Restaurant that specializes in barbecue-style cuisine and dishes
Several types of meats being cooked in a pit at a barbecue restaurant
Abarbecue restaurant is a restaurant that specializes in barbecue-style cuisine and dishes.[1][2] Barbecue restaurants may open relatively early compared to other restaurants, in part to optimize sales while barbecued foods being slow-cooked by the process of smoking are being tended to by restaurant personnel on premises.[2] In some instances, this can enable the sales of barbecued meats that began being smoked the night before the next business day.[2] Per these logistics, a significant portion of their sales may occur during lunchtime.[2] Additionally, high lunch turnover at barbecue restaurants may occur per the foods being cooked and sold in large batches.[2] Popular food items may sell out earlier compared to others, which may encourage customers to arrive earlier.[2] In January 2015, the U.S. National Restaurant Association forecast "barbecue, Italian food and fried chicken" to be "top perennial menu favorites in 2015".[3]
In northern and midwestern areas of the United States, a barbecue restaurant may be referred to as a "barbecue joint".[4] In southern areas of the U.S., a barbecue restaurant may be referred to as a "barbecue" or "barbecue place", rather than as a barbecue restaurant.[4] Some barbecue restaurants may be referred to as "shrines" or as a "barbecue shrine",[5][6][7][8][9] which can refer to those that have earned a strong reputation for purveying high-quality food over the course of several years, and even over the course of generations.[10]
Achurrascaria is a place where meat is cooked in churrasco style, which translates roughly from the Portuguese for 'barbecue'. A churrasqueiro is somebody who cooks churrasco style food in a churrascaria restaurant.[11] Some churrascarias offer all-you-can-eat dining in a style that is referred to as rodízio.[12][13] They may offer many types of barbecued meats.[12] In Brazil, a churrascart is a food cart that serves churrasco, and they are common in the country.[12]
In Central Mexico, barbecue outlets are common and numerous in midsize to large size cities, and often exist at roadside stalls in outlying areas of the metropolitan area.[2] These outlets may not qualify as being restaurants per se, although they often offer the same types of foods.[2] These outlets may offer barbacoa-style foods.[2] In this region, when quantities of meats are depleted, the restaurant or outlet typically closes.[2]
Mongolian barbecue restaurants are popular in the Philippines.[15] In 1991 it was suggested that this may be due in part to the economic recession that was occurring in the early 1990s, because Mongolian barbecue restaurants operate as affordable buffets that enable diners to eat as much as they desire.[15]
Barbecue restaurants in South Korea are referred to as gogi-jip (English: "meat house").[16] They are very common and popular in Seoul.[16] Daedo Sikdang and Nongoljip are Korean barbecue restaurant franchises that both originated in Seoul.[16]
Meats being cooked at a barbecue restaurant in Chicago, Illinois
Barbecue restaurants may have one or more pitmasters that oversee the preparation and cooking of foods, along with maintaining fire and food temperatures.[17][18] The word "pitmaster" is derived from "the ability to control the fires of the pit".[17] The sizes of barbecue restaurants can vary, ranging from very large to smaller-sized buildings, and some exist as mobile food trucks and food booths.[19]
^"Our History". Fogo de Chão Churrascaria Brazilian Steakhouse. Fogo de Chão (Holdings) Inc. Archived from the original on 2014-06-05. Retrieved 2014-06-01.
^Engelhardt, E.S.D. (2010). Republic of Barbecue: Stories Beyond the Brisket. University of Texas Press. p. 23. ISBN978-0-292-78214-3. Retrieved March 17, 2015. Quote: "Though sauce does appear around the pits and on the plates at Central Texas barbecue restaurants, one of the most venerated among them, Kreuz Market, in Lockhart, has stood by its policy of “NO SAUCE”—with the capitals reflecting the..."