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The 2026 James Beard Media Awards Stood On Culture

The 2026 James Beard Media Awards stood firmly on culture this year, celebrating recipients who represented the many pulsing intersections of food, storytelling, and community. Each year, the food world’s biggest voices and influences gather in Chicago for the awards weekend, a commemoration that brings together chefs, authors, journalists, sommeliers, and culinary powerhouses across the epicurean landscape.

Across two major ceremonies, the weekend honors the blood, sweat, and grit it takes to build a life in culinary service and food media. It recognizes not only the finished work, but the stories, sacrifices, and perspectives that continue to shape the way we understand our food systems.

As I recap this year’s Media Awards held at The Art Institute of Chicago, I find myself writing from both sides of the room, as a storyteller celebrating the incredible work of my peers and as a recipient of the 2026 Emerging Voice Award in Journalism. It’s an immense honor to be recognized among so many talented minds, and an even greater joy to reflect on the stories and achievements that made this year’s celebration so meaningful.

Jasmine at the James Beard Media Awards
Jasmine Michel accepts the award for 2026 Emerging Voice Award in Journalism © 2026 Galdones Photography

If you know anything about TLP, you know that we love a good cookbook, one with a food story that inspires both our bellies and our hearts. This year’s Book Award recipients reminded us that recipes and food stories are often more than instructions. They are archives, memories, and living documents of the people and places that create them. Perhaps one of the most moving moments of the evening was the standing ovation received by Sallie Ann Robinson as she was welcomed into the Book Awards Hall of Fame. A sixth-generation Gullah woman born on Daufuskie Island in South Carolina, Robinson’s work has long been rooted in preserving and honoring life in the Gullah tradition. 

Irene Yoo, author of Soju Party: How to Drink (and Eat!) Like a Korean, spoke to the intimacy of food traditions in her acceptance speech, sharing, “I wanted to share how Korean drinking is all about sharing and community. We always pour for each other.” Her words captured a theme that echoed throughout the evening: food is not only about consumption, but connection.

Attendees of the James Beard Media Awards
Dawn Padmore and Cynthia Greenlee attend the 2026 James Beard Media Awards. Photo by Jeff Schear/Getty Images for the James Beard Foundation.

Cha McCoy’s words on stage warmed the room as she reflected on her award-winning book, Wine Pairing for the People: The Communion of Wine, Food, and Culture from Africa and Beyond, written with Layla Schlack. Her work was born from a desire to challenge the ways the wine industry has historically overlooked Black and marginalized contributions, while celebrating the regions, producers, and cultures that have always shaped the world of wine.

The conversations around food justice and advocacy carried that same weight. Leslie Soble, Alex Busansky, and Aishatu Yusuf brought the rawness of our food systems to the forefront with Eating Behind Bars: Ending the Hidden Punishment of Food in Prison, highlighting the realities of food access,  and humanity within the prison system. Their recognition was a reminder of our accountability within systems and communities often left out of conversation.

Across journalism, broadcast media, and books, this year’s honorees reflected the evolving dance of food storytelling, one that continues to make room for deeper conversations around heritage, identity, and the people behind what we eat. Storytellers across categories including emerging voices, criticism, visual storytelling, podcasts, and investigative work, honored the many ways food narratives reach us.

There was not a dry eye in the house when Sarah Ahn and Nam Soon Ahn took to the stage to accept their award for Umma: A Korean Mom’s Kitchen Wisdom and 100 Family Recipes. As the mother-daughter duo spoke about the love, memory, and connection woven into their work, their book and presence reminded us that some of the most powerful food stories begin at home, passed down through hands that have cooked, cared, and carried food rituals forward. 

Marie Mitchell’s recognition for Kin: Caribbean Recipes for the Modern Kitchen also reflected the emotional heartbeat of the evening. Her work robustly tied together the power of family, migration, and the ways food becomes a bridge between where we come from and the journey life takes us on. I was besides myself to meet so many people I have only experienced through their work, fangirling over Pati Jinich being inducted into the Broadcast Media Hall of Fame and whose work has been dedicated to sharing the depth and diversity of Mexican cuisine and culture through broadcasted  flavorsome narratives.  

Duck Camp Dinners, The Texas Tour received recognition in Lifestyle Visual Media, highlighting the power of place, tradition, and gathering through the lens of outdoor cooking and the community that comes with it. Nasim Lahbichi’s recognition as Emerging Voice in Broadcast Media represents the next generation of storytellers who are boldly pushing food media forward with authentic personality, recipe approachability, and a generational perspective.

The ceremony followed a tremendous reception that ended the night with a particular combination of being on cloud 9 while also firmly grounded in what has always been the truth about food. In that it is one of our most significant experiences that binds us and that as a tool, food continues to carry power, evidence, and lore. It lives in every shouted “hot behind” and prolonged nights of editing, every manic breakdown hidden in the walk-in and every pitch rejection to an amazing ancestral story lives the potent example that food has always and will always connect us. And the people brazen enough to make a life out of it are nothing short of stubborn artists unwilling to create something less than the truth.

People pose at the James Beard Media Awards
Monti Carlo and Andrew Zimmern attend the 2026 James Beard Media Awards. Photo by Jeff Schear/Getty Images for the James Beard Foundation.
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2026 James Beard Awards Show Strength of the South

The South was strongly represented at The 2026 James Beard Awards, here are The Local Palate’s most memorable moments and takeaways.

