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Get To Know Easton, Maryland

Maryland’s Eastern Shore is a quintessential getaway for sailing, sun sets over the Chesapeake, and nautical flair. Posh Saint Michaels has all that in spades, but in recent years, Easton has put up a little friendly competition for the title of Talbot County’s best dining destination. The small town, remarkable for its picturesque downtown with brick sidewalks and historic architecture, outdoes itself when it comes to dining out. That’s in large part due to the efforts of Bluepoint Hospitality, which leads with an “if you build it, they will come” mentality. Founder Paul Prager, who made his fortune in the energy business, went about opening tasteful restaurant after tasteful restaurant here, enlisting talent from the likes of New York’s three-MICHELIN-star French restaurant, Le Bernardin. Take a journey through the 20 wine regions within Italy paired with handmade pasta at the newly reimagined The Wardroom. In between meals, art galleries and boutiques await.

Best Places to Eat, Drink, and Explore

Best Alfresco Dining: The Ivy

A brick-lined courtyard featuring a striped awning and greenery including ivy (naturally) is a charming setting for sandwiches and salads or cocktails like cranberry crushes.

Bluepoint Bonheur Tea Courtesy of Bluepoint Hospitality
Bonheur

Best Coffee Shop: Rise Up Coffee Roasters

The Eastern Shore’s favorite caffeine source roasts all its coffee in its Easton location—and sells very cool merch in addition to lattes. Grab a bite with your coffee like the Happy Cow vegan burrito or bacon, egg, and cheese on a scratch-made biscuit.

Best Fine Dining: Bas Rouge

Gracious service and a sophisticated menu that riffs on European traditions (think pastry-enveloped crabcake Wellington) are calling cards for this white-tablecloth establishment, which offers three- or four-course prix fixe menus.

Best Place to Raise a Pint: Washington Street Pub

This Easton classic recently made a comeback under the Bluepoint Hospitality banner, decked out with a handsome new bar that feels like it’s been there forever. Post up in a leather booth for fried chicken and a round from local brewery RAR.

Best Sweet Treat: Bonheur

Ice cream or pie? It’s a tricky decision at Bonheur, which scoops up flavors like coffee toffee crunch and slices like chocolate mousse. The sweets shop looks just as pretty as its desserts, thanks to hand-painted Gracie chinoiserie-style wallpaper.

Best Happy Hour: Legal Assets

From spritzes to espresso martinis, Legal Assets takes cocktails seriously. The restaurant is all in on happy hour, which stretches from 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturdays.

Claim to Fame

Chef Harley Peet

Bas Rouge executive chef Harley Peet is the Eastern Shore’s first-ever James Beard Award winner, earning the Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic title in 2024. Peet, who sails in his free time, uses both European delicacies and hyper local ingredients to create Bas Rouge’s elegant dishes— from fish plucked from the Chesapeake to tomatoes grown in a backyard garden. Peet’s culinary sensibilities touch all of Bluepoint Hospitality’s restaurants, from salads at Sunflower & Greens to slices of pizza at Roma.

Bas Rouge Dinner Scene Courtesy of Bas Rouge jpg
Bas Rouge

Where to Shop

Market at Dover
Market at Dover

Welcome Home

Need an oyster plate or oyster knife to bring home as an Eastern Shore souvenir? Downtown shop Welcome Home has it covered, along with tasteful French table linens and all sorts of cooking and baking equipment like de Buyer crepe pans.

Curlicue

Funky crab tea towels, pretty cloth napkins, and intriguing cookbooks (like How to Cook the Finest Things in the Sea [Artisan, 2025]) make Curlicue another shop downtown that’s worth perusing for home chefs.

Market at Dover Station

If you prefer the thrill of the hunt, the Market at Dover Station is packed with antiques and vintage finds meant for entertaining. The vendors within this
historic building’s walls sell everything from handwoven baskets to artsy cocktail glasses.

On the Road

Easton

Easton is filled with top-notch restaurants, thriving farmers markets, and a full slate of […]

On the Road

Snapshot: Easton, Maryland

In recent years, the colonial city center has seen a renewed sense of pride […]

Dining Out

Ruse

Indulge in the coastal flavors at Ruse, where farm-fresh produce and local oysters are […]

The Heart of the Southwest Louisiana Boudin Trail

Meet the people keeping Southwest Louisiana’s boudin tradition alive.

At the heart of the Southwest Louisiana Boudin Trail are family kitchens, time-tested recipes, and makers who treat every link like a legacy.

