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Ville Platte BBQ Sauce Recipe (Jack Miller/ Pig Stand Clone)
Posted on 10/12/10 at 2:29 pm
Posted on 10/12/10 at 2:29 pm
Ville Platte Barbecue Sauce
This homemade sauce is very similar to the two famous Ville Platte barbecue sauces, Jack Miller's and Pig Stand. I reverse-engineered this recipe based on the ingredients lists and some knowledge of how my grandfather made a similar sauce.
This was my first attempt, but I believe the result is as close to those two sauces as those sauces are to each other. Pig Stand is slightly sweeter.
Ingredients
1 cup yellow mustard
1 cup vegetable oil
2 1/2 cups dried chopped onions (8 oz by weight)
5 cups warm water
10 oz bottle Worcestershire sauce
1 cup catsup
6 Tbs tomato paste
3/4 cup chili sauce
6 Tbs sugar
1/4 cup margarine
2 tsp garlic powder
2 tsp smoked paprika
1 tsp Louisiana hot sauce
1 tsp chili powder
Procedure
1. Pour warm water over the dried onions in a bowl and allow to rehydrate for 30 minutes.
2. Into a pot of suitable size, put the all of the ingredients, including the onion water, and simmer for 2 hours or more, until the onions are very soft.
3. For basting sauce, take a portion of the sauce and add an equal amount of vegetable oil and heat. Use the top part of this mixture (the oil) for basting on the grill. The thicker sauce on the bottom can be painted on the meat during the last few minutes of cooking or served with the meat as a table sauce.
Cooking Times
Preparation Time: 30 minutes
Cooking Time: 2 hours
Total Time: 2 hours and 30 minutes
Yield: about 2 quarts
Author: Stadium Rat
This homemade sauce is very similar to the two famous Ville Platte barbecue sauces, Jack Miller's and Pig Stand. I reverse-engineered this recipe based on the ingredients lists and some knowledge of how my grandfather made a similar sauce.
This was my first attempt, but I believe the result is as close to those two sauces as those sauces are to each other. Pig Stand is slightly sweeter.
Ingredients
1 cup yellow mustard
1 cup vegetable oil
2 1/2 cups dried chopped onions (8 oz by weight)
5 cups warm water
10 oz bottle Worcestershire sauce
1 cup catsup
6 Tbs tomato paste
3/4 cup chili sauce
6 Tbs sugar
1/4 cup margarine
2 tsp garlic powder
2 tsp smoked paprika
1 tsp Louisiana hot sauce
1 tsp chili powder
Procedure
1. Pour warm water over the dried onions in a bowl and allow to rehydrate for 30 minutes.
2. Into a pot of suitable size, put the all of the ingredients, including the onion water, and simmer for 2 hours or more, until the onions are very soft.
3. For basting sauce, take a portion of the sauce and add an equal amount of vegetable oil and heat. Use the top part of this mixture (the oil) for basting on the grill. The thicker sauce on the bottom can be painted on the meat during the last few minutes of cooking or served with the meat as a table sauce.
Cooking Times
Preparation Time: 30 minutes
Cooking Time: 2 hours
Total Time: 2 hours and 30 minutes
Yield: about 2 quarts
Author: Stadium Rat
This post was edited on 10/12/10 at 5:21 pm
Posted on 10/12/10 at 2:43 pm to Stadium Rat
Be sure and put this in the recipe thread. I'll try it soon, I hope. Thanks.
Posted on 10/12/10 at 3:10 pm to Stadium Rat
Does it give you incredible heart burn as well?
Posted on 10/12/10 at 3:12 pm to Stadium Rat
How long will this sauce keep? Can it be put into a squeeze bottle and kept in the fridge?
Posted on 10/12/10 at 3:14 pm to Catman88
If you get a tummy ache from JMs or PS, you need to move north of the Mason-Dixon where they cook food for wimps.
Posted on 10/12/10 at 3:24 pm to bayoudude
I'm no food scientist, so I wouldn't want to speculate on the shelf life. Similar to Jack Miller's or Pig Stand, I guess, since the ingredients are almost the same.
Posted on 10/12/10 at 3:26 pm to CITWTT
I think it goes nice with a hot dog and cheap arse frozen burger but thats about it. It has become the status quo of grilled food incorrectly called bbq in louisiana.
Why would I need to go north though? Because I dont like a greesy sloppy mess of onions with no other real flavor?

