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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.

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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
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Columbia Food & Wine Festival 2026

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How St. Andrews Bay Serves Panama City’s Most Unforgettable Bites

In Panama City, the real star of the menu is St. Andrews Bay. It shapes the views, the lifestyle, and most importantly, the flavors. Here, “fresh” isn’t just a selling point—it’s the starting point. Boats glide in with the day’s catch, restaurants craft their menus around the water, and visitors quickly see that the bay is as much an ingredient as the fish itself.

Bayou Joes shrimp panama city, st andrews bay
Bayou Joe’s shrimp dish
Fresh from the Fleet

Your culinary story can begin right on the water’s edge at Tarpon Dock Seafood Market, a beloved institution perched on the bay. Their fleet docks just steps from the storefront, bringing in Gulf shrimp, grouper, oysters, and—when the season hits—coveted stone crab. You can pick up fillets to grill back at your rental or stay for a made-to-order meal from the open-air kitchen, where “simple and fresh” is the whole approach. It’s local, casual, and unforgettable.

Dock-to-Dish Adventures

Want to earn your dinner? Book a Hook and Cook charter with a local captain. After you reel in your catch, visit participating spots like Alice’s on Bayview or Hunt’s Oyster Bar. There, the pros will fillet, season, and cook your fish just the way you like it—blackened, fried, grilled, or all of the above. It’s a true Gulf Coast tradition: your fish, their expertise, and that satisfying “we caught this” moment at the table.

For a taste of local legacy, Captain’s Table Fish House in Historic St. Andrews has been serving the community since 1967. Many of their dishes are made from fish caught by their own boats, showing a commitment to freshness and sustainability that keeps locals and visitors coming back year after year.

Quirky Bites, Craft Brews & Coastal Character

Seafood may be the main attraction, but Panama City’s culinary scene boasts plenty of character-driven co-stars. Follow the Panama City Oyster Trail for briny bites with scenic views, then spice things up with creative tacos under string lights at El Weirdo, a lively, art-filled space where the plates are as colorful as the murals.

End the night at History Class Brewing Company, where craft beers, comfort food, and walls lined with local stories create a sense of place you can taste. Every dish nods to Panama City’s past, turning dinner into a flavorful history lesson.

Seize the Bay, One Bite at a Time

Whether you’re eating at a picnic table over the water, a historic fish house, or a quirky downtown taproom, dining in Panama City celebrates the bay and the people who work there.

Ready to seize the bay? Start planning at DestinationPanamaCity.com.

St Andrews Bay and Panama City food image
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Recipes From Our 2026 Spring Issue

Candied Sweet potatoes

Candied Sweet Potatoes

lemon sliced open Photo by Richard Den on Unsplash
Image courtesy of Richard Den, Unsplash

Preserved Lemons

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Author Jerrelle Guy Shares Cookbooks That Inspired Her Own

With her second cookbook, Jerrelle Guy teaches us how to make the everyday extraordinary. We Fancy: Simple Recipes to Make the Everyday Special (Simon Element), came as part of Guy’s own recovery after hitting an emotional low during and after the pandemic. She used a moment of burnout to pause and examine why she was pushing herself so hard and reframe how she could build a life centered around wellbeing. That started with what she was cooking for herself and finding ways to reignite her love for making herself a meal. “Being fancy is a lifestyle. It is a mindset, a way of interacting with and moving through the world,” she writes. The book is packed with recipes that are meant to bring a bit of whimsy and joy into an everyday meal plan—and nearly all of them are vegetable-forward with very little use of beef, pork, or chicken. The goal of the book, she says, “is to help you generate ideas, trust your intuition, and cook and eat with agency.” We checked in with Guy, who uses her cookbook library with intention, before her book’s launch to learn more about this latest project and which cookbooks have inspired her along the way.

