DOMINIC ARMATO

Now open: New, bigger Little Miss BBQ wows Phoenix barbecue lovers

Settle down, Little Miss BBQ fans. Scott Holmes' hotly anticipated restaurant in Phoenix's Sunnyslope area has finally opened. Here's an exclusive first look.

Dominic Armato
The Republic | azcentral.com
  • The new Little Miss BBQ quietly opened Nov. 20 at Seventh Street and Townley Avenue in the Sunnyslope neighborhood
  • It nearly quadruples the indoor capacity of the south Phoenix location, housing roughly 150 diners
  • Owner and pitmaster Scott Holmes anticipates being open for three meals a day by the end of the year

Smoked meat makes people a little crazy.

Never mind that it’s a second Phoenix location. The fact that barbecue fiends can already smother themselves with Scott Holmes’ brisket five days a week at the original Little Miss BBQ on University Drive is doing little to dampen their excitement.

The new Little Miss BBQ, on the northeast corner of Seventh Street and Townley Avenue in Sunnyslope, has been one of the most hotly anticipated Valley restaurants of 2018, if not the past several years.

It quietly opened on Nov. 20 (though it closed for Thanksgiving and Black Friday). Thankfully, the newly minted Little Miss is prepped and fully equipped to handle the ravenous crowds, for breakfast, lunch and dinner.

Room for 150 guests

Little Miss BBQ pit master/butcher Jeremy Burnside samples BBQ at the new restaurant in north Phoenix. The second Little Miss BBQ opened Nov. 20.

It took a little longer than anticipated (as restaurants do), but Little Miss BBQ Sunnyslope has finally thrown open its doors — and it has a whole lot more of them.

One gets the sense that the original Little Miss could fit comfortably within the footprint of the new Little Miss’ dining room, to say nothing of the patio and kitchen.

Situated in a spacious building that formerly housed a bank, the Sunnyslope restaurant is modern but unfussy, and brings a whole lot more chairs. It nearly quadruples the indoor capacity of the south Phoenix location, housing roughly 150 diners when it’s loaded to capacity. In a bid to keep the wait short, cutting responsibilities are handled by three cutters, shoulder-to-shoulder at the end of the line.

Little Miss BBQ pit master Wayne Viers, left, kitchen manager Mark Abbott, and pit master/butcher Jeremy Burnside sample BBQ at the new restaurant in north Phoenix. The second Little Miss BBQ is expected to have a soft opening November 15.

“People hate waiting at the old one,” Holmes says, giving The Republic a sneak peek at the new restaurant. “So how do we alleviate those concerns but yet still try to create a really cool experience?”

The line has been moved indoors out of the heat and sun. It will wind past a small display portraying the history of the restaurant and the Sunnyslope area; a wall of Little Miss merch; and a window that looks into the part of the kitchen where the real business happens.

3 tons of brisket a week

To handle the increased capacity and reduce wait times, the restaurant features three Oyler pits, and they’re monsters. Lined up side by side, they create a floor-to-ceiling wall of jet-black smokers fed by wood-burning fire boxes that handle rotating trays of meat.

How much meat? For every week of operation, Holmes anticipates prepping, smoking and serving 3 tons of brisket. As in 6,000 pounds. Literal, actual tons. And that doesn’t even include the pulled pork, pork ribs, sausage, turkey and daily specials.

Chef/owner Scott Holmes is getting ready to open his second Little Miss BBQ in north Phoenix. Here's a closeup look at some sausages.

But if there’s a pitmaster obsessive enough to find a way to handle that kind of volume while maintaining the same quality, it’s Holmes.

In fact, he’s trying to make it even better.

The search for the mystery brisket

“Every once in a while, we’d get a case of brisket and it was like, 'where did these come from?' They’re absolutely amazing,” he recalls.

Thus began the quest to find the best brisket Holmes had tasted.

Chef/owner Scott Holmes is getting ready to open his second Little Miss BBQ in north Phoenix. Holmes slices some brisket.

Meat suppliers bring in their product from multiple sources, and after the briskets have changed hands a couple of times, it can be difficult to pinpoint the precise ranch that raised the piece of beef sitting in front of you.

But after nearly a year of trying to locate his favorite product through his supplier, a distributor, an investment firm and a meatpacking plant that closed and left the trail cold, Holmes finally found the source: an independent ranch in Minnesota.

“It’s absolutely the best beef I’ve been able to find,” Holmes declares.