Famous Foods in Lake Charles, image by Candy Rodriguez
Guillory’s Famous Foods, Image courtesy of Candy Rodriguez

At Guillory’s Famous Foods, boudin is a family affair. Darby Guillory Sr. and Darby Jr. continue a proud Creole tradition, crafting boudin that’s rich, smoky, and deeply rooted in heritage. Their links tell a story of culture passed down through generations, best paired with their beloved “wet” cracklins—an indulgent local favorite. Whether you’re grabbing lunch or stocking up to go, Guillory’s delivers more than a meal; it’s Creole comfort with soul.

In Sulphur, B&O Kitchen & Grocery feels like a warm welcome home. Since 1983, the Benoit family has been serving Cajun classics, and today Jeff Benoit carries the torch as a third-generation keeper of the recipes. He still hand-mixes every batch of boudin—regular and smoked—alongside boudin balls and egg rolls. While the classics anchor the menu, Jeff isn’t afraid to push boundaries with creations like the Gaudidaun Burger or a keto-friendly boudin dip. If it doesn’t pass his taste test, it doesn’t hit the counter.

Tradition and teamwork define Gillis Meat Market and Gillis Grocery & Café. Founded by Navy veteran Steve Gaudet, these sister shops have been turning out Cajun favorites since the late ’90s. Small-batch boudin is still mixed by hand, and smoked boudin demands constant attention over a wood-fed pit. With more than 19 sausage varieties and the next generation now learning the craft, Gillis proves that tradition only gets stronger with time.

Just off I-10 in Vinton, creativity takes center stage at Insane Sausages. Owner Derek Gaspard produces small-batch boudin in more than 30 rotating flavors drawn from over 100 recipes. From pork and smoked classics to crawfish étouffée, bacon queso, and breakfast boudin, every link balances bold ideas with Cajun roots. Open on weekends, this award-winning stop draws curious road-trippers and loyal regulars alike.

At Rabideaux’s Sausage Kitchen, simplicity reigns. Owner Glenn Daigle has made the same boudin since 1991—fresh pork, Louisiana long-grain rice, and a seasoning blend that never changes. No variations, no shortcuts. What began as a small shop has grown through word of mouth, one perfectly seasoned bite at a time.

Ready to taste your way through the trail? Discover these stops and start planning your boudin adventure at visitlakecharles.org.

B&O Kitchen and Grocery, Image courtesy ofKathryn Shea Duncan
B&O Kitchen & Grocery, Image courtesy of Kathryn Shea Duncan
Partnered
Partnered

10 Dishes That Define Lake Charles

Lake Charles celebrates big flavor and generous hospitality. These 10 dishes deliver experiences that stay with you long after the last bite.

In the Field

Louisiana Food & Wine Festival 2026

The Louisiana Food & Wine Festival is back this coming March with four days of drinking, eating, and entertainment in Lake Charles.

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Partnered

Why Gumbo Reigns Year-Round in Lake Charles, Louisiana

While cooler weather may inspire a pot of gumbo elsewhere, Lake Charles keeps the savory Southern dish on the table year-round.

Cookbook Review: Tapas España

Tapas Espana cookbook Cover

For many years, I was known for hosting “appetizer parties,” because, in all honesty, putting together main dishes for large groups was a surefire way to send me spiraling. Then, in college, my eyes were opened to the world of Spanish tapas when I visited Barsa in Charleston. Finally, a way of gathering that encourages simple, small plates shared across the table. Since then, I’ve loved exploring the expansion of tapas culture and restaurants within the American South, including two standout favorites of mine: Cúrate in Asheville and Malagón in Charleston. 

When I saw the release for Tapas España, a new tapas-centric cookbook by Catherine Cogliandro Alioto releasing March 24, 2026, I knew it was going to become my hosting staple.

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Our 2026 Spring Issue is Here!

Erin Byers Murray Headshot for Ed Letter

What I love about Southern food right now is its ability to eschew all boundaries. When I moved back to the South after living away from it for much of my adult life, I noticed that the tide was already shifting in this direction—away from hard and fast traditional dishes and ever-faster toward modernity and global influence. This was back in 2012, and it’s been a tidal wave of momentum ever since.

Today, author Von Diaz points out, flavors from the Caribbean are having their moment in Southern food. Like many trends, though, she notes, “The current Caribbean moment is really something older finally coming into focus.” Read more about the chefs who are bringing their Caribbean influences to tables around the South, including our magazine’s home city of Charleston where chef
Shaun Brian puts accents from his home island of Saint John into the dishes he puts out at CudaCo. Seafood House.

