The combination of underserved markets, high demand and people’s natural and undeniable love for this quintessentially American comfort food means a barbecue restaurant, run well and serving good food, can make money hand-over-sauce-stained-fist.

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I’m a Southern girl raised on greens with iced tea and cornbread, so this food just spoke to me. It’s not fast food, it’s quality food.

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Since we opened in New Orleans on Mardi Gras Day 2002, we’ve prided ourselves on doing things the right way — making sure we use only the best meat and serve unique, flavorful sides, and spending the same level of time and care building our approach to business as we do preparing the meals we serve.

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Despite its popularity, barbecue isn’t a common choice in most cities. There’s a fast food joint on every corner, more Mexican restaurants than you can count and sub shops in every strip mall around. People get tired of those quickly.

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Every day, Chef Angel Lombrage goes to work thinking about how he can make VooDoo BBQ & Grill’s unique and flavorful barbecue dishes even better.

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Entrepreneur Magazine, the bible for American small business, features VooDoo in a blog post about restaurant chains that emphasize their local roots — a switch from traditional food franchises, which tend to homogenize their food to appeal to mass tastes.

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“Everybody, when they think of New Orleans, they think of good food, and that mix of competition-style barbecue with the New Orleans spin, there isn’t anything like that up here,” Kerr says. “The service, the fun environment — there’s really no place like it.”

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“There are not enough barbecue restaurants to meet demand, especially for lunchtime crowds,” Avila said. “Diners gravitate towards fast casual because the food quality is high, the cost is reasonable and they can eat quickly. VooDoo BBQ is well on its way to becoming a national fast casual brand because of this.”

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