Chef/owner Scott Holmes is getting ready to open his second Little Miss BBQ in north Phoenix. Holmes has been busy perfecting Central Texas-style BBQ before their opening day.

Though he’s not yet revealing its name, Holmes describes a family farm that has been developing its line of Black Angus since the 1950s. All of the feed is grown right there on the ranch, and the cows are fed sugar beets and sweet peas, with only 20 percent of their feed comprised of corn.

“It’s so sweet, and the color is beautiful and the grain structure...”

Here, Holmes falls into a lengthy, hypnotic reverie of marbling, intramuscular fat and mouth feel and, mostly, just makes you wish the restaurant would hurry up and open.

Booze and breakfast

In addition to the Minnesota super brisket, fans of Little Miss can expect some changes to the menu at the new location.

Chef/owner Scott Holmes is getting ready to open his second Little Miss BBQ in north Phoenix. The new restaurant has a bar.

For starters, there’s booze, something that was always missing at the original. Holmes is keeping it simple — a few local brews from producers like Wren House, The Shop Beer Co. and North Mountain Brewing — along with a selection of keg wines and batch cocktails developed by manager Ella Perez (formerly of The Gladly and UnderTow) and guest mixologists.

Another major change: The Sunnyslope location will offer breakfast, including breakfast burritos, avocado and barbecue egg bowls, biscuits and gravy, and biscuit sandwiches stuffed with barbecue.

The restaurant will launch with dinner service only. Breakfast will be fast on its heels, and Holmes anticipates being open for three meals a day by the end of the year.

Chef/owner Scott Holmes is getting ready to open his second Little Miss BBQ in north Phoenix. The new restaurant has a bar.

New dishes and specials

Other tweaks and specials will be immediately evident to fans of the original.

In answer to one of his most frequent requests, Holmes is adding a mac and cheese to the menu, along with vegetables that will be roasted in the juicy, fatty drippings from the smoked brisket.

Chef/owner Scott Holmes is getting ready to open his second Little Miss BBQ in north Phoenix. Holmes has been busy perfecting Central Texas-style BBQ before their opening day.

“I’m sorry, vegetarians,” Holmes says, sheepishly.

Holmes plans to offer platters for large groups — cutter’s choice — in a small size that will feed four or five diners, and a mountain of meat that will serve seven or eight.

In a possibly controversial but necessary move, an order of brisket will include both fatty and lean. “If I don’t, I’m going to be out of all of our fatty brisket by 4 o'clock, and there won’t be any for dinner.” 

Chef/owner Scott Holmes is getting ready to open his second Little Miss BBQ in north Phoenix. Holmes talks with Arizona Republic/azcentral dining critic Dominic Armato.

Daily specials like smoked pastrami and short ribs will be in attendance, and Holmes hopes to work in a green chile smoked meatloaf down the line, along with the smoked salmon he teased when the restaurant was first announced.

Sweet and sticky pork belly

Holmes has been developing recipes for his smoked salmon and sweet and sticky ribs. He still hopes to offer smoked salmon, probably a once-a-week special due to kitchen logistics. Those who were looking forward to Holmes’ sweet and sticky ribs will still get the sweet and sticky, but not precisely as Holmes initially envisioned.

Chef/owner Scott Holmes is getting ready to open his second Little Miss BBQ in north Phoenix. Holmes has been busy perfecting Central Texas-style BBQ before their opening day.

“I was working on the sweet and sticky ribs, cooking ribs three times a week at the house, and my daughter, her favorite food in the world is pork ribs,” Holmes explains. “I decided to play with some pork belly, and she takes a bite of the rib, and then a bite of the pork belly, and she did not put that pork belly down.

"She completely forgot about the rib. And I thought, ‘Hmmmm,’ because I like the pork belly better too.”

And so, partly thanks to Holmes’ 6-year-old daughter, sweet and sticky pork belly it is, sizzled up to a crisp on the flat top in a caramelized, sweet barbecue sauce. He’s guessing his guests won’t mind the switch. They might mind waiting to get their hands on it, though.

Hang in there, everybody. It’s almost here.

Chef/owner Scott Holmes is getting ready to open his second Little Miss BBQ in north Phoenix.

Little Miss BBQ

New location: 8901 N. Seventh St., Phoenix. 602-314-6922. 

Hours (effective Nov. 27): 4-9 p.m. (or until barbecue sells out) Tuesdays-Saturdays, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Sundays. Closed Mondays. Hours will change in January.

Original location: 4301 E. University Drive, Phoenix. 602-437-1177.

Details: littlemissbbq.com.

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