Roots

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In the Kitchen with Chef EJ Lagasse of Emeril’s | Listen

TLP sat down with EJ Lagasse, Emeril’s son, to discuss his own journey to culinary stardom in his home of New Orleans.

8 Fresh Sides for This Fourth of July

The Fourth of July is not complete without these tasty, crowd–pleasing side dishes that are sure to steal the show. We’ve rounded up eight fresh recipes to help you host an unforgettable Independence Day celebration.

Barbecue 7 layer dip for Fourth of July

BBQ Seven-Layer Dip

This barbecue seven-layer dip is an assured hit for your Fourth of July gathering. Loaded with beans, cheese, ground beef, and sour cream, this addictive side brings a little bit of everything to the table.

Watermelon skewers for Fourth of July

Watermelon Skewers

Who doesn’t love watermelon on a hot summer day? These watermelon skewers put a twist on the summertime staple with a splash of tequila paired with chile, lime, and salt. The result? A refreshing, ridiculously mouth-watering side that will make guests come back for seconds – or fourths.

Butter Bean Dip for Fourth of July

Butter Bean Dip with Mint, Basil and Lime

Elevate your go-to bean dip or hummus with this smooth and vibrant butter bean dip. Bursting with fresh mint, basil. and a squeeze of lime, this garden-inspired side is sure to score this summer. Serve with pita bread, crisp crackers, or cucumber slices.

Cucumber Radish Salad for Fourth of July

Cucumber Radish Salad

This Korean-style barbecue inspired dish is the perfect complement to smoked brisket and other beef mains. This flavorful salad brings crunchiness and a little acidic sweetness to your Fourth of July spread.

peach iced tea sorbet for Fourth of July

Peach Iced Tea Sorbet

Although this recipe might count as a dessert, we can all agree peaches and iced tea are Southern summer staples. Refreshing and ice-cold, you’re assured to beat the heat with this sorbet. For a quicker option, make the classic iced tea and serve with sliced peaches on top for a crisp beverage.

BBQ Street Corn for Fourth of July

BBQ Street Corn

Elevate your corn-based side dish with sweet barbecue sauce and spices from Lillie’s of Charleston. Bursting with bold summer falvor, this smoky and tangy side is an irresistible companion to grilled burgers and other barbecue favorites.

Smashed fingerling potato salad for Fourth of July

Smashed Fingerling Potato Salad

No Fourth of July Spread is complete without a bowl of potato salad. Cool, creamy, crunchy, and tangy, this dish is a crowd-pleasing classic that never goes out of style.

cool ranch tater tots for Fourth of July

Cool Ranch Tater Tots

These Dorito’s inspired tater tots incorporate the fan-favorite seasoning into this dish with a drizzle of poblano ranch. Just like Doritos, this dish works well as an appetizer or side for your Fourth of July spread.

At the Table

4 Sweet and Savory Pie Recipes for Summer

Pastry chef Caitlyn Cox calls herself the “modern grandmother of baking” Here she share four spins on sweet and savory pie recipes.

At the Table

10 Fresh Barbecue Sides to Upgrade the Cookout

Nine southern chefs share their favorite unconventional barbecue sides ranging from zesty kimchi slaw to rich corn pudding.

Key Ingredient

6 Desserts Where Summer Fruits Shine

The OG fruit bake has variations galore. Armed with spices, herbs,
 and fun flours, baker Justin Burke-Samson spins them modern.

Score Scallops This Summer on Florida’s Sports Coast

From mid-July to mid-August each year, Florida’s Sports Coast turns into one giant underwater scavenger hunt! Locals and visitors head into the shallow Gulf waters for scallop season—a tradition that mixes boating, snorkeling, seafood, and a little friendly competition. This year’s official dates? July 10 through August 18!

The Gulf’s Favorite Summer Game

The goal is simple: spot the glint of a bay scallop shell hiding among the seagrass, swim down, scoop it up, and drop it into your mesh bag before diving back down for another. Think of it as an underwater Easter egg hunt with dinner waiting at the finish line.

local food dish in Florida

Since the waters off Florida’s Sports Coast are shallow enough for beginners, scalloping is especially popular with families. Most scallop beds sit in water about 4 to 8 feet deep, so all you need to bring is a mask, snorkel, fins, and a mesh bag.

Go with a Local Captain

If you’ve never scalloped before, hiring a charter is the move. Local captains know where to find scallops quickly, keep track of harvesting regulations, and often provide snorkeling gear and the fishing license needed for everyone on board.

After a morning on the water, your crew will likely head back with a cooler full of scallops ready for cleaning. Florida bay scallops are smaller and sweeter than sea scallops, and many locals keep the preparation simple—a quick sear in butter, a light fry, or tossed straight onto the grill.

And if cooking your scallops after a day in the sun sounds like too much work, places like Frankie’s Raw Bar will cook your cleaned catch for you.

Keep the Seafood Tour Going

Scallops may steal the spotlight during the summer months, but Florida’s Sports Coast has plenty of other Gulf seafood options you’ll want to sample while you’re in town.

In New Port Richey, Get Hooked Grill gives you a front-row seat to the Cotee River, where you can enjoy a Gulf Coast signature: grouper sandwiches. Or, if your crew worked up a serious appetite out on the water, the Captain’s Feast piles on clams, shrimp, calamari, and grouper all at once.

Seven minutes down the road, The Fish Guy doubles as both a seafood market and café. Order a fried seafood platter at the café counter, then grab Gulf shrimp, flounder, or grouper from the market side and head home with a cooler full of seafood.

