Google+ talkinginallcaps@gmail.com
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Talking in ALL CAPS

  • Food
    • 52 Salads Recipe Index
    • 52 Soups Recipe Index
  • Photography
  • Travel
    • Travel
    • US National Parks
    • Washington DC
    • Disneyland
  • Thoughts
    • Thoughts
    • Motherhood
    • Parenting
  • Calgary
  • About Me

Summertime Alberta Barbecue Beef on a Bun – The Canadian Food Experience Project

July 13, 2013 by danawyyc 6 Comments

It’s Stampede in Calgary this week so for this month’s  The Canadian Food Experience Project challenge I decided to do BBQ Beef on a Bun. The Canadian Food Experience Project started last month on June 7, 2013, it aims to gain global clarity to what Canadian food really is through the participants‘ collective stories and experiences.

Alberta Barbecue Beef on a Bun

This month, the challenge was a regional Canadian food. In Alberta, beef is a natural choice – if there is one thing Alberta is known for, it’s beef. Barbecue beef on a bun is a Stampede staple – you can get all kinds of wild food at the Stampede from deep fried butter to deep fried oreos to deep fried… Well, basically if there is anything you have ever thought about deep frying, you can probably find it at the Stampede and a few more you hadn’t even considered. There are a lot non-deep fried options too but none of them feel like Alberta for me more than beef on a bun. (My friend Merry has also written up her take on Stampede food with her baked mini-donut muffins)

Despite the devastating flood in Calgary this year, only two weeks before, the Stampede went on as planned with a lot of hard work and a few modifications. This is especially remarkable because the Stampede grounds had been covered in water during the flood. I took this kids down one morning and there were only a few places where you could see evidence that there had been a flood at all. There is still a lot of work to be done to rebuild Calgary and the Saddledome is not currently operational, but it was great to see how well the City had pulled together.

Going Home From the Calgary Stampede

Heading home after a fun morning at the Calgary Stampede

We didn’t have beef on a bun while we were there, (we might have had a corn dog), but I picked up a roast when we got home and started cooking. Cooking a roast might seem insufferable in the summer, but you can actually cook a roast on most barbecues even if you don’t have a rotisserie or smoker (although those are great too!)

Summertime Barbecue Beef on a Bun

(adapted from Best BBQ Beef Oven Roast in the I Love Alberta Beef Cookbook)

Alberta Barbecue Beef on a Bun

Print
Summertime Alberta Barbecue Beef on a Bun - The Canadian Food Experience Project
 
Ingredients
  • Ingredients
  • 4-13 lb oven or rotisserie style roast  (inside round, eye of round or sirloin tip) The max size will depend on your barbecue size - you'll want it to easily fit on one side of your grill).
  • 1-2 cups of salad vinaigrette - you can use bottled or home made. I used a home made sun-dried tomato dressing.
  • Buns
  • Barbecue sauce
  • Sun-dried tomato vinaigrette
  • ¼ cup oil-packed sun-dried tomatoes
  • 2 Tbsp balsamic vinegar
  • 1 garlic clove chopped
  • 2 sprigs oregano
  • 1 tsp honey
  • ⅓ cup canola oil
  • ½ cup water
  • salt and pepper
Instructions
  1. Add vinaigrette ingredients to a blender or food processor until well mixed.
  2. Pierce the roast all over with a fork. Stick in a large zip lock bag and cover with dressing. If your roast is too big for a large zip lock bag, you can use any kind of dish, but you'll need more dressing and may want to turn the roast a few times as it marinates. Let it sit in the fridge for around 12-24 hours.
  3. Take out your roast and discard the marinade.
  4. Place a drip pan underneath one side of the barbecue and turn the heat on the other side of the barbecue.
  5. When the grill is hot, place the roast over the drip tray and close the lid.
  6. Cook at 400 F or about medium high heat until a meat thermometer reaches 135-145F. Rotate roast occasionally for more even cooking.
  7. Allow about 20 minutes per pound - check with a meat thermometer.
  8. Remove roast to a cutting board and cover with aluminum foil. Let sit for 10-15 minutes.
  9. Slice roast thinly.
  10. Add roast slices to cut buns and top with barbecue sauce (we used Bull's-Eye which is the official BBQ sauce of the Calgary Stampede).
3.2.2925

 

Alberta Barbecue Beef on a Bun

 

 

Filed Under: Beef, Calgary, Canadian Food Project, Food, Recipes Tagged With: Beef, Calgary, Stampede

Previous Post: « Salus Fitness Personal Training Review
Next Post: Spolumbo’s Fine Foods and Deli Review #yycisopen »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Barbara Bamber | justasmidgen says

    July 16, 2013 at 1:45 am

    I think this is just so much fun.. I’ve found your blog through Valerie’s. Definitely this recipe is perfect for our region!

    Reply
  2. Misty says

    July 16, 2013 at 4:23 am

    I know this post is not about how cute your kids are but I can’t resist commenting about how frickin’ cute they are! Great pic of them! (And the BBQ Beef on a Bun looks great too.)

    Reply
  3. A Canadian Foodie says

    July 16, 2013 at 6:22 pm

    Beautiful photo of the children and post about this iconic Alberta staple. It sounds like you were OK during the flood, but what an ordeal. I seriously can NOT imagine. Thanks for getting the post in during a difficult time. Recipe looks scrumptious.
    🙂
    V

    Reply
  4. bellini says

    July 17, 2013 at 12:39 pm

    You’re right you can’t think of Alberta and not thing of beef. When I lived in Calgary i worked at the Stockyards building for an insurance company that insured cattle so had many dealings with local ranchers.

    Reply
  5. cooking says

    February 19, 2015 at 8:13 pm

    Depression is generally situational and reactive, and associated with pain,
    loss, oor a major social transition. In depression, paqtients feel that no one
    could possibly unferstand or help them. This
    falls in southern solstice which is called as visarga kala orr dakshinayana iin ayurveda.

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. The Canadian Food Experience Project: Round Up Two says:
    July 16, 2013 at 5:45 pm

    […] at Talking in All Caps from Calgary, Alberta, writes about Barbecue Beef on a Bun, as “it’s hard to think of […]

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Barbara Bamber | justasmidgen Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Rate this recipe:  

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Primary Sidebar

About Me

I'm an experiential playground expert and mom to three young kids. I live with my husband in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. When I'm not looking after people, I'm reading all the YA fiction I can get my hands on and am attempting to learn photography. My laundry-folding suffers due to more interesting pursuits.

You can also find me over at:
12 Great Salads to Take to a Potluck or Feed a Big Group - talkinginallcaps.com

11 Great Salads to Take to a Potluck or Feed a Big Group

Sriracha tomato soup - easy meals - talkinginallcaps.com

12 Easy Meals That are Great for One or Two (or more!)

Asian Lentil and Mango Salad 3

Salad #49 – Asian Lentil and Mango Salad

Kale, Quinoa and Black Bean Salad

Salad #42 – Kale, Quinoa and Black Bean Salad

Disneyland Photography Tips - 11 Tips for Getting Great Photos Your Family Will Treasure

Disneyland Photography Tips – 11 Tips for Getting Great Photos of Your Disneyland Vacation

11 Tips for Taking a Toddler and a Preschooler to Disneyland

Categories

Archives

Footer

Copyright © 2025 · Foodie Pro Theme by Shay Bocks · Built on the Genesis Framework · Powered by WordPress