Inside Tom Brooke’s mission to bring true Texas barbecue to the UK

The Staff Canteen

When Tom Brooke opened Red Dog Saloon around 15 years ago, London had almost no restaurants serving authentic American barbecue.

What began as an early fascination with US food culture grew into one of the UK’s most consistent and technique-led barbecue operations.

Red Dog Saloon currently operates six sites across the UK, with three in London and one each in Nottingham, Liverpool, and Southampton.

Inspired by US barbecue from an early age

Tom spent much of his childhood travelling to America through his father’s business interests. He became immersed in the country’s regional barbecue traditions and the sense of identity attached to them.

Red Dog Saloon

He said: “It’s got a cult following and it’s almost as big as a religion. The products were so different and unique to anything I’d had in England or Europe.”

Those experiences would later shape the direction of Red Dog Saloon.

Launching before the UK barbecue boom

Tom described himself as an innovator rather than an inventor, taking what he admired in the US and adapting it for the UK. When he opened his first site in Shoreditch, he said authentic American barbecue was almost non-existent in London.

He said: “When I started 15 years ago in Shoreditch, no one was doing it at all. Since then there’s been a revolution.”

That early start helped the restaurant build momentum as interest in US barbecue increased across the country.

Texas technique at the heart of the menu

Red Dog Saloon uses a Texas-style approach built on minimal seasoning and precision cooking. Tom said the most important factor is sourcing.

Tom explained: “You need to start with really great produce. If you don’t start with great produce, you can’t create good barbecue.”

He said using sauces to mask weaker ingredients goes against the core principles of Texas barbecue, where the meat has to stand on its own.

Fresh every day, never reheated

One of the biggest points of difference Tom highlighted is Red Dog’s

approach to freshness. All meat is cooked daily and never reheated.

Tom said: “We never reheat it. It’s very easy to think, ‘I’ll chill it and reheat it,’ but it would never touch what you’d get if you cooked it fresh that morning.”

Red Dog Saloon

He said this commitment applies across the board, even though it requires tighter stock management and leaves less room for error.

Brisket as the measure of a barbecue restaurant

For Tom, brisket remains the defining test of any barbecue operation.

Tom said: “It’s the hardest thing to cook. It’s the easiest thing to dry out, the easiest thing to be tough. If I’m going to a barbecue place, I’m going to judge you on your brisket first.”

Hospitality challenges shaping the business

Tom has spent 30 years in hospitality and said the current climate is the most difficult he has experienced.

He said: “I can take the same amount of money that I used to take and I won’t make any profit on it anymore.”

Tom pointed to inflation, taxes and the cost of living crisis as key pressures that have forced the business to rethink how it operates.

Developing the offer rather than increasing the number of sites

Rather than expanding the estate, he has focused on broadening what existing restaurants can offer. Red Dog Saloon has introduced weekend breakfasts combining British and American influences, which he said have been popular.

Tom said: “It’s been super popular.”

Some sites now also host Nashville-inspired live music, creating a fuller day-to-night experience.

He added: “We’re just trying to create a bigger, fuller experience.”

Staying committed to the craft

Even after fifteen years of running Red Dog Saloon, Tom said the principles behind the restaurant remain unchanged.

Tom explained: “It’s all about getting it perfectly cooked when the customer sits down. There’s no hiding from it.”

Written by Abi Kinsella 

Small Contribution. Big Impact.

The Staff Canteen has always been more than a website—it’s a community, built by and for hospitality. We share the wins, the challenges, the graft, and the inspiration that keeps kitchens alive.

We believe in staying open to everyone, but creating this content takes real resources. If you’ve ever found value here—whether it’s a recipe, an interview, or a laugh when you needed it most—consider giving just £3 to keep it going.

 

A little from you keeps this space free for all. Let’s keep lifting the industry, together.

The Staff Canteen

The Staff Canteen

Editor 14th November 2025

Inside Tom Brooke’s mission to bring true Texas barbecue to the UK