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50 Years of Dining and Unwinding, Kiawah-Style

Since 1976, Kiawah Island Golf Resort has served unforgettable flavors along ten miles of striking South Carolina shoreline. Today, The Kiawah Island Dining Collection includes sixteen distinct experiences, from sunrise breakfasts by the sea to oyster roasts under the stars—highlighted by the state’s only Forbes Five-Star restaurant, The Ocean Room at The Sanctuary. 

A little less buttoned up, but just as delightful, the resort’s casual options deliver genuine Lowcountry flavor with a side of socializing and fun. These laid-back eateries invite guests to indulge in poolside bites, evening cocktails or specialty milkshakes with ocean views in a relaxed, easygoing atmosphere.

Gourmet Meets Grilled
Beaches Cream dessert drink at Kiawah Island Golf Resort
Magic Milkshake, Beaches & Cream at The Sanctuary

Helmed by Chef de Cuisine Joe Howell, a North Augusta native, The Loggerhead Bar & Grill is an island favorite. Expect gourmet with a tropical twist—sandwiches, grilled burgers, and fresh salads paired with frozen drinks or cocktails overlooking The Sanctuary pool and The Atlantic Ocean. For a dish that’s pure delish, opt for the signature Blackened Mahi Mahi Tacos with tangy salsa, sweet-and-sour slaw, fresh cilantro, and a squeeze of lime. 

Dive into Flavor Poolside

Families need not venture far from splish-splashing for appetizing fare and frosty drinks at Night Heron Grill & Bar. Savor starters ranging from quesadillas to nachos, followed by mains like smash burgers, tacos, and wraps. Little ones will appreciate selections created just for them on the ‘Kids Corner’ menu, along with refreshing smoothies to cool off between swims.  

The West Beach Cantina is the property’s poolside go-to for Mexican fare and margaritas. Authentic, bold flavors shine throughout, with gluten-free, vegetarian, and vegan options to satisfy every palate. From tasty guacamole to fresh-caught seafood and a variety of sides, each menu item is a delicious way to reel in the island vibe. 

Great Taste, Your Pace

The Nest Market | Café, nestled in the heart of Night Heron Park, is beloved for its all-day bakery menu, full breakfast options, charcuterie, soups, sandwiches, and specialties including braised beef and creamy pesto chicken gnocchi. On-site dining is available indoors or on the sprawling, oak-shaded porch. Grab-and-go options keep things a breeze on busy days.

Pub to Play

All-new for 2026, The Perch will bring even more fun and fare to the resort’s newest spot in Night Heron Park to dine, laugh, and linger—The Treehouse Activity Center. After fueling up on pizza and other satisfying bites, guests can roll into a game of bowling, tee off on a golf simulator, or spark a little friendly competition with Skee-ball, shuffleboard, and other crowd-pleasing arcade games.

Magically Sweet and More

At Kiawah Island Golf Resort, there’s always room for dessert! Locally produced all-natural favorite, Wholly Cow Ice Cream, plays a starring role in the specialty Magic Milkshakes served at Beaches & Cream. Enjoy yours piled high with a decadent smorgasbord of hand-made sweets from the pastry team—or opt for an adults-only version prepared with a splash of alcohol. Look for new seasonal milkshakes introduced throughout the year.

For additional low-key dining experiences, visit The Ryder Cup Bar, Tomasso, Cherrywood BBQ & Ale House, The Players’ Pub, and Signature Gourmet Coffee Shop. Beyond the table, Kiawah Island Golf Resort offers five championship golf courses, including The Ocean Course, racquet sports, plus stays at Resort Villas and Homes or The Sanctuary. 

The Nest at Kiawah Island Golf Resort
The Nest Market | Café, Kiawah Island Golf Resort
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A Brief History of the Kolache

In August 2014, in the early afternoon hours in a monastery courtyard in Prague, my husband and I had just gotten married and were participating in a postceremony reception with family and friends. As per Czech tradition, boxes of small homemade koláče were passed around to guests: small round yeast-dough pastries filled with poppyseed paste, quark (a mild, creamy, German-style cheese), or prune jam.

