbyterian Church in Harnett County, near Sanford, established in 1757. While the home-grown pig pickin' has persisted as a venerable institution in North Carolina, the commercial potential of barbecue has been fully realized. In small towns and big cities across the state there are hundreds of small barbecue establishments who serve either the chopped variety or "pulled" pork sandwiches – a technique by which the tender roasted pork is literally pulled off of the carcass. Barbecue has become a good-sized business in North Carolina, and many of these establishments augment over-the-counter sales with impressive catering operations. It has also become traditional for the barbecue catering industry get a huge financial boost every election year. No one knows whom the first politician was to provide barbecue for supporters at political rallies, but for scores of years now virtually no candidate for office has been able to get away with a successful election without cooking at least one pig for the constituency. The practice has become so prevalent that even politicians outside of the state will send to North Carolina for expert barbecuers to come and impress their own supporters with the perfectly roasted pink pork. There are certain towns in North Carolina who have developed a reputation for having the best barbecue restaurants and making up for a lack of other major attractions these establishments have become local tourist attractions, and those with the need for barbecue think nothing of driving an extra twenty-five miles out of their way to make a pilgrimage to them. Barbecue is one of the few subjects that have always cut through the usual racial lines North Carolina has been afflicted with. Even in the depths of the Jim Crow era and in the turbulent Civil Rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s barbecue joints was one of the few places where black and white patrons rubbed elbows on a regular basis. While black students staged sit-ins at the Woolworth lunch counter in Greensboro, a few miles away at one of the more famous shops in North Carolina, white folk and black folk sat at the same table, eating the same rich smoky pork sandwiches, with nary a fuss. Black families and white families have always vied on an equal footing for the bragging rights that come from recipes and roasting techniques. A roasted pig, it seems, is completely color-blind. In deference to health concerns and religious customs it is standard for a dozen or so chickens to be roasted with the pig. Sometimes a separate sauce is used, sometimes the same, but if you follow Mosaic Law or fear for your life you will almost always find a pile of succulent barbecued chicken available at either a pig pickin' or barbecue joint. 

Barbecue Shrooms...

Vegetarians still despair, though some of the more liberal-minded have tried using the same sauce that is used on pork on a large portabella mushroom. Needless to say, this scandalizes the barbecue traditionalist. While the tender fungus does nicely on the grill, it is not recommended that it be subjected to the same six-to-eight hour long roasting that a pig endures. Put the 'shrooms on the grill about fifteen minutes before serving. Barbecuing is so competitive in North Carolina that the state boasts no fewer than twenty five annual cook-offs. Most of these are in the Eastern part of the state, and therefore the whole hog/vinegar sauce method is emphasized, including the North Carolina Championship Pork Cook-Off, sponsored by the North Carolina Pork Producers Association, the Newport Pig Cookin' Contest; adherents to the Western style gather yearly at the Lexington Barbecue Festival to celebrate the pork shoulder/tomato sauce style in Lexington, North Carolina – a town that boasts twenty barbecue restaurants to service 17,000 people (only Lexington, Tennessee, with ten restaurants for 6,000 people has more barbecue restaurants per capita). The teams which compete at these events range from the weekend roaster to the stainless-steel equipped professional pig cooker. At stake are cash prizes and bragging rights, and the competition is fierce. Judges use a very wide variety of criteria to judge a pig, and ensure a lack of corruption by using blind taste tests in addition to on-site tasting inspections. 

A serious business...

Barbecue is serious business in North Carolina. Whether you are a passing traveler or a newcomer to the Tar Heel State a trip to a barbecue joint, restaurant or stand (or, better yet, a church or school pig pickin') is suggested in order to complete the North Carolina culinary experience. Advice on where to go is easy to come by – just ask any three strangers with North Carolina license plates, and you will have three suggestions – and more likely than not the place will be 'just down the road a 'piece'."

 

 

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