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Amelia Island Cookout 2025 Brings Island-Wide Culinary Celebration   

Amelia Island is set to turn up the heat this fall as the 3rd Annual Amelia Island Cookout returns, bigger and bolder than ever. Hosted by The Ritz-Carlton, Amelia Island, the festival runs from October 16–19, 2025, transforming the island into a culinary playground with award-winning chefs, mixologists, pitmasters, and epicurean events that promise indulgence at every turn.

Ritz Carlton Commerical Photography Deremer Studios, LLC Jacksonville, FL
Photo Courtesy of Deremer Studios Ritz-Carlton Amelia Island Commercial Photography

What started as a single-property affair has blossomed into a four-day, island-wide showcase of food, wine, and Southern hospitality. At the helm is Chef Okan Kizilbayir, Culinary Director and Chef de Cuisine of Salt, who has curated a stellar roster of more than 30 culinary talents from across the nation. The expanded format includes dynamic experiences that blend fine dining with local flavor, giving food lovers plenty to savor.

The weekend kicks off Thursday with cigar and port pairings at Ash Street Cigar Parlor and wine dinners at David’s and Burlingame in downtown Fernandina Beach. On Friday, the spotlight shifts to creativity in pairings, from a Champagne class led by Chef Kizilbayir to a Sunset Wine Cruise with The Decantery. Guests can also sample Amelia Island’s craft beer scene during a lively trolley hop, while Coquina hosts an al fresco Mediterranean dinner under the stars. Friday, chefs Dean Max and Dylan Benoit discuss the role cookbooks play in the culinary world at Story & Song Bookstore Bistro at 3-5 p.m.

Ritz Carlton Commerical Photography Deremer Studios, LLC Jacksonville, FL
Photo Courtesy of Deremer Studios Ritz-Carlton Amelia Island Commercial Photography

Saturday takes center stage with Chef’s Theatre demonstrations and the festival’s crown jewel—the Amelia Island Cookout. This signature event features live music and culinary artistry from top names including Dean Max, Tank Jackson, Tony Biggs, Sharon Pinkhasov, and local favorites Omar Collazo, David Echeverri, and Chad Livingstone. Adding star power, chefs from luxury brands like St. Regis Buckhead, The Ritz-Carlton Dallas, and Prime Kitchen, Grand Cayman will delight with dishes crafted for the occasion.

The celebration wraps on Sunday with a mystery pop-up brunch and a trio of decadent closing dinners: the Master Chefs’ Gala at Salt, a Bourbon Tasting Dinner at Lagniappe, and a Backyard BBQ & Oyster Roast at The Pavilion. Guests can choose individual experiences or opt for curated packages, such as the Ultimate Epicurean Tickets Package, which offers VIP access to six signature events.

For those seeking an elevated getaway, the festival has partnered with ACC Aviation, pairing private charter flights with oceanfront accommodations and all-access culinary passes for a seamless luxury escape.

With its expanded programming, world-class talent, and immersive experiences, the Amelia Island Cookout 2025 promises to be a feast for the senses and an unmissable highlight for food enthusiasts across the country.

For tickets and the full schedule, visit AmeliaIslandCookout.com.

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Amelia Island Cookout 2025 Brings Island-Wide Culinary Celebration   

Amelia Island is set to turn up the heat this fall as the 3rd Annual Amelia Island Cookout returns, bigger and bolder than ever.

In the Field

Going With the Grain

Origami Sake honors the craft of sake making with a distinctly Southern spin

In the Field

Off the Beaten Path in South Carolina

The next time you find yourself driving through South Carolina opt for a scenic drive along the state’s back roads instead.

Going With the Grain

Origami Sake honors the craft of sake making with a distinctly Southern spin

Unless you’re in the rice industry, the fact that more than 50 percent of the nation’s rice comes from Arkansas most likely doesn’t mean much to you. It didn’t mean much to Arkansas native Ben Bell either, that is, until his first sip of craft sake (an alcoholic beverage made from fermented rice) in 2004 ignited a personal passion and an idea that could change what it meant to be from “the rice state.” A few crash-course Japanese lessons and a plane ticket later and Bell was on his way, resume in hand, to learn from the top sake masters in Japan.

