BBQ Confessional

BBQ Confessional B&W Portraits + BBQ Stories

After a long day when a customer walked up and asked an obvious question, Ben said the quiet part out loud
09/11/2024

After a long day when a customer walked up and asked an obvious question, Ben said the quiet part out loud

Jordan Rosemeyer and Ben Maxwell started doing BBQ and while serving at an event, after a long slow day, a customer asked a simple obvious question. Ben answ...

Jordan Rosemeyer had a plan when he opened his BBQ trailer. All that went out the window after this event
07/30/2024

Jordan Rosemeyer had a plan when he opened his BBQ trailer. All that went out the window after this event

Jordan Rosemeyer started his BBQ trailer with the dream of being mobile and serving different locations. One event changed that entire plan. Here he tells t...

Have you had the brisket Crunchwrap at CM Smokehouse? Here's the story behind it
05/07/2024

Have you had the brisket Crunchwrap at CM Smokehouse? Here's the story behind it

Cade Mercer had no idea when he made the brisket crunchwrap for a few friends how it would become his most popular menu item simply because he made it for t...

are you a YouTube subscriber to our channel yet? I'll be posting more content on there other than the videos for the fut...
02/21/2024

are you a YouTube subscriber to our channel yet? I'll be posting more content on there other than the videos for the future.

BBQ stories by photographer Ben Sassani Contact: [email protected] If you'd like to tell your BBQ related story here please contact me through email...

02/20/2024

Joe’s passion for BBQ helped save his life when he found out about his cancer diagnosis. His passion, infectious smile, and love for his family is second to none. Here is his story of how it all happened

Leann Mueller was one of the most talented photographers I followed. I never got a chance to meet her in person but admi...
02/19/2024

Leann Mueller was one of the most talented photographers I followed. I never got a chance to meet her in person but admired her work for years.

Stories and pictures like this will keep her legacy alive and well.

LeAnn Mueller was an accomplished photographer and owner of la Barbecue in Austin, TX. Her family's name has a lot of history behind it in BBQ that started ...

A profile and interview of yours truly by my friends over at The Smoke SheetThanks fellas for the conversation.
02/07/2024

A profile and interview of yours truly by my friends over at The Smoke Sheet

Thanks fellas for the conversation.

Ben Sassani talks photography, BBQ, culture, embarrassing stories, and much more.

John is a pillar to the BBQ community and hes in the flight of his life right now. Our friend Russell setup a GoFundeMe ...
01/08/2024

John is a pillar to the BBQ community and hes in the flight of his life right now. Our friend Russell setup a GoFundeMe to help his family while he’s in the hospital.

If you can it would be amazing

Many of us know and love John (JMFB) Brotherton who is one of the biggest s… Russell Roegels needs your support for John and Brenda Brotherton need your help

For the last few years I've been telling stories through words, but there's limits to that on social media. This year, I...
11/14/2023

For the last few years I've been telling stories through words, but there's limits to that on social media. This year, I decided to start telling these BBQ stories in video form because, honestly, its a lot more personal.
I also started a YouTube channel to go alongside the IG and FB pages. So consider subscribing and sharing the YouTube page and lets build that audience as well.

BBQ strories

“There’s a lot of difficulties you experience as a restaurateur, but how you overcome those hurdles define who you are a...
03/29/2022

“There’s a lot of difficulties you experience as a restaurateur, but how you overcome those hurdles define who you are as a business owner. Our location in Arlington opened February 22nd, 2020 right before everything shut down. We didn’t even know what Covid was at the time.

One of the things we struggled with was the health department in Arlington. They had come out unprompted a few weeks before we opened. We weren’t allowed to serve inside the building yet so we were doing pop ups on the weekend and serving food outside under a tent. This is something we were used to since we had been doing pop ups for 2 years prior. We were cooking on these beautiful reverse flow custom Evie Mae pits that Arnis had built for me. I was planning the whole restaurant and cooking style around them. Health inspector sent me an email after the visit saying they weren’t going to let us use those pits to serve food from at the restaurant (we were opening in less than a month!) because the pits had the words “ammonia” on the side of them since the tanks used were old ammonia tanks and stored ‘dangerous chemicals’. They also said the pits weren’t NSF approved per the state code in Austin.