Closer to Wesley Chapel and Zephyrhills, The Great Catch serves both Southern and Northeastern seafood favorites under one roof. You’ll find lobster rolls and Atlantic haddock alongside mahi mahi, scallops, and other Gulf Coast staples.

Scallop season may last only a few weeks, but seafood is part of the everyday playbook on Florida’s Sports Coast. Spend a day out on the Gulf, pull up a chair beside the river, or pack a cooler to take home. Around here, incredible seafood tends to find its way into the game plan!

family floating in water in Florida
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Travel back in time to explore the ancient streets, castles, and architecture in quaint St. Augustine, Florida—the oldest city in America.

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Fort Myers

Fort Myers’ islands, beaches and neighborhoods have a way of leaving a lasting impression. Visit and create memorable moments naturally.

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Gulf Shores & Orange Beach

A waterfront town of about five thousand people, Orange Beach is the last stop on Alabama’s Gulf Coast before Florida

Hickory’s Most Romantic Tables

Some meals are worth savoring. In Hickory, intimate dining rooms, crafted cocktails, and memorable flavors create the perfect setting for an evening out. From historic homes and classic steakhouses to globally inspired tapas and hidden speakeasies, these restaurants serve up romance one bite at a time.

Vintage House

Hickory’s Most Coveted Booth

Vintage House in Hickory NC table setting
Vintage House

Housed in the former Abernethy family home, built in 1915, Vintage House blends historic character with elegance. Reserve the restaurant’s iconic red booth, tucked into a cozy wood-paneled alcove that has hosted countless anniversaries and proposals. Pair a glass from the award-winning wine list or the signature Betty White cocktail with filet tournedos or butternut and pumpkin ravioli glazed in brown butter for a meal that’s as memorable as the setting itself.

Charolais Steakhouse

A Hickory Tradition

For couples who appreciate tradition, Charolais Steakhouse delivers. A beloved fixture of Hickory’s dining scene for over five decades, the restaurant is known for hand-cut, char-grilled steaks presented tableside from the famous steak cart. Start with a trip to the legendary soup, salad & cheese bar before settling in for a perfectly aged cut paired with a bold red from the wine cellar.

Boca

Tapas Worth Talking About

With its warm, moody atmosphere and live music on weekends, Boca sets the stage for an evening of shared plates and conversation. The menu draws inspiration from Spanish, Mediterranean, and Moroccan cuisines, inviting diners to explore global flavors. Share piquillo peppers stuffed with creamy goat cheese, scoop up hummus and baba ganoush with warm naan, or enjoy a fragrant paella bursting with bold, global flavors.

North Hickory Market

Where Creativity Leads the Menu

Fresh ingredients and creative flavors take center stage at North Hickory Market. The ever-changing menu features playful dishes ranging from spam musubi to miso butter grilled ribeye. Cocktails are equally fun, especially the Mai Tai served in a pig-shaped mug. Whether you’re sharing yeast rolls slathered in molasses butter or splitting an over-the-top dessert special, every visit feels like a new experience.

Cowa-Saké

Japanese Fusion, Elevated

For a date night that’s anything but ordinary, head to Cowa-Saké. Smoked sushi rolls, flaming desserts, dry ice cocktails, and the Lychee Death Note martini with its popping flavor bubble create an experience that’s as entertaining as it is delicious. Order a bento box to sample a little of everything, then finish with the Bananas Foster Spring Roll for a sweet finale.

No Entry Cocktail Lounge

Hickory’s Best-Kept Secret

End the evening at No Entry Cocktail Lounge, the hidden speakeasy tucked inside City Walk Brewing & Distilling. Dim lighting, inventive cocktails, and an intimate atmosphere make it an ideal final stop. Sip a tiki espresso martini crafted with spirits distilled just steps away and toast to a night well spent.

The most romantic tables aren’t defined by white tablecloths or candlelight alone. They’re the places where conversation flows, flavors linger, and every course invites you to stay a little longer. Hickory’s culinary scene is full of surprises waiting to be discovered.

Cowa Saké table setting in Hickory NC
Cowa Saké
On the Road

Asheville

Nestled in a valley surrounded by the Blue Ridge Mountains, Asheville, North Carolina, is an outdoor mecca with a thriving art scene, hippie charm, and a beer culture at a fever pitch.

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Chapel Hill

From historic roots to cutting-edge restaurants, Chapel Hill is a quintessential southern destination.

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Charlotte

Ingenuity paired with creativity is at the helm of the thriving restaurants and breweries expanding the Queen City’s culinary scene.

The Ultimate Louisiana Dining Guide 2026

Best Chef: Hardette Harris

Us Up North, Shreveport

Cef Hardette Harris is passionate about the food, culture, and history of North Louisiana. Although Creole and Cajun cuisine get the most love in the state, north of I-10 there’s a different cultural gumbo drawn from Native American, African, German, and English influences. Harris thinks of this as Southern with a Louisiana twist. The chef, who was born and raised in rural Minden outside of Shreveport, created an official North Louisiana meal that includes Natchitoches meat pies, fried catfish, purple hull peas, and hot water cornbread. The James Beard-nominated chef serves this and more at her 40-seat café, Us Up North.