Halfway across the world in Texas, seven hours behind the Czech Republic, numerous bakeries and larger production facilities were preparing their own versions of kolaches to be consumed by enthusiastic customers. Some pastries were filled with poppyseed and prunes, but others featured pineapple compote, pumpkin pie filling, or dulce de leche.

Chef Mary Bass of Good Dough making kolaches
Chef Mary Bass of Good Dough, Image courtesy of Caroline Fontenot

I’ve always been fascinated with this simple baked good that is beloved in two rather different parts of the world: the Czech Republic and Texas. Koláčtypically written out as kolache [ku-LAH-chee] in the United States, is a staple Czech pastry. In theory, the word itself can refer to numerous types of cakes in the Czech language. Karel Bajer, the owner of Koláčové království bakery in Prague, points out that “what you call Texas kolaches are more commonly known as wedding koláče [in the Czech Republic],” or koláčky: shaped like a circle, small enough to be held in one’s hand, with sweet filling in the center.

As a result, Texans returning to the motherland to try a kolache in the Czech Republic may be in for some surprises. “We use only fine flour (hladká mouka),” says Oscar Novak, owner of Kolacherie in Prague, my husband’s hometown. “It is very similar to the Italian style used for pizza. The fine flour is essential for the type of dough we use—it is basically a brioche dough: fine and fluffy.”

Yeast is another nuance. “In our bakery we use only fresh yeast as it works better and doesn’t need reviving,” Novak says. “A lot of households would use the fresh one, too, since it is easily available in grocery stores.” This generally isn’t the case in Texas, where most home bakers and commercial bakers utilize dry yeast for kolache dough. Fresh yeast, which re- quires refrigeration before use, can often be harder to come by in the American South than in Central Europe. Additionally, Novak observes, “the Texan version [of kolache] is more of a doughnut style of dough as opposed to our brioche style.” Both Texans and contemporary Czechs tend to find Texan kolaches sweeter and denser, while the Czech versions are less sweet and fluffier.

This unassuming but versatile pastry was introduced to Texas by way of immigration. Czech immigration to the state primarily began when Texas was granted statehood in 1845. The initial immigrants were mostly farmers attracted by the prospect of bigger farm holdings in Texas.


Four Must-Visit Kolache Festivals in Texas

Hallettsville Kolache Fest

Last Saturday every September in Halletsville, Texas

Caldwell Kolache Festival

Second Saturday every September in Caldwell, Texas

East Bernard Kolache-Klobase Festival

Every June in East Bernard, Texas

Westfest

Labor Day weekend in West, Texas


“The majority of Czechs that settled in this part of Texas [Fayette County and surroundings] were from the Moravian region. Fayette County was once 80 percent Czech,” says Mark Hermes, the manager of the Texas Czech Heritage and Cultural Center in La Grange. “Families had to live together and try to provide for each other on a single farm, or chance the trip to Texas and eventually own their own land.” In my Czech husband’s family, some of his ancestors immigrated to the United States for economic reasons, hoping to find better opportunities to earn income and own property.

bacon and maple syrup kolache from Good Dough
Bacon and maple syrup kolache from Good Dough, Image courtesy of Caroline Fontenot

Like many other immigrant groups in the United States, Czech communities in Texas continued to cook up their beloved culinary traditions, such as the beef dish svíčková—beef sirloin in a creamy sauce served with vegetables. Over the years, though, the kolache in particular became the most well-known Czech Texan foodstuff. Numerous Texans without any personal connections to the Czech Republic seek out kolaches at bakeries or make them at home for celebrations. I have memories from some of my childhood visits to family members living in Texas of visiting kolache bakeries and picking out a fruit-filled delight.

Why, exactly, did this particular doughy treat become such an iconic staple of the Texan food scene?