The next day I called and talked to someone in Austin and was told the pits don’t have to be NSF approved, got that in writing, gave it to the health inspector, and was told I still couldn’t use them citing the storing of dangerous chemicals.

After talking with Arnis we ended up working out a deal where he bought the pits back and I reached out Primitive Pits and got the smokers we have now with documentation of how the tanks were sourced, cleaned, and built. Health department gave us a special variance to use these smokers and we got them couple weeks before opening. Then we had to completely learn how to cook on offset smokers vs. the reverse flows we had.

The day before opening day I’d worked 18 hours straight and exhausted. We had a skeleton crew going into working in a restaurant having never worked in one before cooking outside in the elements.

One of my pit guys, a friend of mine, was out here working overnight. I’d bought pizza for everyone to thank them for busting their ass. Brenden Lamb had brought one of his smokers over here just to be able to cook extra beef ribs on it. We had 90 briskets going for opening day.

We had one guy overnight who was manning the fires. Thats all he had to do and we were going to get there at 4am and take over for him.

We get there and he’d been on his own for 4-5 hours and nobody can find him. Completely gone. We found him sleeping in his car. The pits are at 100º, all loaded up to the max, and he’s passed out in his car.

We didn’t know he was super allergic to tomatoes. He had an allergic reaction to the pizza, took Benadryl and passed the f**k out in his car. So, we had to somehow finish the cook in 4 hours and cook everything hot & fast. It all turned out ok, but our opening day was just as big a clusterf**k as the week leading up to it and dealing with all the issues we had.

So, I looked at our crew and told my wife if this is the most difficult it’s going to get it’ll be smooth sailing from here.

Then the shutdown happened. But lucky for us online ordering was already up and live so we switched to that and absolutely killed it. I even hired 4 pit guys the first week of shutdown who were laid off from other places.” - Brandon Hurtado (), owner of Hurtado Barbecue

“We started doing popups January 2016 through DMs and Social media only. Got a few write-ups before the city shut us dow...
03/02/2022

“We started doing popups January 2016 through DMs and Social media only. Got a few write-ups before the city shut us down, then hooked up with our friends at Brass Bean () and started growing. My buddy Drew and I go serious about BBQ and started looking for buildings. Building we’re in came up for sale, so we went to the bank to see if we could get a loan for it. We got the loan and bought the building September 2018.

Opened our doors February 2019. Daniel Vaughn () was here the first day. It was a madhouse. Big line around the building. Had a few friends come through to help us with cooks the first few weeks. We were just out here making peppery ass bark, Saturdays only, doing our thing.

November 2019 I started having back pains. Couldn’t figure out if it was my sciatic nerve or what. Coworker suggested I go see a doctor about and get a PT. Got a doctor referral that Monday. That night while eating pot roast my son was eating some veggie sticks and starts choking. As I’m running to help my wife as she’s is yelling “He’s choking!” I slipped and fell, put my arm out to break my fall and I hear a ‘pop’. Sounded like I tore my rotator cuff. I ran, stuck my finger down my son’s throat and got the veggie stick out. Afterward she asked if I needed to go to the doctor but I told her I had one already for that Wednesday, so I waited.

At the doctors office I told the doctor “I know you’re looking at my sciatic, but I think I tore my rotator cuff” He picked up my arm and it just flops down. So he had me do an MRI to see the extent of the damage.

Got my MRI done on Black Friday 2019. On December 3rd I go back to the doctors office and he said “There’s something not right with your shoulder, you might have cancer”. My first reaction was “WTF did you just say?!”. He said it may not be cancer but still needed to get it checked out. He sets me up with one of his best friends who happens to be one of the best orthopedic surgeons in Dallas. I go see him the following Monday, December 10th.