Hardette Harris’s Recommendations:

Hardette Harris

Breakfast: Shreveport Biscuit Company

What Kanya Michelle is doing with those biscuits is amazing. They’re so tall and crisp-crusted, dense and airy at the same time. I love all the biscuit sandwiches. She works with local farms. So good

Lunch: Walking By Faith Kitchen

They are the epitome of soul food and local favorites. My favorite thing is everything. But right now, I’m loving the cornbread dressing and hamburger steaks 

Dinner: Orlandeaux’s Café

I usually drink beer, but this small wine shop can steer me to what I More Cajun and Creole goodness at Damien Chapman’s place. I can’t eat seafood, but everybody goes here for the stuffed shrimp. I’m crazy about their smothered chicken livers with sauteed onions.

Drinks: Zuzul Coastal Cuisine

Love this coastal Mexican restaurant for dinner, but the vibe is also great for stopping and having a cocktail. Paul Loggins is the bartender and he can make some drinks. My go-to is not just a dirty martini—I like mine filthy dirty.

Best Beverage Pro: Chassidy Walker

Fritai, New Orleans

Chassidy Walker creates brilliant rum cocktails as beverage manager at Fritai, chef Charly Pierre’s award-winning Haitian restaurant in Tremé, the oldest Black neighborhood in America. It’s a career path she fell into after years as a server in her early 20s. A turning point for her was applying and being accepted into Turning Tables, a 12-week bar training and mentoring program for BIPOC students. An adventurous eater and drinker, she found her palate at Fritai, along with a passion for combining flavors that evoke Caribbean food- and drink-ways.

Chassidy Walker portrait illo

Chassidy Walker’s Current Favorites:

LOUISIANA PRODUCT

I use Herbsaint, which has been made in New Orleans since 1934.

BEVERAGE TREND

I’m crazy about the dirty martini trend! It’s fun and creative—so many umami flavors and ways to go with garnishes. I love it because it shows the versatility of martinis.

DRINK SOMEWHERE ELSE

I really love mezcal and learning about the traditions behind its production. [She goes to Espíritu Mezcaleria & Cocina for their selection.] I’d love to try pulque from Mexico—it’s made from the fermented sap of the maguey plant and has a milky, slightly sour taste.

The Best of Louisiana

Best New Restaurant: Café Malou, New Orleans

Prepare to be completely charmed by local restaurateur Mani Dawes’ Uptown Café Malou. Dawes, who co-owns tapas bar Tia Pol in New York, created the stylish breakfast and lunch gem ingeniously connected to Octavia Books, a wonderful excuse to eat and browse. From the perfect breakfast sandwich to hearty plates of baked grits a la carbonara and the open-faced baked crab sandwich, the cuisine is comfort, but better. 

Five Mile Eatery Co Op Burger
Five Mile Eatery

Best Culinary Hotel: The Windsor Court, New Orleans

With its posh British theme and masterpiece art collection, The Windsor Court is the only Louisiana hotel to win four stars from Forbes and AAA four-diamond accolades. Its landmark Grill Room is stellar, with new chef de cuisine RicTerrio “Ricky” Anderson at the helm. Anderson is focused on modern Southern cuisine, both innovative and relatable. Start with his sous vide lamb chops and devour the menu from there.

Best Reason to Line Up for Fried Chicken: Chicken’s Kitchen, Harvey

Chicken’s Kitchen serves some of the best fried chicken around: crackling crusted, juicy on the inside, soulfully seasoned. Chef Marlon “Chicken” Chukumerije’s fried chicken and warm hospitality earned him James Beard Best Chef: South semifinalist status in 2024. The restaurant’s original location in Gretna will close in April, but fret not, the chef plans to reopen in a new nearby location (to be announced) in May.

Best Bottle Shop with Benefits: Bin Q Liquor, Baton Rouge

Bin Q owner Ben Jones uses his curated list of unique finds, small producers, and natural wines to sell spirits with a story. But it gets better at this Baton Rouge bottle shop, thanks to teeny tiny Bin Q Bar in the back, where raconteur bartender Alan Walter presides over Thursday evenings and Sunday afternoons of sipping mind-bending libations infused generously with brio.

Best Brewery Eats: Crying Eagle Brewery, Lake Charles

It’s been a decade since Eric Avery founded Crying Eagle Brewery in downtown Lake Charles, a community- facing brewpub now with a second lakefront location. Chef Lyle Broussard, who came up in Bayou Teche, has raised Crying Eagle’s menu to lofty heights. CIA trained, the chef spent more than 18 years in casino kitchens. He reimagines pub fare with dishes both simple and succulent: blue crab nachos, real deal gumbo, and parmesan-crusted okra, all best enjoyed with a beer.

Best New Pan-Asian Tasting Menu: The Kingsway, New Orleans

For chef Ashwin Vilkhu, his first solo venture, The Kingsway, is the ultimate family meal, a concept inspired by a childhood of favorite dishes from his father, chef Arvinder Vilkhu. Just across the street from the family’s Saffron Restaurant, The Kingsway offers a four-course, $92 tasting menu with choices like yellowfin tuna with five-year chili sauce and scallion lamb—bold flavors at the crossroads of Asian cuisine. Brings friends, eat everything.

Most Sustainable Kitchen: Five Mile Eatery, Lafayette

Founded by executive chef Kelsey Leger and her partner, Sarah Trotter, the female-owned, pride-proud business opened in 2022. Besides drilling deep into 100-percent local and organic sourcing, the breakfast and lunch café is serious about sustainability, its menu a love letter to the farmers and makers that have become the chef’s friends. To this team, green translates to composting, recycling, and partnering with like-minded grassroots initiatives like Backyard Sapphire and Worm Lady Recycles—extra work but so worth it.

