The Boston Jerk Center is where many say jerk pork originated, and you can sample a variety of chefs' interpretations here.
Given how good the jerk chicken is, I was surprised that the jerk pork ($6.95) was so bland.
Jamaica's jerk pork and jerk chicken are the most famous examples, but what I find infinitely more ingenious is the Bajan treatment.
Others include fried flying fish, a specialty of Barbados, and Jamaican jerk pork and jerk chicken.
Sample the taste of ackee cooked with saltfish, Jamaica's national dish, and the smell of hot jerk pork cooked in a pit barbecue.
The jerk pork is excellent: a huge portion of tender long-cooked slices of pork, served in a tangy brown sauce.
A lot of people have been coming in who don't eat jerk pork.
We lure some guests to our house with the promise of jerk pork, then hit them with a gnarly appetizer: cow heart, fresh off the grill.
Tablemates eating the dry, chewy pork chops or the equally arid medallions of jerk pork had a different answer.
The Shack at Ocho Rios specializes in tropical barbecue and serves excellent jerk pork.