Spring has sprung The grass has riz I wonder where The charcoal is? Indeed, spring has sprung, and it’s time to prepare the grill, dig out the cha

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SPRINGGRILLING

Spring has sprung

The grass has riz

I wonder where

The charcoal is?

Indeed, spring has sprung, and it’s time to prepare the grill, dig out the charcoal and restock the shelves with plenty of Dizzy Pig seasonings for a new season of amazing meals off the grill and smoker.

Regardless of whether your Dizzy Pig supply has grown old and expired, you are missing a few key blends in the line-up, or whether it’s time for ‘The Works’ (the complete line of blends), our team is ready to do quick turnaround on your order. Supplies are topped up with fresh-ground rubs in all sizes: samplers, 8 oz jars, multi-packs and, for the dedicated foodie, quart size containers.

Do yourself a big favor and knock this essential item off your ‘start of season’ to-do list by placing your flavor-packed Dizzy Pig order today. At the very least, plug your zip code into our dealer locator, and you may be able to get your Dizzy Pig fix right down the road!

Happy cookin' this Spring!

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Dizzy Tips: Persistence Pays Off

Any reader of this newsletter that also competes on the professional cooking competition circuit knows the importance of persistence in refining a recipe to meet your, and perhaps more crucially, judges satisfaction. So those folks will know exactly what I mean when I say that a tweak here and a revision there may be the difference between a successful cook and a day spent watching others go up to collect ribbons, trophies and prize money.

Dizzy Pig’s amazing line-up of seasonings was built on persistence and tweaking before they became the versions you know and love. If memory serves, Dizzy Dust was on batch 17 before the balanced end result was achieved. Our Bayou-ish blackening season took over 20 revisions and several years!

So, bottom line, the Dizzy Tip for this month, is to try new recipes, create new things, following your instincts and personal tastes. And, if when the meal is over, the verdict is, ‘Meh, it was okay, it could have been better’, take that critique and run the components and techniques of the dish through your mind and consider what can be revised and tweaked to truly turn the project around and into the dish that compelled you to try it in the first place.

As an example, here is a project that I’ve been working at refining for the past month or so. It started off with an interest in pretzel buns. I found an online recipe that worked for me in its base format, and I tweaked it right away, incorporating Dizzy Dust and Raging River right into the dough, replacing all the salt and half the sugar in the online version. I did this because I envisioned the roll being an ideal platform for pulled pork, which utilized those two rubs in its crust. So, the first step of this journey was taken and the results were good, as you can see:

1PrtzelBreadSammich

However, just about this time, I was talking with Chris (Capell, Dizzy Pig owner), about the idea of ‘Small Plates, Big Flavors’ and wanted to somehow make this new pretzel bun project fit into that model. Sure, the natural reaction would be to say, ‘just make small slider buns!’ but my mind went another direction, as I was on to thinking of pulled pork actually stuffed into pretzel buns. That led to tweak #2 and the idea of creating the pretzel dough and wrapping it around a serving of pulled pork, sauced and with caramelized onions included. That result was beyond ‘okay’ and definitely ‘getting there’, but there was one substantial problem; the pretzel dough was not very sticky and it was difficult to create a tight seam that would hold up when the crucial boiling of the dough step came about. Great try, and close, but these had a bad dough-to-meat ratio, so another step was needed to reach the goal of a great ‘Small Plates, Big Flavors’ candidate:

2PretzelBreadDip

Pulled Pork, Caramelized Onion stuffed Pretzel Balls

As luck would have it, I had just invested in a pasta roller for home use and I incorporated an idea from one of our mainstays at work: Italian ravioli. However, in this case, it was the Dizzy Dust/Raging River infused pretzel dough that was run through the rollers, cut out with a metal ring and then two were used to sandwich the sauced pulled pork/caramelized onion filling. Subsequent crimping of the edges cured the non-sticking dough problem sufficiently that they could make it through the baking soda boil process intact. Finally, on version three of the pretzel bun ‘experiment’ I had what I wanted: a ‘Small Plates, Big Flavors’ appetizer style offering of pulled pork inside a pretzel bun. Success! Here’s the end result of that project that showcased persistence, perseverance and tweaking of a recipe in order to achieve your goal.

3FinalStuffedPretzel

The final product!! A testimony to perseverance.

Next month in Dizzy Tips, I’ll take this subject to the next level and talk about ways to think outside the box in creating your own signature dish(es) and the quest to create your own personal ‘perfect bite of food’.

Mike Kerslake

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Dizzy Pig Personals

Looking For Foodie Love: Greetings! This is my first-time personals ad, so let me tell you a bit about myself. I’ve been working with Dizzy Pig since the very beginning and am told that I am very approachable, friendly, eager to please, not too spicy or aggressive, but not meek or mild either. You can say I have a well-balanced, loveable personality, but I can get crusty when the heat is on, especially for prolonged periods. I do love barbecue, especially big cuts like pork butts (who doesn’t love pulled pork?!), but I’m also comfortable in the kitchen around chicken, stews, casseroles and veggies too! I’d really like to meet you and hook up to share some great food together. You can reach me through the Dizzy Pig online order page anytime night or day; I know we can create great things together!

Sincerely,
Dizzy Dust Coarse
April’s Flavor of the Month

GlisteningPork

Glistening pulled pork with deep flavor crust from Dizzy Dust Coarse.

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DemoEggsStaffPic

DizzyFest 8 Demo EGGs now Available!

DizzyFest 8 is now clearly on the horizon (June 6 in Manassas, VA), and once again, we are offering up the demonstration Big Green Eggs® for sale for post-event pick-up at a great discount price. This is the ideal opportunity to purchase an EGG, be it your first, second, third or……? Not only is the event a great time/place to purchase an EGG, it’s a fantastic chance to see and talk to dozens of cooks creating their favorites and specialties on these amazing and versatile cookers. Get all the details on the demo EGGs and DizzyFest here.