I walk in and I’m the youngest person in that room. He tells me its a giant cell tumor and we just just need to take it out. We scheduled to take it out the next day.

My whole family was there for the surgery. Doctors told me it was benign. If it wasn’t cancer the procedure would take 2 hours. If it was cancer it’d be 30 minutes because they’d have to close me up. After the surgery I wake up, look over to my nurse and asked how long my surgery was. She said “40 minutes.”

I had cancer. Multiple myeloma, to be exact.

All I thought was ‘God, I just want to see my kid grow up’. And as weird as this might sound, in my head I was thinking was ‘I want to make it until the next list comes out’.

My doctor sets up appointments with radiologist, bone marrow specialists, and oncologists. I won the jackpot on this one though, because the average age that gets this type of caner is about 75 and I was 32 at the time.

We meet with the first doctor, the radiologist, who told me I was going to live. He also told me I needed to talk more with the bone marrow specialists. I asked how it was going to affect my back since I do BBQ and he said “wait, you do BBQ? Has Daniel Vaughn ever eaten your food?”. I told him he had, so he looks up my place and saw “flawless brisket” (Thanks, Daniel!). He told me to hold on, walked outside, told the bone marrow specialist who I was and came back and said “He’ll see you right now.” We sat with the specialist for 4 hours that afternoon and came up with a game plan from drugs to stem cell to beat this cancer.

December 23rd insurance approves the plan, January 3rd 2020 I started my treatment. By the end of February I was in technical remission but still had to do stem cell. I told the doctor I was invited to a BBQ festival (Red Dirt) and wanted to finish the treatment so I could go and party there. Then Covid hits.

Now I’m thinking I’m going to die of covid because I have a weakened immune system. We had to wait until May when the numbers started dropping and did the stem cell then.

I had to be in the hospital for 10 days that June because my white and red blood count was at zero. On day 6 I get a call from my dad saying my AC at home went out and they had to put my dog down. The same day CJ calls me and said they caught the smoker on fire and burned 10 racks of beef ribs.

All through covid we were 1 day a week pre-orders only. I couldn’t really be up there so I sat across the street on walkie talkies with the team answering questions and doing admin stuff. But I needed to get back in there and start cooking. So in July, with my doctors permissions, I started going to the restaurant when no one was there to do some cooks.

For 5 months I didn’t tell anyone I had cancer until the end of May when I was about to lose my hair from chemo. Employees and family knew, but nobody else did. So I did a video and announced it to everyone. It was the greatest thing because afterward people would come up to me and tell me they were in remission, too. That was the most uplifting thing hearing people who’d been in remission for 5, 6, 10, 20 years. All these people I had no idea had cancer because everyone was afraid to talk about it since you’re scared its going to come back when you say something.

That October we start opening Friday service doing burgers and fajitas. We started getting busy again. January of 2021 we opened 2 days for lunch, hired our 5th employee, started getting busier, and ended up with our best month to date. Then the ice storm came that February, busted our pipes and we had to shut down for 9 weeks. All our momentum stopped.

April 2021 we go back and we had one focus. The list was coming out so we put our powers together like the Power Rangers and got going. We hustled and did everything on point for the next several months. List comes out in October and I never lived in the moment like that. That morning I was drinking champagne out of the Yeezys on my feet, had no clue where my phone was, not a care in the world, and it was a beautiful feeling.

I’d told myself during this whole thing I wanted to start living in the moment and for now. As much as I said I was going to do that when I was done with treatment I never did. But I finally did it and it was the best.

I feel like now its my responsibility to talk about my cancer for the people that came before me. I’d be doing a disservice to them for getting me to where I am now. For 29 days a month I live and don’t think about cancer, but 1 day every month I go and get checked and my heart stops knowing it’ll come back, but hoping its not anytime soon.” - Joe Zavala. Owner of Zavala's Barbecue, Cancer Survivor.

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