That feature is giving me wanderlust, as are the stories in “Table for One”, which comes from a few of our star writers about what it’s like—and how meaningful it can be—to travel solo. “There’s a particular kind of joy in attempting something new alone,” writes Eric Barton, who traveled to Bonaire, the island oasis on our cover. If you’re looking for more ways to try new things, get to know our new column called The Guide, which breaks down the best ways to see a city (in this issue, it’s Asheville) from three different angles.

Speaking of new, please help me welcome columnist Jolyon Helterman, who happens to be based in Asheville and will be penning our Dining Out column this year, starting with a look at Judith in Sewanee, Tennessee (talk about boundary pushing). We’re also introducing two fresh columns: Front Burner , which will explore some of the many challenges the food and hospitality industries are facing today, and Good Spirits, which is a deep dive into the beverage space.


Thanks, as ever, for joining us on our storytelling journey—here’s hoping 2026 is full of exciting bites at every turn.

image
Erin Byers Murray,
Editior in Chief,
@erinbmurray

What I’m Reading

Service Ready Book Cover

SERVICE READY
A Story of Love, Restaurants, and the Power of Hospitality, by Molly Irani


Visionary cofounder of Chai Pani restaurants, Molly Irani and her husband, Meherwan, are out to build an intentional empire of Indian food businesses (including their popular spice brand Spicewalla), and her new book chronicles their journey while also offering a road map for others. Personally, I’m in it to glean notes on effective female leadership as well as how to incorporate hospitality into all aspects of a business, food-focused or otherwise.


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Turn Up the Heat: Exploring Louisiana’s Hot Sauce Trail

Whether you’re a spice-loving foodie or someone who puts hot sauce on everything, there’s always something new simmering in Louisiana. From Morgan City to Avery Island, the Pelican State is packed with unforgettable flavors, unexpected discoveries, and mouth-watering meals you’ll remember long after the last bite. 

Louisiana Hot Sauce bottles
The Louisiana Hot Sauce Trail

If your idea of a good time includes pit stops for hot sauce and plenty of detours for unforgettable food, Louisiana is perfect for your next road trip. Hit the highway and start exploring the Louisiana Hot Sauce Trail!

TABASCO Factory Tours

Kickstart your adventure with a taste of a true Louisiana classic: Tabasco. Bottled in Avery Island, Louisiana, this pepper sauce is still made using the same original process and three classic ingredients: home-grown red peppers, salt, and vinegar. Visit the facilities and take the self-guided tour, including the museum, greenhouse, barrel warehouse, and bottling facility. This easy 45-minute loop is perfect for stretching your legs, soaking up history, and stocking up on the Tabasco classics as well as innovative new products.

D.a.T. Sauce

Make a pit stop in Morgan City to sample D.a.T. Sauce, a taste of true Acadiana flavor. This family-run company started in Don Abner Tabor’s backyard with an old family recipe, and the one-of-a-kind sauce has become such a hit that they’ve since added a second product – D.a.T. Ketchup! Stop by the retail shop for hot sauce by the bottle (or case), gift baskets, and more.

Panola Pepper Corporation

Next, pop over to Panola Pepper Corporation. Grown in Lake Providence, Louisiana, this pepper producer employs locals who honor traditions going back to the very first batch. Panola takes pride in the legacy of its recipe, with its distribution center still located right on the farm. Stop by the factory for a tour and pick up a bottle of the hot stuff at their gift shop.

Small-Batch, Big Flavor

Some of Louisiana’s most innovative sauces come from small-time producers. Ponchatoula’s Berry Town Produce carries its own in-house line of hot sauces made from homegrown produce, including flavors like Vidalia Peach, Vidalia Orange, and Good & Evil.

Driving through Lafayette? Swing by the Saturday farmers market, where you’ll find Front Yard Farms selling their organic, small-batch hot sauces and pepper products with both classic and unique blends like Habanero, Creole Garlic, and more. 

Ready to turn up the heat? Hit the Louisiana Hot Sauce Trail and taste your way through bold flavors, local creativity, and a whole lot of spice. Start your taste bud adventure today at LouisianaHotSauceTrail.com.

Louisisana Hot sauce on shrimp gumbo dish
Dining Out

12 New Restaurants in Louisiana

12 new and exciting restaurants in Louisiana bring even more thriving personality to the Pelican State. Come explore the dynamic flavors.

Dining Out

9 Noteworthy Louisiana Restaurants | Listen

From New Orleans to Lake Charles, Louisiana has an incredible variety of top-notch restaurants to try.