Posted on 10/12/10 at 3:33 pm to Stadium Rat
You may want to add some lemon juice to that recipe to avoid botulism..
However the hot sauce may remove that threat. But im not sure if its enough. You want the PH at 4.6 or lower.
However the hot sauce may remove that threat. But im not sure if its enough. You want the PH at 4.6 or lower.
Posted on 10/12/10 at 3:33 pm to Stadium Rat
Have you tried jarring it in one time use jars?
I am going to have to give this recipe a shot although I will definitely have to cook some meat to go with it as I don't think I could smell that sauce cooking and not have anything to eat it on.
I am going to have to give this recipe a shot although I will definitely have to cook some meat to go with it as I don't think I could smell that sauce cooking and not have anything to eat it on.
Posted on 10/12/10 at 3:43 pm to Catman88
Hey buddy you need to chill out with all the VP BBQ hate. We get it, you don't like the stuff, but I bet it was up to you to form that opinion on your own. Let everyone else form theirs as well without anyone trashing it for thinking it should be more than it is.
Posted on 10/12/10 at 3:46 pm to cheeriopiss
And for those of us that never make it far north enough to even taste Ville Platte BBQ don't ruin it 

Posted on 10/12/10 at 3:48 pm to Catman88
The sauce is already pretty acidic, remember it's got that mustard in it.
Posted on 10/12/10 at 3:51 pm to Stadium Rat
For those asking about the shelf life, etc. I just made this for the first time today, so I have no experience with that.
I had a bottle of Jack Miller's and a bottle of Pig Stand, tasting as I went. It's very close to those in taste and acidity, so I would think he shelf life would be similar.
I had a bottle of Jack Miller's and a bottle of Pig Stand, tasting as I went. It's very close to those in taste and acidity, so I would think he shelf life would be similar.
Posted on 10/12/10 at 3:54 pm to Stadium Rat
how is the viscosity? I have never tried either of the sauces you are comparing to.
Posted on 10/12/10 at 3:56 pm to bayoudude
If it's not warm, the viscosity is about like catsup. Thinner than that if it's warm.
Posted on 10/12/10 at 3:58 pm to Stadium Rat
perfect timing on posting this. I will be using the smoker this weekend and may give this a shot if I have time.
Posted on 10/12/10 at 4:06 pm to bayoudude
quote:
I have never tried either of the sauces you are comparing to.
quote:
I will be using the smoker this weekend
And you may become the first person to actually use this style BBQ sauce on actual BBQ..

It is the #1 style sauce used on school fundraiser hamburgers though.
I know I knock it but it does go good on a hamburger and hotdog and grilled chicken. But if you are going to put it on low and slow cooked bbq then I would recommend against using it with pork shoulder and if you use it with brisket add the juices of the brisket to the sauce. Would probably be fine with smoked chicken.
Posted on 10/12/10 at 5:52 pm to Catman88
nothing better than a pork chop with jack millers on it.
Posted on 10/12/10 at 7:10 pm to diat150
Pork chop my arse ... just give me a piece of Evangeline Maid bread with some JM on it!!!!
I will NEVER live where I can't buy that stuff ... we're personal friends with the Miller's ... guess I could ALWAYS have them ship me some!
And why would someone EVER want to make this stuff as opposed to just buying it???
I will NEVER live where I can't buy that stuff ... we're personal friends with the Miller's ... guess I could ALWAYS have them ship me some!
And why would someone EVER want to make this stuff as opposed to just buying it???
Posted on 10/12/10 at 7:13 pm to tiger91
quote:
I will NEVER live where I can't buy that stuff ...
quote:
And why would someone EVER want to make this stuff
So you can live where they don't sell it?
This post was edited on 10/12/10 at 8:24 pm
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