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Pappy's Smokehouse (often referred to as simply Pappy's) is a barbecue restaurant located in St. Louis, Missouri, United States. [1] It was started in 2008 by Mike Emerson, who previously worked at another barbecue restaurant called Super Smokers. [1] [3] [4] The restaurant was named after Emerson's late brother, Jim. [2]
An Al Tazaj restaurant in Buraidah, Saudi Arabia Dinosaur Bar-B-Que's Syracuse, New York Location The interior of a Famous Dave's restaurant in Mountainside, New Jersey Signage for Louie Mueller Barbecue A Sconyers Bar-B-Que catering vehicle at the Boshears Skyfest, October 16, 2010
The restaurant was officially founded in 1953 when they expanded the business into a fried chicken take-out restaurant. [2] The menu eventually incorporated hamburgers, and then shifted into a barbecue restaurant. The second restaurant opened in February 1963. [3] Bill Miller Bar-B-Q was a family business.
Common large shelf display of Maull's BBQ sauces at a St. Louis grocery store. The Louis Maull company started in 1897 as a grocery business selling out of a horse-drawn wagon. In 1905 it was incorporated as the Louis Maull Cheese and Fish company and had switched to wholesale distributing to restaurants and grocery stores.
The original Joe's Kansas City Bar-B-Que is in Kansas City, Kansas. Joe’s Kansas City Bar-B-Que can be traced to competition barbecue and the Kansas City Barbeque Society (KCBS). Accompanying friends at the American Royal and The Great Lenexa BBQ Battle [14] inspired Jeff Stehney to start cooking on his own. The first smoker purchased was an ...
[1] St. Louis is said to be home to the first barbecue sauce in the country, which was created by Louis Maull in 1926. [2] In the 1950s, pork butt became a staple in local St. Louis-Style barbecue when local grocery chain Schnucks began selling it. [2] St. Louis–style ribs have deep roots to Kansas City style-barbecue.
These original settlers brought a strong barbecue tradition and even though successive waves of later, primarily German and Scandinavian, immigration obscured much of the state's Southern roots, the Southern influences persisted, especially throughout the Little Dixie enclave of central Missouri (connecting the Kansas City and St. Louis ...
The restaurant was founded by Leon Finney Sr., originally of Mississippi, in 1940. [1] It was one of the earliest barbecue establishments in Chicago. Along with other restaurants like Lem's Bar-B-Q, Leon's popularized the "Delta style" of barbecue that predominates in the South Side.