“I didn’t get the job,” Bell jokes, adding, “I definitely oversold that I spoke Japanese, so they offered me a tour instead. Once they saw how much I knew about sake, though, they offered me a two-week training course.” Bell came home eager to learn more and became one of the first American Certified Sake Professionals before moving back to Japan to work for two years at the Nanbu Bijin brewery in Hot Springs’ sister city, Hanamaki. He returned to Hot Springs with a plan to start a sake brewery and give his home state the craft product it deserves.

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“A lot of people have this foolish idea that there’s nothing special about their home,” says Bell. “‘At home’ is the default, and everything else is exciting. I was lucky in that I’ve been able to travel internationally, and everyone asked me about Arkansas. That got me thinking about my home, and I couldn’t let go of the dream to start sake in the rice state.”

With the help and vision of entrepreneur Matt Bell (no relation), the two sold their first bottle of Origami Sake in 2023 and opened the state’s first-ever sake brewery in Hot Springs. Using sake rice from Isbell Farms in England, Arkansas, and water from the Ouachita Mountains aquifer—sourced from a well dug on-site at the brewery—nearly the entire brewing process is a local endeavor.

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“Having good water is crucial for making sake, and our water in Arkansas is one of the best water sources you can have,” Bell says. “We don’t have to do anything to it to make the sake we are making. It’s soft water, with some minerals that are good for yeast, which we get from a Japanese company who produces dedicated strains of sake yeast.”

In less than two years of being open, Origami Sake is already being poured in Michelin-starred restaurants in New York City and California, even winning a gold medal at the Tokyo Sake Challenge. Their four brews—White Lotus, A Thousand Cranes, Angelfish, and Zero (the first nonalcoholic sake in North America)—can be found in 30 states, and is also getting onto the shelves at Kroger, HEB, and Albertsons.

“I always wanted Arkansans to take this as something we can have local pride in,” Bell explains. “We’re the number one rice grower in the US. We know we grow it, but I don’t think we look at it as a cool, local thing. By turning a commodity like rice into a craft product, people start to get interested. It builds on something locally, and it creates connections around the world. That was always the big-picture goal, and I’m seeing that happen.”

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Off the Beaten Path in South Carolina

Take the road less traveled for culinary delights across the Palmetto State

The next time you find yourself driving through South Carolina, get off the highway, roll down the windows, and opt for a scenic drive along the state’s back roads instead. You’ll amble through tiny towns and wide stretches of farmland, and you’ll also encounter some of the best classic Southern dishes and hospitality the state has to offer.

THE HUNGRY DROVER

Travelers Rest

Originally a Gulf gas station and mercantile, this landmark situated at the intersection of Highway 290 and Tigerville Road just outside of Travelers Rest is now a bustling Southern diner serving breakfast, lunch, and dinner. It’s a spot that locals and visitors flock to for their pimento cheese. Current owner Don Chase says the secret to his popular version is dried parsley and a dash of Texas Pete mixed together with cheddar, pimentos, and “of course, Duke’s mayonnaise.”

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FISHCAMP ON 11TH STREET

Port Royal

You’ll need to take Highway 21 deep into the Lowcountry to find Fishcamp on 11th Street in Port Royal, a restaurant in the home of a former crabbing factory. The docks in front of the restaurant still serve the shrimping community today. Breathe in the salty ocean air at this waterfront spot known for its fresh local seafood, like the blue crab they source from nearby Daufuskie Island. They’re also known for their Lowcountry boil, a one-pot dish that originated in South Carolina, with corn, potatoes, sausage, and shrimp seasoned with a fair amount of Old Bay. fishcampon11th.com

MARTHASICECREAM(of)

MARTHA’S ICE CREAM SHOP

Florence

En route to Myrtle Beach from most other parts of the state, there’s a good chance you’ll take Highway 501 and pass through Florence. It’s home to the annual South Carolina Pecan Festival that draws in more than 50,000 attendees each year, a nod to the role pecans have played in state agriculture since the late 1800s. It’s also home to Martha’s Ice Cream Shop, a small confectionary tucked behind an outdoor supply company. Their brown butter pecan ice cream, made with browned butter made in house, is their top selling flavor and a tasty midtrip treat.