Where Hospitality Meets Modern Creole: Atchafalaya, New Orleans

At Atchafalaya, where a restaurant has lived in the Irish Channel neighborhood since the 1920s, chef Chris Lynch channels umami in plates of elegant modern Creole cuisine, and the kitchen consistently turns out what might be the best andouille-studded shrimp and grits in town. Then there’s the attentive service, which is familiar with the emphasis on family. And the final piece lies with proprietors Tony Tocco and Rachael Jaffe, who radiate a deep commitment to welcoming guests. No wonder the restaurant earned a MICHELIN recommendation, an overdue affirmation to a level of excellence regulars have known about for years.

Cafe Malou New Orleans
Café Malou
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New Orleans

From Bourbon Street to bánh mì, there’s a lot to love about the Crescent […]

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Lafayette

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Lake Charles

If you’re chasing the perfect roux, a flaky biscuit, or a cold drink, Lake […]

A Weekend Guide Through Historic Virginia

Traveling back in time over the short distance from Old Town Alexandria to Mount Vernon for America’s 250th

Inside a dim cellar at Mount Vernon, beneath a brick floor laid more than two centuries ago, workers made an unexpected discovery while restoring George and Martha Washington’s historic home: 36 large glass bottles, carefully buried and long forgotten. Inside were cherries, gooseberries, and other fruits, preserved at the height of their season.

preserved bottle at Mount Vernon
Image courtesy of Mount Vernon

They had been placed there in the spring of 1775, part of a common practice for storing fresh fruit for the months ahead. But that summer, George Washington left for Philadelphia as the Revolutionary War took hold. He would not return for years.

“In the meantime, there’s no entertaining happening here,” says Jeremy Ray, senior director of interpretation at Mount Vernon. “Mrs. Washington is in and out, and the estate is being managed by Washington’s nephew, who ultimately decides to brick over the cellar. Those bottles were sealed in and lost to history.”

They remained untouched for nearly 250 years, unearthed during a comprehensive, multiyear revitalization project to shore up the mansion’s foundation and return Mount Vernon to its 18th-century integrity that’s only recently been completed.

“To have something older than the country itself—fruit that’s still intact—is remarkable,” says Julie Almacy, vice president of media and communications. “This fruit is older than the nation—and cherries, on top of that.”

“Of course, it had to be cherries,” Ray adds.

The story of young George Washington and the cherry tree, first popularized in a biography published shortly after his death, is as unlikely as it is enduring. Yet its staying power says something about the 250th anniversary year now unfolding across the country: The stories we tell about our past are rarely fixed. Details may be preserved, but context is continually reinterpret- ed, gaining new layers as the culture around them changes and our understanding expands.

That’s part of what drew me to Mount Vernon and Alexandria, Virginia. This stretch along the Potomac River is steeped in history. Founded in 1749 and long tied to Washington, who surveyed its streets as a teenager, worshiped at Christ Church, and conducted business in Market Square, Alexandria’s Old Town neighborhood is among the nation’s first historic districts. Its colonial past is preserved at places like Gadsby’s Tavern Museum, Carlyle House Historic Park, and the cobblestone stretch of Prince Street known as Captain’s Row.

But Old Town is not frozen in time. It’s a vibrant, multifaceted neighborhood and a culinary crossroads, where Southern traditions converge with the bounty of Chesapeake Bay, layered with multicultural influences. For today’s traveler, it also offers a strategic and inviting home base within easy reach of Washington, DC, which lies just across the river, to observe America’s 250th in a highly walkable, richly diverse community that’s distinctly its own.

Day One:

I check into The Alexandrian, a polished, contemporary hotel located in the heart of Old Town on King Street, a mile-long corridor that runs from the Metro station at the east end to the riverwalk at the west. King Street and its offshoots offer easy access to the more than 200 independently owned restaurants and boutiques that thrive in Old Town.

My first stop is Virtue Feed & Grain, where I meet director of operations Tom Gale and local writer Tim Long. The restaurant sits in an old hay, grain, and flour warehouse, and the offices just across the courtyard once served as a storage facility for local goods headed to market, including George Washington’s rye whiskey. It’s now a bustling, modern dining room.

A server brings Freddie’s old fashioneds, made with Blanton’s Gold bourbon and bitters crafted especially for Virtue by Charleston-based Bittermilk. We clink our glasses, and almost reflexively, Gale and Long tap theirs against the table.

“We do that here to honor those who have gone before us,” Long says. As we tuck into Old Town crab dip, heavily flecked with lump crabmeat, and plates of locally caught rockfish with a lemon caper butter sauce, I ask what distinguishes Old Town from the rest of the region.

“We are our own community,” Gale says. “So many people come over here as a respite from the district.”

“Alexandria is a city. Old Town is a town—that’s really the big difference,” Long adds. “It has a totally different feel.”

Alexandria waterfront blue hour Image courtesy of Sam Kittner for Visit Alexandria
Alexandria waterfront, Image courtesy of Sam Kittner for Visit Alexandria

I get a sense of that myself wander- ing through the streets and along the waterfront after lunch. What were once warehouses used for colonial trade, and later as storage and offices into the 20th century, have since been adapted into a lively mix of restaurants, shops, and residences.

