For The Love of MOINK!

moink-1It wasn’t all that long ago that it took quite a bit of luck to become an internet phenom. Today it just takes a funny or inspiring video and one or two well placed emails and you can suddenly find yourself all over the internet. Be it good or be it bad…there you are. And MOINK Balls are a prime example of how easy it is to make a name on the internet.

MOINK is a very minor BBQ and internet story of fame. Because on various BBQ Forums there appears to sometimes be an unhealthy amount of time spent on MOINK Balls I thought I would take a few minutes to tell the story of MOINK!

Last June I had the good fortune to venture out to Wichita, Kansas to spend the weekend at one of my internet friends homes along with a bunch of other bbq enthusiasts cooking and eating our way through the entire meat scale. We ate brisket, chili, ham, brats, spam, pork ribs, and a few other meat items. If it wasn’t for Steve’s wife Linda forcing a salad or two down our throats we would have been pretty much vegetable free for the three days.

A few of us had made plans to fly into the Kansas City airport, rent a car and drive to Wichita, causing untold BBQ havock along the way. For three of us the journey to KC was pretty much uneventful. However, when we all rendezvoused in KC one of us was missing, It seems our Los Angeles brother was kicked off his airplane for wearing blue jeans. (There’s a valid reason, but that’s another story, for another day.)

After talking Neil into catching another flight wearing the appropriate flight attire we had to wait the four hours or so for him to arrive. So what do three BBQ enthusiasts do in KC with a four hour wait? Go find some BBQ, of course. Because we didn’t wish to stray to far from the airport we ended up at a local BBQ establishment, not one of the famous places, that advertised itself as the #1 BBQ Restaurant in KC. (The restaurant shall remain nameless to protect the guilty).

Because this is not a review of the restaurant we won’t discuss how bad the food was. But the beginning of MOINK was born there. As we finished our meal we commented to our waitress about the baby back ribs we ordered. It came as quite a shock to us when she informed us that their baby backs were beef. It was a comment that, of course, we could not just let pass. After laughing about it for a sometime we came up with the term MOINK. Beef = MOO and Pork = OINK. MOINK!

Later in the summer I had the chance to do a little catering for the daughter of a good friend. I wanted something special and decided to wrap a pre-cooked, italian style meatball in bacon, rub it with a little Plowboy’s Yardbird Rub and smoke it for about 90 degrees. As I was plating them up I was asked what they were called. Without really thinking about it I called them MOINK Balls.

The most important thing to remember about MOINK Balls is they are supposed to be simple. Official MOINK Balls are only made with pre-cooked, frozen (but thawed) meatballs. Anything else is a faux MOINK Ball.

FoodBuzz 24, 24, 24: My Heritage In Bacon!

slab-bacon-fryingWhen people see my surname I am often confused for someone who subscribes to a particular neopagan religion that worships Gaia or Mother Earth.  But that couldn’t be further from the truth.  My last name GAIAN is only two generations old.  If my great grandmother had not gotten mad at my great grandfather many years ago I would still have my Irish ancestors surname of GAHAN.

My Irish ancestors came to this country through Nova Scotia, Canada just after the turn of the 20th Century.  They eventually found themselves living in and around Lowell, Massachusetts.  They left their homeland in the hope of a better life during the potato famines.

My English ancestors came to this country much earlier as part of the Puritan movement that settled here shortly after the Mayflower first landed.  These ancestors eventually found themselves throughout what became “The South.”   Settling in the Carolinas and Georgia as farmers these people eventually helped to develop the southern cuisine that I love today.

Finding a menu that encompassed these three cultures and still enable me to incorporate bacon in each course proved to be much easier than I had anticipated.  It appears bacon has been a staple of my ancestors for centuries.  Maybe that’s why some people think I might have bacon grease flowing through my veins instead of blood.

It wasn’t hard to find people to share my visionary meal.  I quickly found four other couples to join my wife and I with my theme meal.  With the assistance of two of my favorite cookbooks: The Bacon Cookbook: More than 150 Recipes from Around the World for Everyone’s Favorite Food and Seduced by Bacon: Recipes & Lore about America’s Favorite Indulgence I was able to come up with a menu that I could adapt to my love of BBQ and keep within the theme of my blog.

The menu consisted of:

  • MOINK Balls Appetizers (More on MOINK later on)
  • Southern Shrimp & Pea Salad w/cracklings
  • English Bacon & Cheddar Bread
  • Southern Style Smothered Chicken w/bacon and lemon slices
  • Southern Style Sauteed Green Beans w/bacon and shallots
  • Irish Colcannon
  • Southern Red Velvet Cake w/bacon cream cheese frosting
  • Pecan, Brown Sugar, Bacon Ice Cream

Utilizing a several types of bacon was critical to trying to get the authenticity of each dish.  The English Bacon & Cheddar Bread and the Irish Colcannon required English/Irish bacon.  Slab bacon was used on the Southern Shrimp & Salad, Ice Cream. And your normal everyday sliced bacon was used on the others.