GULLAH GULLAH FISH

Manning

Gullah Geechee history and culture run deep in South Carolina, a product of enslaved West Africans blending languages and traditions many moons ago. Off Highway 301 in Manning, Gullah Gullah Fish owner Craig Levy has been honoring his family’s heritage by serving traditional Gullah cuisine for the past 10 years. One such time-honored dish on the menu is the Charleston crab rice, a simple but delicious blend of “well-seasoned rice” mixed in with blue crab meat that’s somewhat the equivalent of Southern fried rice. facebook.com/gullahgullahfish

SARA’S FRESH MARKET

Trenton

Georgia is known as the Peach State, but South Carolina produces more than three times the number of peaches as its neighbor. Peaches have been sold along Highway 25 in Ridge Spring for 40-plus years, initially out of the back of a Cadillac before eventually becoming Sara’s Fresh Market roadside stands. The fresh markets are named after Sara Powell, who sold her stands to local peach grower Titan Farms nearly 17 years ago. You’ll find peaches as well as their award-winning peach salsa, plus a range of seasonal produce during the summer months.

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Sip, Savor, and Sway in Tupelo, Mississippi

Tupelo, Mississippi, is where music and mixology hit all the right notes. From lively events that showcase the city’s soulful spirit to 15 vibrant venues serving up every genre you can imagine, it’s the ultimate spot for a getaway that’s anything but ordinary. 

An array of cocktails being made with fresh squeezed citrus juice at Jobos cocktails

Sip your way through seven downtown Tupelo bars and restaurants on the Tupelo Cocktail Trail. Try the Jordan River at Amsterdam Deli, a bright and bubbly cocktail made with Titos Vodka, champagne, lemon juice, and simple syrup. Visit Nautical Whimsey for the Tupelo Martini, featuring tequila, triple sec, sweet and sour mix, and blueberry syrup. At Downunder, acoustic sets perfectly pair with The Burnout, made with bourbon, Grand Marnier, ginger syrup, and a hint of smoke from flamed orange. Download your Tupelo Cocktail Trail passport here or pick one up at any of the seven downtown locations. After completing the trail, visit the Tupelo Visitors Center to claim a free #MyTupelo cocktail shaker. 

With a mix of national brands and local favorites, the Barnes Crossing District’s live music venues make for a great night out. Tupelo’s home for original live music and good mood food, check out Blue Canoe. With the largest craft beer selection in Northeast Mississippi and a delicious menu of eclectic bar food, catch regional acts on the Cathead Stage. Groove to local sounds in an intimate setting at Lone Star Schooner Bar and Grill. While the beer is ice cold, live music and a menu of burgers, tacos, and more make it the perfect recipe for a sizzling night out.  

In the Jackson West neighborhood, stay in the rhythm at Romie’s Grocery, a former neighborhood grocery store. While they’re known for Tupelo’s favorite meat-and-three plates during the day, their steaks, burgers, and catfish are perfectly paired with live music on the back patio on the weekends.  

In Tupelo, cocktails and live music go hand in hand. Visit tupelo.net to plan your positively upbeat getaway and imagine what you can do here! 

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Exclusive Q&A with Chef Arnold Myint

A Nashville chef brings his family’s legacy to life in his new cookbook, Family Thai

Screenshot at  PM

The chef Arnold Myint is known in the food-loving world for his James Beard Award nomination, a stint on Top Chef, his boisterous social media presence, and his Thai cooking. But for people in Nashville, he’s more notably known as Patti Myint’s son. Patti and her husband, Win, were the owners of International Market & Restaurant, a global grocery and steam-table Thai restaurant that was open in its original location near Belmont University for 43 years—but she was also a connector in the community, a mother hen to anyone who touched the market or had an interest in Thai cuisine, and a source of nourishment to those she and her team of female cooks fed well and constantly at a fair price. 

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Discover a Feast for the Senses in Sevierville, TN

Nestled in the foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains, Sevierville, Tennessee welcomes guests to enjoy autumn in all its glorious color (and flavor). Eight different self-guided historic driving tours wind their way through Sevierville and the surrounding community offering unparalleled views and opportunities to discover a taste of the Smokies.

