Low and Slow: Chasing Adventure on the Southern Barbecue Trail

Andrea Wien
Thoughts And Ideas
Published in
2 min readOct 7, 2016
(Photo: Denny Culbert)

From growing up as a young lad in a restaurant kitchen, to managing a deli, to spending years eating delicious freaking barbecue, Rien Fertel has followed stomach after adventure with great success.

If someone told you that you could get paid to travel around the South, stopping along the way to pop out and eat barbecue in iconic barbecue cities, you’d probably take them up on it. I mean, let’s be real, unless you are a vegetarian, there are few things more satisfying than a hunk of meat cooked over an open flame, possibly dipped in sauce and paired with a cold beverage.

Well, friends, here we are. Meet Rien Fertel, a New Orleanian who will make you very jealous with how he makes his coin. In 2012, Rien hit the road in a barbecue bus (yes, he called it that), and hit up a veritable clusterf*ck of juicy, meaty establishments across the South. That trip, along with years of other research across Tennessee, Mississippi, the Carolinas and Kentucky, culminated in a masterpiece book called “The One True Barbecue: Fire, Smoke, and the Pitmasters Who Cook The Whole Hog.”

So, um. Sounds great, right? But here’s something that will leave you scratching your head. When I asked Rien WHY he chose to dedicate years of his life to the topic of barbecue, he told me this:

“Barbecue wasn’t a thing. I didn’t particularly love, or even like, barbecue. I was looking for an adventure.” — Rien

#mindblown.

You’ll have to listen to the interview to hear how this whole shebang came about.

Photo: Denny Culbert

So, what’d we talk about?

We hop all over the place, from Rien’s time growing up in restaurant kitchens to how he knew it was time to move back to New Orleans post-Katrina. He also gives his curious pick for best food city (seriously, you’ll never guess it), and sheds some light on what it’s really like to work as a freelance food writer in an increasingly crowded space.

I loved recording this interview and I hope you’ll enjoy listening to it. If you do, share it with a friend.

Other ways to listen to the show: iTunes, Stitcher and Google Play

Full show notes: We Could Make That

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Andrea Wien
Thoughts And Ideas

Author of “Gap to Great: A Parent’s Guide to the Gap Year” and teller of food stories at www.wecouldmakethat.com.