On the Road

A Year of Food in Louisiana | Listen

Here are some of the state’s top bites from parish to parish, each reflecting something special about Louisiana.

5 Things in Landon Bryant’s Fridge

Born and raised in Laurel, Mississippi, Landon Bryant has captured the hearts of Southerners leading hot debates on Instagram like Hellman’s versus Duke’s (Duke’s, obviously). Known by his followers as @landontalks, the author, internet personality, and standup comic was working as a teacher when he began making videos on “Southernisms” and posting them on social media. When views, likes, and comments started pouring in, he knew he was onto something. This inspired his first book, Bless Your Heart: A Field Guide to All Things Southern (Running Press, 2025). “If you’re not Southern, you’re going to learn a lot in the book,” he says. “If you are Southern, it’s just going to be hilarious the things that we have to explain.” He also has a second book, Twas the Night Before Christmas, Y’all (Running Press, 2025). Bryant’s fans have even more to look forward to, with exciting projects in the works from a new cookbook to television. “There’s more to come in so many ways!”

Landon Bryant Shares His 5 Fridge Essentials

Landon Bryant The Local Palate
1. DUKE’S MAYO

Simply put, “there’s always Duke’s mayonnaise.”

2. MILO’S SWEET TEA

“It’s just the brand I’ve always known would be real sweet tea if you had to buy it and couldn’t get it from your grandma,” says Bryant. “It’s the closest thing to hers.”

3. LEFTOVER POT ROAST

Bryant likes to make a Mississippi pot roast on a Sunday and then enjoy the leftovers.

4. ROAST CHICKEN

“For sandwiches and whatever throughout the week,” he says.

5. FRESH PRODUCE

Bryant keeps his on the door. “This is an ADHD household, and if produce goes in the produce drawer it will never be seen again.”

On the Road

5 Things in Darius Rucker’s Fridge

We sat down with Darius Rucker to discuss the 5 things he absolutely can’t live without in his refrigerator.

In the Field

5 Things in Kristen Kish’s Fridge

Fully settled into her role on the other side of the judge’s table, Kristen Kish takes us on an exclusive tour of her fridge and ingredients.

In the Field

5 Things in Casey Corn’s Fridge | Video

Known for her global culinary curiosity and inventive home cooking, Casey Corn takes us on a tour of her fridge.

South Walton, Florida: A Getaway for Any Time of Year

Imagine the perfect vacation: quiet relaxation, music and cocktails with friends, exploring nature or enjoying upscale accommodations. Now imagine it all in one place, steps from 26 miles of sugar-white sand beaches and turquoise water.

Dune Allen South Walton Florida, Santa Rosa Golf & Beach Club
Santa Rosa Golf & Beach Club

Located in Northwest Florida, South Walton is continually recognized as a premier beach vacation destination with 16 unique beach neighborhoods, each with its own personality and style. In South Walton, luxury accommodations, outdoor adventure, eclectic shops, art galleries and award-winning restaurants are part of the distinctive character and relaxing atmosphere.

Outdoor activities are abundant, with four state parks, a 15,000-acre state forest, 15 rare coastal dune lakes and easy access to the Gulf. Beyond traditional sunning and swimming, adventurous travelers will enjoy stand-up paddleboarding and kayaking, or fishing on the Gulf or Choctawhatchee Bay. More than 200 miles of trails invite nature lovers to observe rare birds while hiking through state parks and forests. The 19-mile Timpoochee Trail leads runners and bicyclists past New Urbanist neighborhoods and offers panoramic views of stunning scenic beauty.

You can challenge yourself on the tennis court or tee off on a championship golf course, but if shopping is your passion, take time to browse the area’s eclectic mix of chic and sophisticated boutiques. Foodies will relish the fusion of flavors created by award-winning chefs showcasing fresh-from-the-Gulf seafood and locally sourced ingredients. As the sun makes its spectacular evening splash into the Gulf, the beach offers a front row seat to the greatest show in town.

Travel is a breeze, too, whether by car or by plane – South Walton is conveniently located less than 25 miles from Northwest Florida Beaches International Airport (ECP) and Destin-Fort Walton Beach Airport (VPS) with direct flight options available and is within less than a day’s drive from most locations in the Southeast.

An upscale, yet casual place to unwind, South Walton is the ideal place to rejuvenate, create lasting memories and find your perfect beach. Plan ahead for your perfect getaway at VisitSouthWalton.com.