This is one of the few remaining historic covered bridges in Tennessee, and it is made of wood, held up by stone pillars, and nestled in a grove of trees with yellow autumn leaves in Sevierville, Tennessee.

Covered Bridges & Secret Recipes

Peak colors shine from mid-October through mid-November and make it a perfect time to check out the English Mountain Fall Driving Tour. Drive through one of the few remaining historic covered bridges in Tennessee then take a tour of Blowing Cave Mill. Built in 1795, and only recently brought back to life by a famous local candymaker, the homemade fudge, candies, and fresh baked goods are worth the trip. Finish the afternoon with a scenic drive to the home of Bush’s Baked Beans. Try and uncover the secret family recipe in their museum and grab a hearty, homemade lunch at the Bush’s Family Café.  

Moonshine & Revolution

With America’s 250th birthday just around the corner, it’s only fitting to strike out on the Boyd’s Creek Fall Driving Tour. Explore a farming community dating back to the 1770s where the Revolutionary War Battle of Boyd’s Creek took place. See historic homes, the historic Island View School, and a “See Rock City” barn along the way. Near the midway point of your drive, make a detour to Mountain Cut Distillery. Sample fall spirits like Hot Cinnamon or Apple Pie Moonshine or try the Butter Pecan Crème Liqueur – perfect for a steaming hot cup of coffee. Billed as “top shelf shine,” their products contain no artificial colors or dyes.

Sevierville’s Apple Barn & Cider Mill

Orchards & Steeples

Sevierville’s Apple Barn & Cider Mill is a working orchard pressing the most out of its apples every day. Not only can you watch the bakers at the Apple Barn create handmade fried apple pies and apple butters with their harvest, but you can also get a peek at how the Apple Barn Hard Cider House crafts a variety of alcoholic and non-alcoholic ciders with tasting notes such as honey basil, blueberry, and loganberry. Let this be among your first stops on the Steeples & Farmsteads Fall Driving Tour. Filled up on a traditional southern dinner at The Applewood Farmhouse Restaurant, wind your way along the backroads to explore picturesque cemeteries, pass a century farm, and visit the marker commemorating the Battle of Fair Garden, a small yet decisive Civil War battle.

Learn more about visiting (and tasting) Sevierville, Tennessee this fall at VisitSevierville.com

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One Night at Duck Camp

A novice hunter spends the opening weekend of teal season on the Cajun prairie at Duck Camp.

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My alarm sounded at 4:30 a.m. I brushed my teeth, tucked my hair beneath a camo hat, and pulled borrowed neoprene boots over quick-dry pants. At the edge of a rice field, I piled with a group of hunters into a souped-up, air-conditioned side-by-side, its headlights choked with a cloud of bugs. We rode along dikes to our blind, a metal trough sunk into the earth that was shielded with marsh grass. At 6:25 a.m., a half hour before sunrise, I heard the first pop-pop-pop of shotguns.

This was my introduction to duck camp, where I was spending opening weekend of teal season in Gueydan, Louisiana, aka Duck Capital of America.

Each year, 18 duck species stop over in Louisiana wetlands as they fly from breeding grounds in the north to their winter habitats. In September, blue-winged teals are the first to arrive en route to Mexico and Central America. In recent years, more than 80,000 registered hunters—following a storied, gun-toting Acadian tradition—eagerly await the birds in their blinds. In between hunts, they gather at duck camp.

Despite my Manhattan address and zero qualifications, Drake Leonards had roped me into this weekend of duck hunting. Leonards runs the Cajun-Creole restaurant Eunice in Houston, named for his southern Louisiana hometown, and at camp, I would be joining men with whom he had grown up hunting, fishing, and generally stirring up trouble. The day before my early wake-up call, we’d driven from Houston to Gueydan in his Ford 150, and over Bluetooth, we learned that our companions had bagged the day’s teal limit by 8:30 a.m. In their voices, in an instant, I recognized my dad talking on the phone with his fraternity brother, Pete, and my uncles regaling us with the misadventures of their annual pheasant hunt. I’d been mostly excluded from those outdoor pursuits, but here I was driving toward an envy-inducing hunt. After a night at duck camp, I’d have my own stories to tell.