That creatively driven, adaptive reuse is especially visible at the Torpedo Factory Art Center. The cavernous three-story building was once used to manufacture Mark III torpedoes. During the Korean War, the Pentagon stored sensitive documents there, including transcripts of the Nuremberg trials. Today, it is filled with artists’ studios and galleries, their open doors inviting passersby to step inside, look around, and talk.

Later, I head to dinner at 1799 Prime Steak & Seafood, around the corner from The Alexandrian, where I meet owner Jay Quander. He tells me his ancestors are among the oldest documented African American families in the country, with roots tracing to the 1600s in colonial Maryland. A branch of the family was enslaved at Mount Vernon, and Quander named his restaurant for the year Washington directed the emancipation of the remaining enslaved people in his will. A great-aunt was the first African American tour guide at Mount Vernon, and Quander himself is a former director of food and beverage operations at the estate.

“I didn’t just open a restaurant to open a restaurant. I opened a restaurant to honor my family,” he tells me.

The idea of honoring the past while building something current seems especially apt in Old Town. “It’s Old World and New World colliding,” Quander says of the area.

Quander is in the process of relocating 1799 Prime to Duke Street and opening a second location in Maryland. He is also launching a line of sauces under the 1799 brand, made in part with Fort Mosé whiskey distilled near St. Augustine, Florida, and named for the first legally sanctioned free African settlement in what’s now the United States.

The brand’s signature smoky mustard-cream sauce stars in a blackened whiskey shrimp appetizer, and I also try the steak au poivre special with a side of collard greens.

Day Two:

The next morning, I walk up King Street and find another tangible example of an old-world tradition that invites new conversations and connection. Turkish Coffee Lady is a coffee shop and cultural gathering space founded by Gizem Şalcıgil White, whose nickname comes from a Washington Post article. White, originally from Ankara, Turkey, has lived in the United States for 20 years, where she’s also raised her family. In 2022, with support from the SBA Restaurant Revitalization Fund and a Rebuild Virginia grant, she opened a Turkish coffee and culture house in the heart of Old Town.

Turkish Coffee Lady Image courtesy of Misha Enriquez
Turkish Coffee Lady, Image courtesy of Misha Enriquez

“We have this incredible 500-year- old coffee culture, and I realized nobody knows about it,” she says, as I sip a strong brew served in a delicate porcelain cup and spiced with minty Cappadocian cardamom, accompanied by a small domed platter of Turkish Delight and small glass of water, “to cleanse the palate,” she says.

White excuses herself to greet a group of out-of-town visitors. “Welcome to the culture house,” she says. A woman in the group also speaks Turkish, and they fluidly slip between languages. White soon returns with an ornate platter of cheeses, olives, and meats.

“I always say it’s a culinary art—from brewing to presenting to drinking. It teaches you patience,” she says of the ritual of Turkish coffee. “It starts with the aroma, the fragrance, and from that moment to the end, the whole thing is an experience that brings people together,” she says. “We slow down and enjoy life. We socialize, connect, and reflect.” Although a free DASH bus and

trolley run the length of King Street, I choose to walk the several blocks to the Old Town Metro station, headed into Washington, DC. My pace seems slower and my senses more receptive as I pass boutique windows and sidewalk cafés.

I depart the Metro at the Smithsonian station, which opens directly onto the National Mall, and spend the afternoon making a wide, meandering loop among the monuments—the Lincoln Memorial, Vietnam Veterans Memorial, around the Tidal Basin to the Jefferson Memorial. Of course, the towering Washington Monument is never far from view.

I stop into the Smithsonian Museum of American History to see the original Old Glory—much larger and more battle-tattered than I’d imagined. I peruse hundreds of disparate yet historically significant objects that signify past places and times, including a re-creation of Julia Childs’ kitchen, frozen in the mid-20th century, and the wooden stir spoon Charlie Papazian used to perfect recipes for his Joy of Homebrewing book, which helped launch the modern craft beer movement.

In “The American Presidency: A Glorious Burden” exhibit, I notice the disputed placard detailing Donald Trump’s two impeachments, freshly edited and moved to the bottom of a display like a footnote. I watch a team of conservationists painstakingly work to preserve the Gunboat Philadelphia, which sank to the bottom of Lake Champlain as part of a ragtag American fleet that helped stall invading British forces during the American Revolution.

As inspiring as it is, I’m just as happy to be on a Metro heading back to Alexandria after an afternoon of walking. I stop in the Potomac Yards development and head to Founding Farmers’ newest location. The regional chain, which start- ed in DC, is owned by the North Dakota Farmers Union and Farmers Restaurant Group and has several locations in the region. All ingredients are sourced from family farmers and small producers, and everything is made in-house, including spirits made by their sister distillery, Founding Spirits. I opt for an Old Cuban mojito paired with shrimp ceviche with jalapeño and coconut—the most flavorful dish from my trip—followed by seared mahi mahi with an apricot mustard sauce. I mop up every bite.

Day Three:

The next morning, I rideshare the short drive to the main estate and the Mount Vernon Inn, where I meet Ray and Almacy for lunch—a bowl of savory peanut soup and stuffed chicken roulade crusted with grain milled on the property. After the meal, Isaac Makos, a senior interpretive supervisor at Mount Vernon, gives me a tour of the mansion, grounds, and newly reopened Museum and Educational Center, which now features immersive projections and digital instillations that help bring Washington’s story to life.

