DUBOIS â Looks are deceiving at 2Zâs BBQ in Dubois
The tiny log-cabin restaurant is situated in a tiny and tight space, tucked between a laundromat and hardware store. It screams hole-in-the-wall from the outside looking in, with nothing particularly special about it.
But there are hints of something special as youâre waiting in the rather long line to order while perusing a pared-down menu.
That menu has the usual suspects on it. Smoked brisket and chicken, pulled pork, racks of ribs, hot dogs, coleslaw and potato salad. There are the usual thirst quenchers, too â soda, iced tea and frozen lemonade.
But thereâs also someone named Mary Ellen and her baked beans on the menu. And someone else named Melba and her cucumber pickles.
Not to mention, the completely surprising minty watermelon-feta salad that you wonât find on the menu of too many other barbecue joints. And the lavender-colored huckleberry margarita.
Another hint on the menu is the disclaimer that suggests customers shouldnât be too surprised if something isnât available any given night.
âOur BB is made fresh daily,â that disclaimer warns. âWe often run out of items.â
Here Comes The Big Surprise
Still, nothing is too beyond ordinary yet.
Until, that is, you step out onto the back patio, searching for a seat.
And thatâs when you see the 6x6 plank of stained and varnished lumber thatâs been plunked down smack in front of a babbling brook that lies behind the restaurant, turning a very narrow space into a well-hidden gem.
Invisible from the front of the restaurant, the brook teems with birds playing downstream in a brook. They dart and dip after each other or after bugs, and even the water seems to murmur approvingly as it rolls over rocks in the stream bed.
A green canopy of trees is keeping everything impossibly cool and shady. So cool that even on an otherwise hot July day, it feels as if an air conditioner is running outside.
At this point, anyone who didnât order the frozen huckleberry margarita or the frozen lemonade is probably rethinking all of their life priorities.
Because either one would have been just the perfect drink for the moment.
It doesnât hurt this magic at all that the food is just as good as the scenery. Itâs perfectly prepared â even the more difficult chicken â and, from the first bite, itâs completely understandable why menu items run out every day.
This is barbecue heaven, and you donât even have to die first to get here.
Inspired By Two Brothers
2Zâs Barbecue is owned by two brothers, Matthew and Josh Tousignant.
The name comes from their nickname. Family and friends often shorten their last name to âTwozies,â Josh told Cowboy State Daily.
Matthew, who is also the manager of Brooks Lake Lodge, a luxury resort near Jackson Hole, knows a thing or two about hospitality. So, when he spotted a location perfect for a restaurant for sale, he knew it could be a gem, and he snapped it up.
He also knew that his brother, Josh had been looking for a life change. He was tired of driving a truck for his living.
That made him an easy sell. He could be the pit master and day-to-day manager of the restaurant.
For the brothers, barbecue was the obvious choice. Not just because it was something Dubois didnât really have yet.
âI was about 12 years old the first time I lost my eyebrows to a gas grill,â Josh said. âSo, Iâve always done this. Whether itâs a family group or thereâs some big party, Iâm the one who ends up cooking a lot of the time, and I really enjoy it.â
Barbecue brings out the kind of attitude that Josh feels goes great in a town like Dubois.
âItâs kind of the summertime sort of attitude,â he said.
And, really, who doesnât love good barbecue and potluck sides in the summertime?
Not Your Backyard Cookout
Challenge is what keeps Josh interested in barbecue.
âEvery meat is different,â he said. âEvery fire is different. We donât use pellets or anything computerized. Itâs logs in a smoker. Thatâs how we do it. So, if I made something really well, replicating that isnât easy. Youâve got to develop a feel for it.â
That feeling doesnât come from a cookbook. It comes from experience out in the field, with the wind and the weather doing its thing while the pit master does his.
âYouâve got to know what youâre cooking, where your fireâs got to be,â Josh said. âThereâre so many variables. That makes it an interesting challenge every day. And timing it all out â when it works, itâs beautiful.â
Timing is everything when it comes to cooking enough barbecue for a restaurant. Because, after all, this is not some backyard cookout.
âThe smoker never gets cold except when itâs being thoroughly cleaned,â Josh said. âItâs always going. And we make 150 pounds of brisket in a day and 60 pounds of full racks of ribs.â
They also do about 60 pounds of pulled pork, which at 2Zâs is baked in an oven instead of smoked, and 10 to 15 pounds of smoked chicken.
âOur chicken is really good, but (itâs) not what people typically come in for,â Josh said. âI think people make chicken at home. Here they want brisket, and Iâm happy to provide it for them.â
Family Recipes The Magic Behind 2Zâs
The dishes named after people come from the Tousignantsâ family.
But theyâre not just any family members. These are their grandmothers, who knew how to make something spectacular from something simple.
Growing up, these were the dishes at every potluck; food the brothers grew up on.
âIâm sure if I went into my parentsâ refrigerator right now, there would be some of the pickles,â Josh said. âWe make ours fresh every day at 2Zâs.â
Josh estimates that he cuts at least 15 cucumbers every day to keep up with demand.
The watermelon mint salad, meanwhile, was his brotherâs recipe.
âI donât know where that one came from but itâs very popular,â Josh said. âItâs a great kind of refreshing side. So much of our stuff is savory, so I think having something thatâs sweet and bright, it just flies really well.â
BBQ Is The Main Event
Smoking, though, is the star of the show. Thatâs all due to Josh and a lifetime of experimenting every time there was a potluck or party.
âItâs funny because everyone who is from Texas will introduce themselves as being from Texas,â Josh said. âAnd theyâll say, âThis is good, and Iâm from Texas.ââ
Customers often ask what kind of barbecue it is that Josh is making as well.
âAnd I say itâs Dubois,â he said. âBecause Iâm not from any of those places that are famous for anyoneâs particular barbecue thing. I have just kind of developed my own way of making each thing that I like, and that customers seem to like.â
Just call it Dubois Delicious â the newest style of barbecue to hit the planet. And another great thing that came from Wyoming.
Renée Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.