I used that eastward I-10 drive to ease into the Cajun prairie—rice country. We pulled over at In-Law’s Cajun for cracklins, fried ribs, golden boudin balls, and smoked boudin links that I squeezed from their casing into my mouth like a cheap summer popsicle. I sucked down a piña colada roadie from the drive-thru Daiquiri Shack in Eunice; at the one-room Mowata Store, we picked up ponce, or pig stomach stuffed with sausage and rice.

Finally in Gueydan, we stopped at G&H Outdoor Store, purveyor of farm and garden supplies, alligator and crawfish feed, apparel, guns, and ammunition. I registered for a waterfowl hunting license and bought a Drake brand camo cap. I eavesdropped on shoppers as they swapped stories from their morning shoot. What I imagined to be a sleepy country store for much of the year crackled with energy and anticipation. The ducks and hunters all traveled to this place year after year, eager to meet in the morning in a flooded rice field.

Acadians arrived in Louisiana in the mid-18th century after the British expelled the French speakers from Nova Scotia, and as they adjusted to life in humid, isolated southern Louisiana, a distinct Cajun culture emerged from the swamp’s wild riches. For generations, duck hunting meant self-sufficiency, mouths fed. Now, it’s Leonards’ out of office, a flip switched from Houston business owner to native son—a bit more laissez les bon temps rouler than survival. But the tradition is no less potent. Cajun culture endures when hunters leave home and gather with friends at duck camp, ostensibly for the purposes of securing dinner.

Making gumbo at Duck Camp

“Fall in the South, for me, is marked by the first football game, opening weekend of teal season, and the first gumbo of the year,” Leonards later told me.

By the time we arrived at camp in the late afternoon, 15 or so birds were already simmering in brown gravy in an aluminum roaster on the stovetop. The blue-winged ducks had flown over the flooded fields of Vermilion Parish earlier that morning as the sky turned from star-flecked black to pink to cornflower blue.

Our camp belonged to Michael Guillory, an oil and gas man and longtime friend of Leonards from Eunice. To a double-wide trailer, Guillory had annexed a metal building with a kitchen and entertainment room. A covered carport sheltered labrador retrievers in their kennels. Twelve ducks, as if in flight, hung near a bar stocked with Tito’s and Crown Royal. I chose a bottom bunk set with a polyester navy coverlet and learned that I would be sharing a bathroom with seven guys. Among them: the Frugé boys, David and Michael; Chad Brisco and his son Weston; and Leonards and his chef de cuisine, Scott Phillips.

Before sunset and whiskey, and to size up this interloper in her factory-fresh camo, the crew took me to a pond out back for a gun safety lesson and target practice. Each gave me good advice that nevertheless failed to yield a clean shot. Shoot in front of the target or just below. Aim straight at it. Imagine a duck and set your sights on the neck, the top of the back, the beak. Bailey, a young and wiry yellow lab, dived into the water to retrieve my unbroken clays.

“You gotta pull your own weight to be invited back to duck camp,” Leonards confided. “You gotta be a good shot. You gotta be a good cook. You gotta be a good bullshitter. If you can’t do any of those, you better clean up after everybody.”

No one would let me take out the trash, and capable cooks had already planned an hours-long feast to be paired with 10-ounce cans of Miller Light. David Frugé had plucked, stuffed, bronzed, and braised the ducks; he reserved the heart and gizzards for my plate, the tender and essential organs of a bird that had never seen the inside of a cooler. Michael Frugé brought rice grown on his farm in Eunice. We doused ourselves in mosquito repellent so we could nab Gulf oysters as Phillips took them off the grill. Leonards tinkered with maque choux, ponce in gravy, and that first pot of teal gumbo.

Turns out, I’d have to bullshit for my keep. So I poured myself an old fashioned and shamed a fruity vodka concoction one of the hunters mixed without irony. After dropping a few well-timed f-bombs and some gentle ribbing about the dominance of the Georgia Bulldogs over the LSU Tigers, I was welcomed—for a night, at least—into the circle of storytelling. Fights in pool halls, fights in parking lots, Guillory’s doomed love life, college drinking exploits, best-loved dogs, daughters’ accomplishments.