Standing in front of the mansion, Makos explains that the restoration work was necessitated by a structural problem. The mansion’s foundational sill had degraded, leaving the building structurally sound but vulnerable to strong lateral forces. Crews had to brace the structure section by section, remove 20th-century repairs made with poured concrete, rebuild the sill, and then put everything back in place. They also brought in artisans skilled in 18th-century techniques to repair wallpaper, millwork, and restore other details using period-correct methods.

The mansion is impressively preserved and filled with significant artifacts, including the bed on which Washington drew his last breath on December 14, 1799, at age 67. With its “public” wing for entertaining and a pri- vate wing isolated from the rest of the home, it also offers a glimpse into the stresses of the war and the presidency and how the Washingtons sought respite at their beloved estate.

Mount Vernon Inn
Mount Vernon Inn Exterior

This comes into broader focus while touring the gardens and farm. Makos describes Washington’s vision to position America as “the granary to the world” and how he sought for Mount Vernon’s farms to function as an agricultural model and a place for experimentation. “He’s innovating on a level you’re not seeing on a lot of similar-sized plantations,” Makos says, detailing elaborate crop rotation methods and strategic planting schemes.

We pass a reconstruction of a unique 16-sided treading barn, a design Washington conceived himself in which the hooves of trotting horses separated wheat berries from stalk, allowing the seeds to fall through gaps in the floor, where they were collected for processing.

Even during the war and later, as president, he kept up a steady stream of letters to Mount Vernon with detailed instructions on crops, labor, and designs for buildings. Like the jars of preserved fruit, these preparations offer a fitting lesson as America looks toward its 250th year and beyond: The past is not something we seal away and forget. Even in the midst of war and in establishing a new country, Washington concerned himself with what came next. What are we fighting for and what will we build? Whether in the rooms of Mount Vernon, at the Smithsonian, on the plate, or in the stories we tell, preservation is an active process—one that asks us to learn from, adapt, and reinterpret what came before in order to cultivate a fruitful future.

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Summer in a Can

The theme of this summer is “reclaiming my time.” It may not be possible in a meeting with a longwinded client or on a long commute in stop-start traffic, or with those hours spent scrolling, but that doesn’t mean the inspiration is out of reach. Among the many ways we like to reclaim our time is with canned beverages (based in the South, of course) that allow us to create restaurant-quality beverages in moments. Here are some of our favorite products for every kind of drink under the sun this summer.

Tip Top Proper Cocktails’ Tequila and Mezcal Variety Six-Pack

Georgia-based Tip Top Proper Cocktails has added a limited release, the Oaxaca old fashioned, a chef-influenced blend of tequila, mezcal, agave nectar, and bitters, to its repertoire. It’s included in their tequila and mezcal variety pack, which includes the classic margarita and the Naked and Famous. Tip Top Proper Cocktails is our pick for bartender-quality cocktails in a can, and this variety pack is a summer essential.

Oaxaca Old Fashioned (TMVP) Credit Jose Pereiro

Louie Louie THC Seltzers

This “good time” seltzer from New Orleans comes in six flavors, and for summer we love the ginger cucumber can for nonalcoholic, alternative sipping. It’s infused with a fast-acting water-soluble delta-9 cannabis, but at only 5 milligrams it’s a gentle, delicious nonalcoholic alternative. Drink on its own, or use in place of alcohol in one of their cocktail recipes.

LL Hat

Wild Blood Coconut Water

This Austin-based brand sustainably sources fresh coconut water from the Bến Tre region of Vietnam, offers employee profit-sharing, and comes in still and sparkling versions that taste incredible by themselves or as a hydrating mixer. Their sparkling can makes a fabulous topper for a fun daiquiri twist with 1 ounce rum (we love Nashville-based Trovador), 1 ounce pineapple juice, and a squeeze of lime.

wild blood coconut water sparkling can front

Twang Flavored Salts, Rimmers, and Mixers

Cocktails, beer, snacks—Twang has our summer party needs covered with flavors inspired by Mexico City and crafted in San Antonio. Try one of their four lime rimming salt options with a margarita or the grapefruit rimming salt with a spicy paloma. Their cucumber chile lime beer salt adds next-level flavor to a Mexican- or pilsner-style lager like Modelo or on paired with your favorite michelada riff, or sprinkle their chile lime flavored salt on top of Vish Bhatt’s watermelon granita.

Twang Lifestyle August GarrettSmith Cropped Sized
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JXN’s Table—Stay Awhile

Hal & Mal's in Jackson MS
Hal & Mal’s

We gather for all sorts of reasons, not just to share a meal. We gather to create, connect, and celebrate. To dance, sing, shout, and let it all out. And sometimes, to sit back, relax, explore, and enjoy. We gather as a means of community. So, when we invite you to JXN’s Table, we’re inviting you to experience something special, something only Jackson has: our people and our sense of place. Jackson’s culinary scene is shared across one table. From longtime institutions like Hal & Mal’s and the Mayflower Cafe to the soulful kitchens of The Pig & Pint and Sugar’s Place, every restaurant contributes to a larger, connected experience that defines the City With Soul.

Step inside the Mayflower Cafe and make your way to a booth. This welcoming cafe can feel like a time-travel flashback (originally opened in 1935, after all). But open the menu of this historic eatery, and you’ll find something entirely fresh with a culinary twist. For lunch, dive into a blue plate special such as the Feta-Brined Fried Chicken, or come for dinner to enjoy local seafood, Greek-inspired classics, and everyone’s favorite—Comeback Sauce.

