Travel

Eight Food and Drink Festivals with Uniquely Southern Spirit

…from beignets in New Orleans to chicken gizzards in Georgia
A trio of photos. From left to right, an empty glass, hands holding a beignet, and shrimp and grits

Photo: (1) COURTESY OF CORKDORKS WINE SPIRITS BEER, (2) COURTESY OF BEIGNET FEST FOUNDATION, (3) Courtesy of Adobe

Just about every town in America welcomes the fall season with a jubilant festival. But pumpkin picking, apple bobbing, and cider drinking aren’t necessarily on the menu at these uniquely Southern affairs. 

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BBQ on the Block

October 4, St. Simons Island, Georgia

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On the first Saturday evening of October, St. Simons’ Mallery Street will be lined with festival goers enjoying food trucks, barbecue, and bluegrass. While admission is free, all proceeds from event vendors, which include noted Lowcountry barbecue joints and craft distilleries, go directly to helping the local food and beverage community during emergencies.


Nashville Whiskey Festival & Battle of the Spirits

October 11, Nashville

An empty glass on a table top
Photo: Courtesy of Corkdorks Wine Spirits Beer

This year’s one-day whiskey fest offers well-loved liquor tastings, hors d’oeuvres, custom barrel bottling, and educational panels. The grand testing will bring in more than 100 spirits to sample—so attendees would be wise to follow festival advice: Eat a meal, use the spit buckets, and do not pregame.


Delta Hot Tamale Festival

October 17–18, Greenville, Mississippi

There’s some debate as to whether the hot tamale originated with Native Americans, migrant workers, or Italians who made their way down the river, but the dish has certainly become a part of Mississippi Delta heritage. This three-day, music-filled celebration brings in Southern chefs and authors to share hot tamale history, host panel discussions, and of course, cook. 


46th Annual Bog-Off Festival

October 18, Loris, South Carolina

A large pot filled with chicken bog.
Photo: Courtesy of Loris Chamber of Commerce

In 1980, a small group of Loris community members came together for a cooking contest to celebrate the town’s signature dish: chicken bog, a one-pot Lowcountry classic made with rice, chicken, sausage, and spices. Since that intimate gathering, bog cookers from across the state have convened every year to enter their best batch for the People’s Choice Award.


Jekyll Island Shrimp & Grits Festival

October 24–25, Jekyll Island, Georgia

A man in stilts and a shrimp costume.
Photo: Courtesy of Jekyll Island Authority

Held in Jekyll’s National Historic Landmark District, this free, family-friendly tradition brings in local artists, live music, Friday night fireworks, and of course, fresh Georgia crustaceans. Vendors will cook up your accompanying grits the traditional way, in cake form, or with some kick.


National Peanut Festival

October 31–November 9, Dothan, Alabama

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At the first National Peanut Festival in 1938, the guest speaker was none other than the father of the peanut industry himself, George Washington Carver. In the decades since, traditions of a Miss Peanut pageant, a thirty-foot-tall peanut statue, live music, and an abundance of legumes have held strong in Dothan.


Broxton Chicken Livers & Gizzards Festival

November 1, Broxton, Georgia

A man sitting atop a vintage red tractor.
Photo: Courtesy of Broxton Chicken Livers and Gizzards Festival

Twelve years ago, the city of Broxton launched a celebration to shed light on the local poultry industry while standing out from Georgia’s other chicken-themed festivals. Since then, the event’s antique tractor parade has evolved into a much-anticipated pastime. Don’t worry if you’re not big on strangely named chicken parts—plenty of vendors serve up other dining options. 


Beignet Fest

November 15, New Orleans

A vendor prepping at the Beignet Fest in New Orleans.
Photo: Courtesy of Beignet Fest Foundation

When Beignet Fest founder Sherwood Collins discovered there wasn’t an official celebration to honor New Orleans’ signature sweet, he got straight to work. A decade later, the one-day celebration held in scenic City Park welcomes both well-known eateries and smaller businesses to show off their versions of the beignet, which range in flavor from bananas foster to crabmeat. 


Liv Reilly, a 2024 intern at Garden & Gun, grew up in Lake Norman, North Carolina, and graduated from UNC-Chapel Hill.


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