English/Irish bacon differs from traditional bacons found in the U.S. because it’s made from the meat of the back of the pig instead of the belly meat.  English/Irish bacon closely resembles “canadian bacon.”  But as you can see from this picture it has a layer of fat surrounding it, while canadian bacon is made from the leaner loin of the pig.

english-bacon

English/Irish Bacon

The highlight dish of the evening was the Colcannon.  This traditional Irish potato dish utilizes cabbage to make the potatoes go further.  The English/Irish bacon along with the cabbage gave the dish a great flavor profile. 

The Southern Style Smothered Chicken was my opportunity to incorporate my Traeger smoker into the meal.  Instead of tying the whole chickens I decided to spatchcock and smoke them for an hour with cherry wood.  The smoked but still raw chickens were then transfered to the dutch oven on the stove to finish cooking them.  The smoke flavor along with the bacon and lemon gave the chickens are nice country taste.

Spatchcock chicken

Spatchcock chicken

Chicen In The Pot

Chicken In The Pot

 The course that generated the most conversation amongst our guests was dessert.  The Red Velvet Cake only had bacon as a garnish on the top of the frosting.  The original idea was to substitute finely chopped crisp bacon for the pecans in the frosting.  After making the ice cream we decided to only sprinkle crumbled bacon on the top of the cake.

The Pecan Brown Sugar Bacon ice cream was good, but the texture of the bacon after being in the ice cream mixture turned a little soft and chewy.  If I were to do this again I’d cook the bacon crispier and use half the amount.

Red Velvet Cake w/Bacon Ice Cream

Red Velvet Cake w/Bacon Ice Cream

 Last but not least were MOINK Balls.  I came up with MOINK Balls last summer for a wedding I was asked to cater.  I needed a different type of finger food.  I wrapped a pre-made meatball with bacon, seasoned with one of my bbq rubs and smoked it for about 90 minutes.  They were a hit.  After posting them on the BBQ Brethren Forum you can now find MOINK Balls made all over the world.

The name MOINK comes from a visit I had to a Kansas City BBQ restaurant last June, with Ron L. and Neil T., where our waitress proclaimed their baby back ribs came from  a cow.  Anyone with any bbq knowledge knows that baby backs are pork ribs and not beef ribs.  And with that little mistake MOINK was born.  Beef = MOO, Pork = OINK…MOINK.

MOINK Balls

MOINK Balls

A few other pictures from the evening:

English Cheddar & Bacon Bread

English Cheddar & Bacon Bread

Lots of Red Food Coloring In the Cake

Lots of Red Food Coloring In the Cake

Green Beans With Bacon & Shallots

Green Beans With Bacon & Shallots

Shrimp & Pea Salad with bacon

Shrimp & Pea Salad with bacon

 

 

 

 

Bacon makes everything better?

I had forgotten about these pictures from a BBQ Brethren Bash awhile ago.  What do you do when you’re sitting around all day visiting and cooking and someone breaks out the Oreos and puts them down next to a little leftover bacon.

Bacon wrapped Oreos of course.

Start with an oreo and a piece of bacon.

obt1

Wrap it up good and tight and hold with a toothpick.

obt2

Every true bacon expert knows that chocolate and bacon were made for each other.  The question was what would happen to the cream filling after two hours in the smoker at 245 degrees.

Nothing…that’s what happened.  Here is the final product after being rubbed with Ddog’s Apple Rub and smoked with almond wood.

obt3

Yes, I ate it.  And it tasted pretty darn good.

Pulled Pork Crostini

pp-crostini4

I recently was thinking about how I could serve pulled pork at my daughter’s wedding in a way that was easy, yet more elegant.

There’s certainly nothing wrong with pulled pork sandwiches but because I was the cater and in the wedding I needed something easy to put together.

I bought some nice sweet french bagettes and cut them into thin slices.  After drizzling the slices with a little olive oil and a sprinkle of Plowboy’s Yardbird Rub I lightly toasted them on one side in the broiler

I had already taken the pulled pork and given it a rough chop.  So all I had to do was place the pulled pork on the crostini and top it with a little cole slaw.  The whole thing was then garnished with a little “Simply Marvelous” BBQ sauce and another dash of Plowboy’s Yardbird.

Hmmmm…..tasty.

Smoked Chicken Faux Pate

I needed something “new” for an event this weekend so after a few conversations with other bbq enthusiasts and reading a couple of recipes I came up with the following:

I smoked a bunch of chicken thighs rubbed with DDog’s “Apple Rub.” After the thighs cooled I removed the skin and pulled the meat off the bones. I then used the food processor to chop the chicken meat into a really fine consistancy.
chick-pate1

Threw some neufchatel cheese into a bowl:
chick-pate2

Added some onion and a good dose of additional “Apple Rub”
chick-pate3

After adding the smoked chicken and mixing very throughly I put the mixture into a mold and let it set. There is also mayo, lemon juice and some tabasco added.

Continue reading Smoked Chicken Faux Pate

The Weekend Q Experience

6:30pm, Saturday, September 6th:

A few slices were taken off the brisket and the rest is in the freezer.  I’m done…

5:12pm, Saturday, September 6th:

Continue reading The Weekend Q Experience

Wedding Cook!

Cooked some food for the daughter of a friend. Had a wonderful time doing it. It really showed me how much I have to learn. And how much better I’ve gotten over the years.

There is so much to learn about “catering.” And let me tell you I can’t imagine doing this full time. Caterers have it rough, this was a great deal of work.

Enjoy the pictures.