Photography by Ian L. Sitren

Posts tagged “barbecue

National BBQ Spareribs Day with Dickey’s Barbecue Pit

Today July 4th is also National BBQ Spareribs Day.

These are barbecue pork spareribs from Dickey’s Barbecue Pit. Dickey’s opened its first location in Dallas, Texas, in 1941. More than eighty years later, the company has grown to more than 380 locations around the world. The original location was a bar where Travis Dickey sold barbecue from a pit he built in the back. Today, Dickey’s still smokes its meats on site over hickory wood burning pits.

These ribs are one of my favorite fast food photographs. I don’t photograph barbecue very often, so National BBQ Spareribs Day seemed like a good reason to bring this image back out of the archive.

You can see more of my photography, projects, motion, and my Blog on my website at https://www.secondfocus.com

Thank You!


July 4th and the USA Celebrates… the Hot Dog!

The Wienerschnitzel original hot dogs, Mustard Dog and Kraut Dog.

About 150 million hot dogs are eaten on July 4th alone.

For this photograph, I went with hot dogs from Wienerschnitzel, a chain that started in Southern California in 1961 with a single hot dog stand opened by John Galardi. Today, Wienerschnitzel calls itself the world’s largest hot dog chain and says it serves more than 120 million hot dogs a year.

The Wienerschnitzel basics have never changed. Mustard Dog. Kraut Dog. Chili Dog. Chili Cheese Dog. I personally remember when a Mustard Dog was 15 cents and a Kraut Dog was 18 cents. That was a long time ago, but the idea is still the same. A hot dog in a bun, a few toppings, and somehow it still fits July 4th perfectly.

You can see more of my photography, projects, motion, and my Blog on my website at https://www.secondfocus.com

Thank You!


National Brisket Day and the Reality Behind FOOD FROM BAG TO BACKGROUND

My photograph of three chopped brisket sandwiches from Dickey’s Barbecue Pit, arranged directly on a black background. Each sandwich is filled with smoked Texas-style brisket, chopped and piled high, with visible charred bark, sliced pickles, raw onions, and a generous pour of barbecue sauce. The soft buns are slightly compressed under the weight, and sauce drips onto the surface, emphasizing the messiness and abundance. No food styling, just the sandwiches exactly as served, still warm from the takeout bag. A fast food rendition of Texas BBQ, unfiltered and straightforward.

Today is National Brisket Day.

One of the things I wanted to challenge with my “FOOD FROM BAG TO BACKGROUND” project was the idea that food only becomes visually interesting after it passes through a marketing department, a food stylist, an art director, retouching, and increasingly now, AI image generation.

These brisket sandwiches from Dickey’s Barbecue Pit are none of that.

They were bought like any normal takeout order, carried home in a bag, opened, placed onto a black background, and photographed exactly as served. No rearranging. No fake steam. No hidden supports. No motor oil pretending to be sauce. No tweezers moving sesame seeds into place.

And yet they still work visually.

Actually, I would argue they work because they are real.

The overflowing chopped brisket, the uneven piles of smoked meat, the compressed buns, the dripping barbecue sauce, the onions and pickles sliding out of place, all of it feels far more appetizing and believable than the heavily over-engineered perfection seen in so much advertising imagery now.

That tension became one of the central ideas behind FOOD FROM BAG TO BACKGROUND. Fast food and takeout photographed seriously, exactly as it exists in the real world, isolated against black with no attempt to hide the messiness, excess, or reality of what arrived in the bag.

And sometimes the real version ends up looking better than the manufactured one.

More from FOOD FROM BAG TO BACKGROUND:
https://www.secondfocus.com/index/G0000wQ3fbeEezF0


National BBQ Day

Today May 16th is National BBQ Day. Why it was created to sometimes be on a weekday instead of a Sunday makes no sense to me. But I didn’t do it. What I did do is photograph barbecued ribs because what says BBQ more than ribs! More of my food photographs on my website at http://SecondFocus.com Take a look, they are fun. Thanks!