There seems to be a slew of articles ( https://www.texasmonthly.com/bbq/how-southern-barbecue-got-to-texas/
, https://www.theguardian.com/comment...-tradition-enslaved-africans-native-americans ) going around claiming that European descended Americans never BBQed/low and slow smoked meats before they saw black people doing this. Is there any truth to this? And is there even any truth to the idea that this low and slow smoking has Native American origins when this article (https://www.thoughtco.com/medieval-food-preservation-1788842) asserts that Europeans smoked meat in the medieval time period?
, https://www.theguardian.com/comment...-tradition-enslaved-africans-native-americans ) going around claiming that European descended Americans never BBQed/low and slow smoked meats before they saw black people doing this. Is there any truth to this? And is there even any truth to the idea that this low and slow smoking has Native American origins when this article (https://www.thoughtco.com/medieval-food-preservation-1788842) asserts that Europeans smoked meat in the medieval time period?
I've also seen claims that brick pits with chimneys, offset smokers and smokehouses were invented by African Americans as well. Any truth there?Smoking was another fairly common way to preserve meat, especially fish and pork. Meat would be cut into relatively thin, lean strips, immersed briefly in a salt solution and hung over a fire to absorb the smoke flavoring as it dried — slowly. Occasionally meat might be smoked without a salt solution, especially if the type of wood burned had a distinctive flavoring of its own