You’ll find the intersection of Southern and Soul Food smack dab downtown at Sugar’s Place. For breakfast, there’s the sweet and sublime chicken and waffles, the perfect bowl of shrimp and grits, or scratch-made biscuits loaded with egg, sausage, or bacon. For lunch, you may be ready for fried catfish or fried chicken (even after the waffles), or get a mess of wings, with sides like mac & cheese, collard greens (cooked with turkey), candy yams, or fried okra. All good for the soul at Sugar’s.

Thankfully, the picnic tables at The Pig & Pint are very sturdy, since they often hold big, beautiful barbecue feasts. From slow-smoked brisket, pulled pork, and rib plates to ’cue-layered nachos, tacos, and salads, Pig & Pint is a meaty slice of paradise. You might want to start with small plates like Pork Belly Corn Dogs, Fried Boudin Balls, or Pork Rinds and Queso. Signature smoked wings are also on the menu, along with ice-cold beer and beverages.

Pull up a chair or bar stool at Hal & Mal’s, and you’re immediately immersed in iconic JXN sights, sounds, and food. Founded in 1984 by brothers Hal and Malcolm White, Damien and Mary Sanders Cavicchi became the venue’s new owners in 2022— honoring what Hal & Mal’s has always been while opening up to new possibilities. Take the menu: Alongside classics like red beans and rice, tamales, and po’boys are now purple sweet potato gnocchi and Indian butter chicken. Yet, there’s still live blues every Monday, jazz every Tuesday, and the Big Room keeps hosting all the big shows.

Jackson is best defined by experiences, flavor, and community. So come and join us at the table. Wherever you sit, you’re in for something good.

The Pig & Pint in Jackson MS
The Pig & Pint
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Pitmaster Leonard Botello IV Refines Texas Barbecue | Video

At his two locations of TRUTH BBQ in Houston and Brenham, he has built a reputation on pursuing consistency in a craft defined by variables. No two briskets are identical. Wood burns differently each day. Humidity shifts. Airflow changes. Trims are sculpted for uniform cooking; briskets rotate hourly through cavernous steel smokers. The structure is meticulous—yet the outcome is never guaranteed.

“The reality is, there’s no true consistency in barbecue,” says Botello. “But when you obsess over it—taking notes, comparing today to yesterday, finding patterns—you start to learn where you can apply control. I’ve always been drawn to that balance. It’s the way I operate; I need to have control over chaos.”

TRUTH BBQ Pitmaster Leonard Botello IV Image courtesy of Ben Sassani
Image courtesy of Ben Sassani

Botello grew up in Lake Jackson, Texas, on the Gulf Coast, where his parents ran a restaurant and worked long nights and weekends. Seeing the toll hospitality took on his parents, he went to college to study biology rather than follow in their footsteps. But in 2013, after a life-altering day eating at Franklin Barbecue and la Barbecue in Austin, his trajectory shifted, leaving him in awe of the craft.

He immersed himself in learning, drawing inspiration from pitmasters like Aaron Franklin, John Lewis, and Wayne Mueller of Louie Mueller Barbecue. In the early 2010s, before social media tutorials democratized information, knowledge was harder to come by. Botello relied on books, repetition, and trial and error, cooking brisket after brisket to understand how wood, airflow, trim, and time interact. Over time, he developed a philosophy rooted in respect for tradition but grounded in personal authenticity: a belief that great barbecue isn’t about imitation, but refinement.

In 2015, Botello purchased a modest roadside shack in Brenham and opened TRUTH BBQ with his parents. His father joined him on the pits; his mother baked and frosted the towering cakes that quickly became a signature. He drew on family recipes for Southern-inspired sides, including his grandmother’s corn pudding and creamy, crunchy tater tot casserole.

From the beginning, Botello prioritized high-quality sourcing. He works with ranches like 44 Farms and Creekstone and selects Duroc pork for its marbling. He uses brisket trimmings for in-house sausages and keeps seasoning restrained to showcase the protein. He trims briskets for aerodynamic uniformity and rotates meats hourly during long cooks. This attention to detail propelled TRUTH onto the national stage: In 2017, it debuted at No. 10 on Texas Monthly’s Top 50 list; by 2021 it climbed to No. 3. In 2024 and 2025, the restaurant earned MICHELIN Bib Gourmands.

A sprawling Houston location fol- lowed in 2019, now home to seven 1,000-gallon pits and weekend specials like whole hog cooked Carolina-style over direct heat. Dinner service reshaped the restaurant from a traditional sell-out lunch spot into a broader culinary destination.

As the business has been scaled, Botello’s role has shifted. “To grow from a two-table restaurant to what TRUTH is now, I had to shift into a teaching role so we could replicate what I do on a day-to-day basis. That said, teaching is also beneficial for me. It keeps my gears turning. I learn a lot from the people I’m training, and that’s one of the things I enjoy most about it.”

Accolades haven’t diluted Botello’s focus on the craft; they’ve only sharpened his resolve to evolve.

“I’ve always looked at barbecue as an art form,” says Botello. “When you spend more than 10 hours focused on one thing, it becomes more than just cooking. You have to keep sharpening your craft and stay open to learning. People who are great at what they do never stop pushing themselves.”

Try Botello’s Recipes

Tater Tot Casserole

Tater tot casserole recipe image courtesy of Ben Sassani
Image courtesy of Ben Sassani

Smoked Brisket

Smoked Brisket recipe Image courtesy of Ben Sassani
Image courtesy of Ben Sassani
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