Dawn Orsak, a culinary historian with expertise in Czech Texan cuisine, shares her perspective: “In my opinion, kolaches have survived 150 years in Texas because they easily adapted to the ingredients available in Texas, they were a source of ethnic pride for Texas Czech women to make, and they were origi- nally a food made for special occasions or gatherings, so cooks deliberately preserved their recipes and techniques for their descendants.” Additionally, the fact that they can be made in large batches makes them much less prohibitive in terms of ingredient costs and time than labor-intensive desserts like medovnik (Czech honey layer cake) or palačinky (thin crepes). My mother- in-law’s Czech Christmas cookies, particularly the beehive-shaped včelí úly filled with rum custard, can take hours to prepare. Those types of baked goods make for lovely family treats but are hard to replicate on a large scale.

Mass production of kolaches starting in the mid-20th century also played a role in sparking Texans’ interests and taste for the pastry, as they became available in supermarkets or through online ordering. “Like any Texans, Texas Czechs were influenced in their cooking by nationwide food trends and fads, by what their children wanted to eat, and by the need for conveniences to help relieve the time pressures of busy lives,” Orsak says. Bakeries throughout the state started to produce kolaches for customers, and at a certain point, so did factories in Texas. Many of the bakeries across the state that specialize in kolaches are concentrated in locations that traditionally had high Czech immigrant populations, such as Austin County, but they can also be found in major cities. My own memories of getting kolaches are all based in Arlington and Dallas. One can even own a kolache franchise in Texas.


Where to Find Kolaches in Texas and the Czech Republic

Gerik’s Ole Czech Bakery and Deli

511 W. Oak St., West, Texas

Kenner’s Kolache Bakery

2812 S. Cooper St., Arlington, Texas

Good Dough

1506 39th St., Galveston, Texas

Kolacherie

Celetná 27, Prague 1, Czech Republic


As these bakeries spread, factories expanded production, and Texans discovered their love for the kolache, homegrown variations started to appear more frequently at home and commercially. According to culinary historian and food blogger Melissa Guerra, “Adaptation is the first thing a recipe undergoes in a new space. Can you find the same ingredients and reproduce the exact flavor you remember? Probably not. In a new land, even the taste of water is different.”

original photo streusel topped fruit kolache from Good Dough
Streusel-topped fruit kolache at Good Dough, Image courtesy of Caroline Fontenot

Chef Mary Bass of Good Dough in Galveston, Texas, shares that her most popular self-invented kolache, the Lumberjack, “is an open-faced kolache filled with sage sausage, bacon, and maple syrup.” While these ingredients are not part of contemporary Czech cuisine, they are certainly beloved in Texas. Bryan Anderson, owner of Gerik’s Ole Czech Bakery & Deli in West, Texas, also features some nontraditional kolache flavors with more of a Texan twist at his bakery: Texas pecan pie, Texas praline, turtle cheesecake, and (quite possibly one of the most quintessential Texan fillings ever) Big Red float.

Another Texan twist is the kolache festival. These annual celebrations pay homage to Texan Czechs and their heritage, drawing in visitors from all over the state and beyond. Reminiscent of American state fairs, kolache festivals feature relevant competitions, such as a kolache eating contest as well as a kolache baking competition at the Hallettsville Kolache Fest.

Czech pride is on full display at these festivals, with polka bands, folk dance ensembles, and parades. Jennifer Hagan, executive director of the Hallettsville Chamber of Commerce and Agriculture, reports that the estimated attendance in the festival’s inaugural year of 1995 was around 6,000 attendees with an impressive 4,000 kolaches baked for the occasion; it currently attracts up to 10,000 visitors annually. These festivals also play a role in bringing in new converts to kolache deliciousness.

At the end of the day, food and memory are a poignant duo, even in a pastry as deceptively simple as a kolache. Whenever I bite into one, I can’t help but be transported back to the joy and magic of my wedding day, and the happiness that these little baked goods contain for me.

Novak agrees. Regarding his customers who are visiting Prague from the United States, he says: “For a lot of them it is very nostalgic to taste the same thing in Prague after their grandma or mom passed away and it reminds them of their childhood. [Those are] the most touching moments in my store—some of them get very emotional.”