Men from other camps dropped in and made plates. You could tell the local boys by their cane syrup cadence, the way “egret” rolled off the tongue. As the night went on, Leonards warned, accents would grow twangier. It would all get a little fuzzier. New tales would be born. After one truckful of men left camp, they ran over a 10-foot alligator, which did not prevent the lizard from charging them as they filmed it with an iPhone.

At the time, I did not fully realize the living, breathing portal to history and culture I had entered. There are duck camps that cater to wealthy, out-of-state hunters; hunting clubs with official memberships and bylaws; family camps; duck camps so deep in the swamp that they can only be accessed by boat; shacks in the woods without indoor plumbing. Regardless of their creature comforts, many camps share structural characteristics—bunk beds, card tables forbourré, gun storage, cleaning stations, dog kennels, and satellite TV for LSU games—according to Maria Rachal, a historian and daughter of Cajun country, who wrote her master’s thesis on duck camp. The rhythm of the camps, too, is remarkably similar. “A lot of it is inherent and practiced ritual that people don’t even recognize,” says Rachal.

That night, along with countless other hunters scattered across the backwoods of southern Louisiana, I fell into my bunk bed after eating an elaborate meal and shit-talking into the wee hours.

The wake-up call came while it was still dark, dogs and shooting positions assigned. Once we were out in the blind, David worked his duck call, and soon enough his squeaks and squeals summoned a swirl of fast-flying teal. The men claimed their shots. Ducks fell from the sky. Bailey bounded into the water, splashing with glee. When a naive teal swam up to a decoy, the men let me take the sitting duck, a soft-feathered beauty I’d later hold in my hands. By 8 a.m., despite the whiskey from the night before, we were just one bird short of our limit; the ducks had scattered, and a tender recoil bruise had started to form near my shoulder.

Leonards and I had to leave camp early for Breaux Bridge, where he would cook a special dinner at Maison Madeleine. On the way out of town, we stopped at a gas station for a sausage biscuit. The cashier took one look at me and asked if I was on a road trip. I told her, with deep satisfaction, “No, ma’am. I’ve been hunting teal.”

Caroline Hatchett at Duck Camp

The Local Palate’s Tour of Tucker | Video

Tucker, Georgia, may be just outside the bustle of Atlanta, but its Main Street hums with a character all its own—a balance of history and new energy, tradition and innovation. This culinary tour reveals three of Tucker’s rising stars: a bookstore café blending literature and comfort food, a shawarma shop rooted in global flavors, and a coffeehouse that bridges Syrian and American cultures. Together, they illustrate why this town has become a gathering place defined by warmth, resilience, and a shared appetite for community.

Books & Brew
What began as a concept has become a cozy cornerstone. Books & Brew started when the founders tested a family recipe that sparked the idea of pairing food with the intimacy of a bookstore. The family-owned establishment started by Quinelle Bhandari, her mother Irene, and husband Nate, offers a hub for the community—part café, part bar, and part bookstore you wish you lived in. Inside, shelves lined with finds from local library sales surround guests as they sip seasonal creations, whether a hearty winter menu or a lighter summer spread. The space itself carries the charm of reinvention; once a children’s barber shop, it has been transformed into a haven where neighbors exchange stories and recommendations across the counter. 

Baraka Shawarma
Just down the street, Baraka Shawarma welcomes visitors with the scent of spiced chicken thighs sizzling on the grill. “Baraka” translates to blessing, and the name carries weight in every plate served. The menu draws from across the Mediterranean and North Africa: Greek gyros, Lebanese spices, Egyptian-style falafel, Sudanese variations, all merging into one diverse spread. Owner Said Gheddai, originally from Eritrea by way of Canada, describes shawarma as a dish that transcends borders yet honors them all. The restaurant’s atmosphere mirrors its food: unpretentious, generous, and grounded in heritage. In Tucker, Baraka has found not just customers but community, proof that blessings multiply when shared.

Mint Coffeehouse
Finally, Mint Coffeehouse captures the blend of past and present, home and abroad. Founded by Syrian-American couple Ahmad and Marianna Alzoukani, the café channels his roots in Damascus and her Southern upbringing into a menu that moves effortlessly from flatbreads drizzled with olive oil to Turkish coffee brewed with cardamom. Mint Coffeehouse serves as a cultural meeting point where customers connect over coffee and linger throughout the day. Each cup is brewed with an intention that reflects Tucker itself: small-town hospitality infused with global flavor.

