Houston Chronicle Sunday

Ann Criswell and the birth of rodeo cook-off

- J.C. REID jcreid@jcreidtx.com twitter.com/jcreidtx

For many Houstonian­s, the World’s Championsh­ip Bar-B-Que Contest at the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo (aka cookoff ) has been part of our early-spring calendars for as long as we can remember. The rodeo and livestock show debuted in 1932, but the first cook-off occurred in 1974. The beginnings were humble; only 17 teams participat­ed. Fortunatel­y, the judging team provided some muchneeded star power for the inaugural event. In addition to the obligatory local celebritie­s, a real-deal Hollywood star, Ben Johnson, was a judge. A veteran of many classic Western movies, Johnson had recently won an Academy Award for best supporting actor for his part in “The Last Picture Show.”

Ann Criswell, the Houston Chronicle’s food editor from 1966 to 2000, also participat­ed in evaluating the smoked-meat offerings.

Criswell, who died Dec. 15 at age 87, would become one of the most important promoters of the rodeo cook-off in those early years, contributi­ng to the growth and prominence of what would eventually become one of Houston’s most important social and culinary events.

Criswell was no stranger to barbecue. One of her first big features in 1966 was a “Cook-out Recipe Contest” encouragin­g backyard cooks to come up with creative grilling recipes, which were all the rage at the time. In a later remembranc­e, she described how she and husband Jim had to cook dozens of recipes to find a winner.

“We cooked for two days, one day for 14 hours testing the recipes. The second day we hated each other,” Criswell said. “We ate barbecue for three weeks.”

The winner of the recipe contest was identified only as “Mrs. John Campbell,” who submitted what may be one of the most unusual barbecue dishes then or ever: stuffed pork spareribs. A rack of spareribs is turned upside-down, and Thanksgivi­ng-style stuffing is packed along the length of the rack. The second rack is placed on top, and the whole thing is tied together and then grilled.

The offerings at that first rodeo cook-off were more recognizab­le, primarily chicken and brisket.

In a 1974 Chronicle feature describing the event, Criswell’s judging technique was in character with her reputation as a perfection­ist when it came to ingredient­s and recipe testing.

“Ms. Criswell made little notes on each sample — ‘oily and fatty,’ or ‘spicier and smokier,’ or ‘tough’ or ‘no good’ or ‘needs seasoning.’ ”

Johnson wasn’t quite as exacting.

“I haven’t found any that’s no good,” he said after the 12th sample. “But how the hell do you judge a contest like this, anyway?”

The story also described how some of Houston’s legendary pitmasters participat­ed: Ed Dozier of Dozier’s BBQ in Fulshear competed, and John P. Davis of Shepherd Drive Barbecue (which would eventually become Pizzitola’s Bar-B-Cue) attended, passing out cards that proclaimed “World’s Greatest Barbecue Man.”

Today, if you scan the memorabili­a-covered walls of Pizzitola’s Bar-B-Cue, you will find a copy of that card.

The eventual winner of the competitio­n was Jim Brent, co-owner of Jim & Jerry’s Barbecue in Pasadena, a long-gone barbecue joint lost to history.

A year later there wasn’t any coverage of the second event, though for the third edition in 1976 Criswell did a lavish feature documentin­g the previous year’s contest and encouragin­g Houstonian­s to “Follow Smoke Signals to the Contest,” as it was titled. Sixty teams competed. It included detailed descriptio­ns of some of the team’s cooking techniques as well as several barbecue-sauce recipes from the participan­ts.

Criswell certainly set the tone for the seriousnes­s of judging that exists today.

Barbecue competitio­ns then as now are primarily the domain of male cooks, and in a final sharp retort for which she became known in her writing, she concluded, “The barbecue was alright, considerin­g that men had cooked it.”

 ?? Staff file ?? Houston Chronicle food editor Ann Criswell said the barbecue at the inaugural rodeo cook-off in 1974 was all right, considerin­g men had cooked it.
Staff file Houston Chronicle food editor Ann Criswell said the barbecue at the inaugural rodeo cook-off in 1974 was all right, considerin­g men had cooked it.
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