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Meet a South Carolina Local: Chris Williams

For Chris Williams, chef-owner of Roy’s Grille in Irmo, South Carolina, community is key. He grew up in Olar, a rural town on the edge of the Lowcountry, before moving to the Midlands as a kid. The chef celebrates his South Carolina and Gullah Geechee roots at events like Taste of Lake Murray and Columbia Food & Wine Festival, and will compete this fall in the World Food Championships in Indianapolis. We chatted with Williams, a2022 South Carolina Chef Ambassador, about food, culture, and community.

South Carolina local Chris Williams cooking by Demi Henderson King and Columbus
Image courtesy of Demi Henderson King and Columbus

The Local Palate: Tell us about your community and how it influences your food.

Chris Williams: To me, [community] means everything. It’s who you are. It shapes and it moves your being. And that permeates and comes out through the food—whether it be local farmers or produce growers in the community [whose] products I’m using to cook with, or just talking to the elders in the community and getting inspiration about older recipes, older heirloom grains that are harder to find.

The dishes that I cook now have a historical undertone, like my collard greens, my mac and cheese, my green beans. It’s just a part of my upbringing. The cobblers that I do when the holidays come around, the sweet potato pies that I make—a lot of my meals have to do with how I grew up and how I was raised. The barbecue sauces that I make, the barbecue that I do, all of those are reminders of who I am, where I come from, and the people who did it before me.

A lot of the things that I do are community-based and -oriented, because it’s my community that feeds me, and it’s because of those people that you guys know who I am.

TLP: What led you into this career path?

Chris Williams: I’ve always had a love for food. My grandmother was an excellent cook. My grandfather was a handyman/farmer/ your favorite man’s favorite man. So, he would grow the crops and grow the animals. We’d harvest them, and then I’d go on inside with my grandmother and learn how to cook these different cuts of meats and these different vegetables, and how to just make things taste good.

TLP: Do you source locally for the restaurant?

Chris Williams: I’m a member of the Certified SC program. So the majority of my produce, meats, and things that I cook with are locally sourced, whether it be here in Columbia or in South Carolina, too. In order to be a chef ambassador, I had to be a part of that program. In order to be a part of that program, your ingredients have to be local. I know a lot of the people personally that I get my stuff from.

TLP: What does being a South Carolina Chef Ambassador mean to you?

Chris Williams: It’s a sort of validation that, hey, we see you, we know what you’re doing. It’s not going unnoticed. We see things that you’re doing in your community. We see the things that you’re doing as a chef. Then we just see who you are as a person. It means I get to represent myself, my company, my brand, my ancestors in the state of South Carolina, everywhere I go. I’ve been able to travel the world. My confidence, a lot of it’s been directly tied to the ambassadorship. I wouldn’t have gotten the ambassadorship if I wasn’t who I am, but I’m still not oblivious to the doors that the ambassadorship has opened for me.

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Charleston Wine + Food Presents Street Eats: The Charleston Edition

Taste Charleston and beyond like never before! This one-of-a-kind event celebrates the evolution and expansion of the Charleston’s food community over the past 20 years—stretching from the historic peninsula to neighborhoods like James Island, Sullivan’s Island, Park Circle, Hanahan, West Ashley, and more, each now defined by the unique culinary scene thriving there.

Street Eats: The Charleston Edition brings together the chefs, bars, restaurants, and food trucks that make each area special, along with a few out-of-town friends, for a night of unforgettable bites, drinks, and community spirit. Stroll, sip, and savor your way through the region’s hidden corners and culinary highlights, experiencing the flavors and creativity that have transformed Charleston and its surrounding neighborhoods into a culinary destination.

As part of our 20th anniversary celebration, this event tells the story of community growth, collaboration, and the people who have built the Lowcountry’s vibrant food scene—one neighborhood at a time.

Learn more and get tickets at chswf.org, linked here: chswf.org/events/street-eats-the-charleston-edition/

margaritas at Street Eats Charleston edition for Charleston Wine + Food