Chefs cooking South Walton Florida

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Partnered

Savor South Walton, Florida

From Gulf-to-table dining to chef-inspired creations, taste the best of these 16 beach neighborhoods in South Walton, Florida.

Dining Out

9 Noteworthy Florida Restaurants | Listen

From Miami to Orlando, Florida has a wide range of cuisines and high-end restaurants to discover during your next visit.

On the Road

Escape to Florida

A dream vacation awaits in the Sunshine State.

Get To Know Thibodaux, Louisiana

In the heart of Louisiana’s Cajun Bayou, Thibodaux simmers with the layered richness of its heritage—Acadian, French, Spanish, African, Native American, Vietnamese, and German influences melding like a dark roux in gumbo. Just 60 miles southwest of New Orleans, the Queen City of Lafourche evokes a Provençal village with a walkable downtown amid moss-draped oaks, wrought-iron balconies, and French-inspired facades lining the banks of Bayou Lafourche, the longest Main Street in the world. French-Canadian Acadians expelled from Canada settled here in the mid-1700s, evolving into today’s Cajuns. Savor a flavorful cultural convergence— boudin, jambalaya, étouffée, gumbo, po’boys—along the Cajun Bayou Food Trail, with eight stops in Thibodaux. “Across South Louisiana, food is a living archive of our shared history,” says Allyn Rodriguez, lead park ranger at the Jean Lafitte Wetlands Acadian Cultural Center. “One of the most cherished traditions is the crawfish boil, featuring familiar ingredients like potatoes, corn, and sausage, but every family adds its own twist.”

Seafood Napolean at Fremin's
Seafood Napolean at Fremin’s

Best Places to Eat, Drink, and Explore

BEST FINE DINING: Cinclare

Chef Logan Boudreaux serves up inventive Southern fare with French finesse. A Lockport native and Institut Paul Bocuse alum, he weaves global influence and classical technique into local ingredients. Crawfish and andouille rangoon pair seamlessly with the salt and pepper tomato martini or an old
fashioned.

MOST AESTHETIC RESTAURANT: Fremin’s

Housed in an 1878 drugstore restored by the Fremin brothers, this elegant downtown gem blends Creole soul with Irish Italian flair. Guests can enjoy crawfish tortellini or the signature seafood Napoleon: “fried eggplant slices layered with seafood stuffing, topped with house red sauce and herbal cream sauces,” says executive chef Kevin Templet. “It’s a Fremin’s original and a true staple.”

BEST CLASSIC CAJUN: Saphr’s Seafood

Since 1968, Spahr’s has dished out rich gumbo, catfish chips, crawfish bread, and fresh-from-the-bayou seafood, delivering old-school flavor with every plate down to its decadent pain perdu. “Our catfish chips start with locally sourced Des Allemands catfish, fried golden brown and simply seasoned,” says chef Brandon Naquin. “And our gumbo recipe, unchanged since 1968, is still made fresh daily.”

LOUISIANA’S OLDEST BUTCHER SHOP: Bourgeois Meat Market

In 1891, Valery Jean-Baptiste Bourgeois sold fresh cuts by horse and carriage to bayou towns. Now five generations strong, this family-run local landmark is famed for its smoked sausage, fresh boudin, and irresistible Cajun beef jerky—1,000 pounds slow-smoked and sold each week. They also offer wild game processing.

BEST WINE BAR: Cuvée Wine Bar and Bistro

Grady V's Gumbo
Grady V’s Gumbo

Cuisine meets convivial charm here. Named for the French term meaning “blend,” Cuvée brings together the best of wine, food, and hospitality. Inside, curated bottles line the walls, original cocktails flow with quiet gusto, and guests savor small plates and gourmet entrées.

BEST SURF & TURF: Grady V’s

Nestled within the Bayou Country Club, the menu here spotlights house-smoked meats, all-the-way gumbo, and blue crab beignets laced with gator sauce. “A personal dish for me is our pecan shrimp ball,” says chef Brent Daigle. “My maw maw always served a cream cheese pecan ball and shrimp dip at family holidays, so I combined them into one: goat and cream cheese, toasted pecans, blackened shrimp, and pepper jelly, to honor her legacy.”

Claim to Fame

Chef John Folse Culinary Institute

Thibodaux is home to the Chef John Folse Culinary Institute at Nicholls State University, the only four-year culinary program in Louisiana and a training ground for the state’s next generation of chefs. Established in 1994 and named after Louisiana’s Culinary Ambassador to the World, the institute celebrates regional flavors at Bistro Ruth, its student-run fine-dining restaurant, where Cajun and Creole classics are reimagined. “Chef Folse teaches that food is a story connecting people, place, and time,” says chef Jana Billiot, director and instructor at the culinary institute.