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The Swordfish Sea Change

This New Orleans chef has discovered a delicious substitution for pork: swordfish

At GW Fins restaurant in New Orleans, chef Michael Nelson is making waves with his “sea-cuterie” program—and swordfish is all over the menu in versions of mortadella, pastrami, bacon, and Bolognese. “You can interchange [swordfish] with pork in a recipe without adjusting the recipe in any way,” Nelson says. He compares the texture to that of a pork chop: “It’s not typically flaky like other fish; it has this much more dense, meaty texture, and it’s a lot higher in fat content than most fish.”

Mike Cutting Dry Aged SwordFish

Nelson’s reasoning for subbing swordfish for pork is twofold: It’s both healthy and sustainable. GW Fins sources fish from the Gulf that weigh between 40 and 70 pounds and tend to be much lower in mercury, and the US fishes well under its quota for swordfish, which means we could risk losing that quota altogether—so increasing demand is a good thing. “The stuff we get out of the Gulf is so clean and beautiful,” Nelson says. “I think it’s one of those fish that people don’t have enough experience with.”

The chef makes andouille sausage with swordfish and traditional spices that he uses in seafood gumbo, pasta, and his Deep Sea BBQ plate. Essential steps include making sure the seasoned meat is well chilled before grinding, hand mixing in part of the fattier meat for that marbled appearance and texture, and resting the ground meat overnight. “The results are going to blow your mind,” Nelson says. “Once you try it, it’s a done deal.”

TLP featured image, swordfish andouille

Swordfish Andouille heading-plus-icon

yields

Makes 5 pounds or 30 sausages

    ingredients
  • 5 pounds swordfish (a mix of 60% tail and head cuts to 40% belly cuts)
  • 3 tablespoons kosher salt
  • 2 teaspoons cayenne pepper
  • 1 teaspoon pink salt
  • 1 teaspoon dried thyme
  • ½ teaspoon ground mace
  • ½ teaspoon ground cloves
  • ⅛ teaspoon ground allspice
  • ¾ teaspoon dry mustard
  • 1 cup small-diced onions
  • 1 tablespoon minced garlic

  • Special equipment: Food processor or stand mixer with food grinder attachment and optional sausage stuffer kit; 26-mm cellulose hot dog casings, such as Walton’s (optional, available online); smoker (optional)

  • KitchenAid offers a metal food grinder attachment kit with three grinding plates and sausage stuffer tubes.
steps
  1. Separate belly meat into two equal amounts; set aside one half in a separate container. In a large bowl, toss remaining belly meat with all remaining swordfish cuts and all seasonings. Freeze both containers until fish is slightly hard to firm on the outside, about 1 hour.
  2. Chop unseasoned belly meat first. If using stand mixer, fit food grinder attachment with coarse grinding plate and grind unseasoned belly meat. Otherwise, hand chop unseasoned belly meat to a fine dice. Set aside.
  3. Chop seasoned swordfish. If using food processor, pulse seasoned fish until it resembles texture of ground beef or pork. If using stand mixer fitted with food grinder attachment, attach fine grinding plate and grind seasoned fish, then remove grinder attachment.
  4. In bowl of a stand mixer fitted with paddle attachment, mix processed fish on low speed until it develops a uniformly sticky appearance. Remove bowl from stand and, with a rubber spatula or wooden spoon, mix in diced unseasoned fat.
  5. Optional step: If making links, fit stand mixer with sausage stuffer attachment and fill casings. (Pro tip: Cellulose casings are not edible and can be peeled off after smoking.) Using a pin, poke 1 hole about every 2 inches on either side, then twist casing to desired length (5 to 6 inches, about the length of a hot dog) to remove air and tie off with butcher twine.
  6. Allow swordfish andouille to rest overnight in the refrigerator before cooking or smoking.
  7. Optional step: Preheat smoker to 140 degrees; smoke sausage links or hand patties for 1 hour, or until internal temperature reaches 150 degrees. (Avoid letting sausage get too hot or consistency will be grainy.) Submerge links in ice bath to stop cooking process, then pat dry and refrigerate until ready to serve. Swordfish andouille freezes well for up to 6 months
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