Review: Ptrains wood smoked bbq chicken pizza
admin | June 24, 2010 | 7:37 am
This past Saturday I had the opportunity to attend the Huck Finn Jubilee out at Mojave Narrow’s Campground in Victorville, CA. It was myself, my wife, my good friend Brian and his fiancee, Shea. I plan on posting some future installments here about the jubilee itself, but there was one small thing I wanted to get out of the way first, the food at Vittle Village.
Now to our overall disapointment, there was absolutely no beer to be found at any of the vendor booths. That makes one heck of a long day to be sitting out at a beautiful campground, listening to various bands based on early Americana bluegrass and country, with the smell of BBQ in the air with no way to purchase any beer. There seems to be a lack of verifiable information on whether it was sold or not in the past. Depending on who I spoke to in my desperate search for amber nectar, I was was pretty much told down the middle there was/wasn’t any beer the year before.
In the hopes of having some really good country inspired food, I had failed to eat breakfast that morning running on only about three cups of coffee until we made our way to the ‘foodie’ area of the fair at around 1pm. Sadly to say the options were a tad limited. If I can recall correctly there was on corndog/hotdog stand, one funnel cake vendor, one bratwurst/sausage kiosk, a tent that sold roasted corn on the cob, and another tent that had some plates of BBQ chicken and ribs. The one that caught my eye was Ptrains BBQ which emphasized hot wings and a wood smoked BBQ chicken pizza. Each vendor sold cans of soda or bottled water although there were two specialty drink places: one that sold either fresh lemonade or strawberry lemonade, and the other homemade craft soda’s such as rootbeer and cream soda among some of their offerings.
I gravitated towards Ptrains because of the very large custom made BBQ pit shaped like an 1850′s era style steam train engine, and of course the smell of the wood laden fire. In addition to my fondness of BBQ and cooking, I also enjoy model railroading, so the chance to learn more about this epic one-of-a-kind custom train pit and the sampling of some good ‘ole BBQ seemed perfect for me.
Ptrains is a family run business based out of Rancho Cucamonga, CA. You can go to their site and read the family story about Ptrains all there. By looking at their schedule, it appears they travel to various events all over the place with pit in tow. I can tell you that the whole family seemed very genuine and nice. I had a chance to talk to one of the daughters who was overseeing the wings being cooked and she was very pleasant and was happy to share with me the story of the train. The train itself happens to be a relatively new addition, being only a few months old and was custom built by a gentlemen in Houston, TX. The man who built it (name escapes me right now) has built other well known grills including the famous Six-Gun Grill, and took so much pride in this train creation decided to drive it out himself to deliver it to the client only a few weeks back. The Ptrain pit cost roughly $50K and duplicates steam era sound effects as well.
I’m not exactly sure what they offer to grill on the circuit, but on the menu today was only the pizza and chicken wings. I hope in the future if I run into Ptrains again, they may offer up some brisket, ribs, or pork items.
Anyway, my buddy Brian had the wings and offered me one, but I declined. I’m sorry that I did in retrospect because I would have liked to have included that experience here as well, but I can tell you Brian said he enjoyed his and they had a pleasant glaze and wasn’t too spicy.
I myself decided to try the wood fired bbq chicken pizza. I can tell you it had a lot of potential, but just wasn’t there. It wasn’t the taste per-se because Ptrains ketchup based bbq sauce is indeed mighty tasty (although not too spicy), but the execution of the actual pizza was a tad off. First, even though the wood smoking induces a mouth watering aroma to the pizza, the crust itself wasn’t completely done. It wasn’t as crisp as I would have liked it to be and a tad doughy in parts, as if it wasn’t cooked all the way through. It probably could have stood a few more minutes on the grill to firm up a bit more. Secondly, it was a bit over-sauced in the BBQ department. I’m not exactly sure if they were trying to highlight the chicken or the sauce, but it came across as little heavy on the sauce. Maybe because it was their first time here and it was a busy part of the day or they are still working the kinks out in the recipes, but I could have used a bit less sauce and a bit more chicken. That being said, it wasn’t bad, but definetly room for improvement.



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