More from today's PD in Restaurant Row:
http://www.cleveland.com/entertainment/p....xml&coll=2Wednesday, December 27, 2006
Bill Lubinger
Plain Dealer Columnist
Never order ribs.
On the list of first-date don'ts, that one falls between never carry on about an old flame and never be late. There's just something about a sloppy mug and fingers that not even Brad Pitt could overcome. OK, Brad could, but not the rest of us.
But now there's hope, rib lovers.
Al "Bubba" Baker, a man whose physique and personality are bigger than life, has come up with a big idea that could wipe out the no-ribs rule for good. The former pro football star-turned-restaurateur has developed a method and tool to de-bone baby-back ribs so they can be served and eaten neatly like steak.
Like a mad scientist, Baker spent 17 years trying and failing, testing and adjusting. By George, I think he's got it.
Baker recently demonstrated the process in the kitchen of his year-old restaurant, World Famous Bubba's Q Bar-B-Q & Cat ering in Avon.
Careful not to risk pending pat ents, his idea centers on time and temperature. Ribs are cooked with bones intact, capturing flavor.
When a tray of slabs was done, he slowly slid the bones out one by one, pushing on one end and pulling on the other without tearing the meat. The slab was sliced in half, horizontally, like a filet.
"They flip out," said Baker, when asked about customer reaction.
The item isn't even on the menu yet. A sign inside Bubba's Q reads, "Try our de-boned baby- backs." Servers are trained to mention it.
"It's special," he said, "and it's being tested."
De-boned ribs, which cost more because of added labor ($15.99 compared to $13.99 for a half-slab), have surpassed sales of boned baby-backs after just three weeks. So far, they've been especially popular with women, families with younger children, older folks and suits.
Baker refuses to use the words "boneless" or "riblets" to describe his product because they create the misperception that the ribs are processed, like the McRib.
Long term, Baker, who learned to cook from an uncle and started a catering business while still in football, envisions stuffing his de-boned ribs with crabmeat, shrimp, asparagus and other fillings.