Chef John Folse Culinary Institute
Chef John Folse Culinary Institute

Where to Shop

Cajun Pecan House Pecan Pies
Cajun Pecan House Pecan Pies

Gumbo Weather

In South Louisiana, gumbo weather arrives when the heavy heat lifts and cool air stirs something ancestral, prompting families to reach for cast-iron pots and
timeworn recipes. Honoring that ritual, this downtown shop supplies handcrafted charcuterie boards, heritage kitchenware, and engraved gifts, including a “Gumbo” signature penned by the founders’ 90-year-old grandmother.

Once Upon a Time Antiques

This charming storefront opens a window into the past with a mix of heirlooms, vintage décor, and distinctive curios sourced through estate transitions. Meticulous pickers are rewarded with character-rich finds and the thrill of discovering a tchotchke with a story worth telling.

Cajun Pecan House

A Thibodaux staple since 1985, this family-run sweet shop churns out pralines, pecan pies, fruitcake, and more than two dozen handmade candies, plus more than 30 types of king cake. Glass cases brim with Southern confections carved by generational recipes.

In the Field

Lafayette

Known for its dishes that are stuffed, smothered, and stewed, Lafayette is a bastion […]

On the Road

Ruston

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On the Road

Shreveport

Come explore Shreveport and get a taste of the Ark-La-Tex region. A place of history, […]

Spring Festivals for Foodies in Columbia, South Carolina

As winter moves into the rearview and warmer weather approaches, the anticipation for the best of Columbia SC’s festival scene grows. And if you’re major foodies like us, you’ll appreciate the many events that are dedicated to culinary craft. Mark your calendars and start planning your trip to experience one or more of these mouth-watering festivities.

Drink Pink Festival
Drink Pink Festival, Columbia, South Carolina

If enjoying a delicious meal with lakeside views speaks to you, you won’t want to miss Dining on the Dam on March 29. This annual event invites guests to sip and savor locally crafted cocktails and food atop the Lake Murray Dam while listening to live music as you watch the sunset over the water.

Each year, April brings the well-loved Columbia International Festival. Not only does this event boast cultural exhibits, a bazaar, and performances, it’s the perfect opportunity to taste cuisines from around the world. Don’t miss your opportunity to expand your palate sampling a variety of far-flung flavors and immerse yourself in cultures represented by nearly 100 countries on April 18 and 19. 

Notably the region’s largest celebration of all things delicious, the Columbia Food & Wine Festival is a can’t-miss. The five-day award-winning festival, happening April 22-26, showcases local chefs, mixologists, and artisans with the finest plates and pours Columbia has to offer. While it’s worth grabbing tickets to all the events sprinkled throughout the week, if you can only swing one, let it be the Grand Tasting on Sunday. This finale features a sampling of dishes, cocktails, live music, interactive chef demos, and of course, a souvenir wine glass to take home.

It may come as a surprise, but crawfish are kind of a big deal around here – at least during the Rosewood Crawfish Festival. With 10,000 pounds of crawfish brought in directly from Louisiana, plus a healthy dose of other Cajun and Southern specialties, and a full day of live music, you can see why hundreds of people flock to the festival each year. Be sure to save the date for May 2 to get in on the action.

Rosé lovers rejoice! There’s a festival just for you. The Drink Pink Festival on May 16 showcases over 100 different rosés to sample, paired with exquisitely prepared food by local chefs, and a wine store onsite. Sport your best pink and white outfit and be ready to sip the day away at this festival that became an instant hit when it debuted in 2015.

All of this and more are waiting for you to dine on and discover in the heart of SC. Experience it for yourself and start planning your trip at ExperienceColumbiaSC.com.

Columbia Food & Wine
Columbia Food & Wine Festival
Partnered
Partnered

Community Meets Cuisine in Columbia, South Carolina

Gather COLA is more than just a food hall in Columbia. Enjoy craft cocktails, delicious cuisine, vintage shopping, and even co-op work spaces.

On the Road

Columbia

In Columbia, old stalwarts dish out gourmet plates while a new guard of eclectic eateries have sprung up in the farthest reaches of the city.

In the Field

Columbia Food & Wine Festival 2026

The Columbia Food & Wine Festival is back for its ninth year with 10 events, 100+ chefs, and entertainment for everyone.