Thursday, 4 August 2011

BBQ Shack, World's End, Brighton

JACK PUDDINGS REVIEW:
I saw someone tweet on Twitter about how they were getting excited about visiting Brighton and eating at the BBQ Shack and they linked to the review below:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2011/jul/24/jay-rayner-restaurants-bbq-shack

As a Brighton local, the review of the food seemed tempting but the location was a bit surprising. The World's End is definitely not one of the "trendy" bars or pubs or the knowingly old school pub. It is an old school pub. I have been there a few times and to be honest have never felt the most comfortable in there. Being on London Road it has elements of the real Brighton that the style press and blogs ignore.

When we arrived the place was relatively quiet and apart from one woman it was full of men. Some on their own, some in small groups but no one eating.

The woman working behind the bar were very friendly and took our order. We had the Texas Style Oak Smoked Beef Brisket sandwich
and the Rib & Chicken Combo

The ribs are very good. I have eaten ribs in Texas and these may not be from Texas but they are tasty. Very meaty and a great flavour and the BBQ sauce pot has a lovely unique flavour. Having read the review in The Guardian, I was really looking forward to the chicken. I was slightly disappointed, as the skin was not that crispy but overall it was OK. The disappointment may be because I was expecting the chicken heaven (a world where Colonel Sanders did not exist).

As we began to finish, a few more groups of people were coming in to eat. It definitely looks like word is spreading. The menu describes the food as "Awesome".

For me personally, I was not that into the World's End as a place to eat. It will definitely appeal to some people, but it is not for me. The big TV screen got on my nerves. It does have some nice touches that people would like, such as a pool table and I liked Space Invaders table between the two sofas.
Overall, I will definitely be trying a few other dishes on the menu but will not be eating in the World's End. I would recommend trying the food here, whether eat in or takeaway though.

8 out of 10 Puddings for the ribs.

ALAN CARTES REVIEW:
Me and my mate Jack Pudding love going out for food. But we do have issues. We like our routines and much as we want to try new places, we  tend to meet up, debate where we're gonna go, then go to Gar's, eat the Imperial Choice set menu, go to Carluccio's for dessert and coffee, and call it a night. But the buzz about The BBQ Shack hadspread quicker than the rumours about the riots affecting London Road (thanks to the way Google Searches and the word 'London' combined to have an effect on the sort of people that think the Meerkats and OperaSingers are the world's funniest advertisers), so we had to try it.Now, I love re-enacting Nick Nolte & Eddie Murphy in 48 Hours (and in Another 48 Hours) as much as the next bloke, but going to The World's End, I was really worried that my fake police ID wasn't up to it. I swear that if Mr P had ordered a Black Russian, we'd never have made it to the beef brisket. It felt like the slightest thing could have kicked off a bar brawl. I thought an old woman was bogging me out for a solid ten minutes. But it turned out she was bogging at Sky News which I didn't realise was broadcasting off a massive tellybox above my head.

I'm glad we did go, though. The menu describes how everything is pretty much slow cooked for 18 hours which explains why they were laminated, as if that doesn't make you drool, then you shouldn't be reviewing food.

The brisket was good. As my Rabbi would testify, it doesn't beat a Bagelman hot salt beef bagel (from Bagelman on Church Road), but it was good. Soft meat, nice bun and the hot Chiptotle sauce did the business.

I was definitely tempted by the other dishes on the menu. I tried someof the ribs from Jack's plate and again the meat was as soft as you could imagine and the sauce was great. The fries were ok, the coleslaw was above average, although a bit unnecessary. If I was after ahealthy snack, I probably wouldn't be having brisket, fries and Guinness.

Unfortunately, though, you can't escape the surroundings and to be honest we ate like convicts. I felt like Grossberger in Stir Crazy, hunched over my meal, shovelling it into my mouth as quick as possible so we could go somewhere else for a relaxing drink (Circus Circus). Mr P said he was trying to think of a good riposte if someone came up and asked if they could take his food off him. Even sitting outside at Circus Circus, where you're chilling in the middle of three dual carriageways was 100% more relaxing than being at The World's End. How that didn't feature prominently in Jay Rayner's review, I don't know. He described it as "a local boozer, which is exactly as it should be". Yeah right. If any of you go there and start campaigning to your localboozer that it should be more like The Word's End, then I'll eat my brisket at The World's End again! To be fair, he did also say that "In its natural habitat the best barbecue is found at roadside shacks off the arse end of nowhere." Maybe I'm middle class, but I've always thought the best bbq is found in someone's garden where you don't feell ike you're one wrong look away from a fight.

All in all, though, I'd agree with Mr P. I'd definitely like to try the rest of the menu. And I'd go back. I'm not scared. I'd probably get a better fake police ID first, though. 2 and a half, or maybe 3 out of 5 puddings (probably more for takeaway).

http://www.bbqshack.co.uk/index.html

1 comment:

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