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PerfectChixAndEggs

Succulence.

April 25th Dizzcovery Class: Chicken

Article by Mike Kerslake, Dizzy Pig co-founder

My friend Chris Capell, Dizzy Pig owner and competition team pitmaster, is the finest and most meticulous chicken cook I’ve ever met. It can be difficult to achieve juicy, moist white meat while creating fully cooked and pull-from-the-bone dark meat in the same bird, but Chris’s mastery of poultry guarantees these kinds of results, whether you’re using pieces or whole birds. You don’t have to take my word for all this; one view of the Dizzy Pig trophy shelf (I think they’re actually multiple shelves now!) backs up all I’m saying.

So, if you can make arrangements to be at Dizzy Pig HQ in Manassas, VA for Chris’s Dizzcovery Chicken Class on April 25th, definitely do so! I highly recommend it. You will learn everything from fire building, getting the right smoke, temp control, cooking ‘by feel’ to the actual prep, seasoning and cooking of chicken. All Dizzcovery classes are incredibly informative and entertaining, but this is an opportunity to learn all about bbq chicken from a bbq chicken specialist; Chris Capell, the finest poultry cook I know.

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Fatties

Dizzy Pig and Home Made Sausage

Years ago, a dedicated Dizzy Pig fan from the Austrian Alps (whose family has been into sausage making for years) sent a recipe he developed using one of our Dizzy Pig blends. Chris made up a batch and was blown away with how good it was.

For being such a simple recipe, the flavor is amazing and great for breakfast, appetizers, sides or to use in another dish. The Dizzy Pig team has won awards at sausage contests using this recipe, and it really opened up our eyes to the potential for Dizzy Pig seasonings to elevate all sorts of sausage recipes!

Fresh Patties and Fatties

When we make sausage, we aren’t making cured sausages, and we don’t even go through the process of stuffing casings. We find it more fun to make small batches of FRESH sausage, and prefer to form the sausage into patties or fatties. A great flavor can be achieved by the browning of the surface of the meat, and we don’t have to mess with casings.

Meats to use

Pork is the go-to meat for “sausage” to most people. And for a good reason! There are lots of fatty cuts of pork, and fat is your friend when it comes to making sausage. We have found that utilizing less than 20% fat can yield a dry and unappetizing sausage. But really, just as long as you have some fat, any meat can be used...chicken, lamb, beef, venison, even seafood.

When we are out on the BBQ trail competing, we end up with a lot of pork trimmings from both pork shoulder and spare ribs. Both are perfect for sausage, and the rib meat really has a great flavor and texture.

Grinding

There are quite a few options available for getting your meat into a form that you can work with. Dedicated meat grinders are not too expensive if you stick with one of the consumer models. If you have a mixer, attachments are usually available to turn your mixer into a grinder. We have a Kitchenaid attachment, and it works well for grinding smaller batches (5 pounds or less).

Most grinders come with a coarse and a fine plate. The finer plate, as you may expect, yields a finer and denser grind, and the coarse plate a larger more airy grind. Generally we always start with the coarse plate. A decent sausage can be made with a single coarse grind, then mixing in the ingredients and forming patties. Take it a step further by running through the coarse plate a second time after the ingredients are mixed. Conversely, for a tighter, denser result, run the sausage through the fine plate after mixing in your ingredients. Whatever you do, it pays to work with very cold (even partially frozen) meat.

Raging River Maple Sausage

Original recipe from Sepp Aschbacher

Per pound of ground pork (with at least 20% fat) add:
* 2 tbsp of Dizzy Pig Raging River
* 1/4 cup of maple syrup

Mix and refrigerate overnight
Form into patties, fatties or stuff casings.

Chris has done several successful variations of this, including subbing Red Eye Express for the Raging River, or swapping maple sugar for the syrup, and adding a little salt.

But this year, Chris got a little crazy in the test kitchen and came up with some creative and tasty concoctions. We hope you enjoy

Lan’s Ginger Fried Rice Sausage

Chris's wife, Lan, makes an amazing dish called ginger fried rice. Leeks, ginger and rice are fried up in a wok, plated, sprinkled with crunchy golden pan sautéed garlic and ginger, and topped a fried egg. Why not make a sausage?? We did and it would, indeed, go great with a fried egg.
* 1 lb ground pork
* 1/2 cup cooked rice
* 2 tbsp minced garlic and ginger caramelized and crunchy
* 1 tbsp fresh ginger root (grated)
* 1 fresh leek (cleaned and chopped)
* 4 cloves garlic (roasted and crushed)
* 1.5 tbsp Dizzy Pig Shakin the Tree
* 1 tsp salt

Pineapple Head Teryaki Sausage

1.5 lbs ground pork
1 large onion or 2 small (chopped/caramelized/cooled)
1 tbsp fresh ginger root (grated)
1 green onions (finely chopped)
1/4 cup maple sugar (or syrup)
2 tbsp soy sauce
2 tsp salt
1 jalapeno peppers (finely chopped)
1 tbsp sesame oil
1/2 tsp black pepper
3 tbsp Dizzy Pig Pineapple Head
2 tbsp sesame seeds (optional to apply to fatties/patties before cooking)

Maple Jalapeno Chicken Sausage

1.5 lbs ground chicken (dark meat with fat)
2 tbsp Raging River
1.5 tbsp maple sugar
1 tsp salt
1 tsp garlic granules
1/4 tsp cayenne
3 tbsp jalapeno peppers (minced)
3 tbsp apricot (finely chopped
3 tbsp red bell pepper (finely chopped)

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