Travel The South's Best The 23 Best Local Treasures In Every Southern State By Lisa Cericola Lisa Cericola Lisa Cericola has been on staff at Southern Living since 2015. As Deputy Editor, Lisa manages the food and travel departments and edits those sections of each issue, as well as digital content. Previously, she was the features editor at Food Network Magazine and has more than 15 years of experience writing, editing, and managing photo shoots for print and digital lifestyle brands. Southern Living's editorial guidelines Updated on March 6, 2024 Close Photo: Visit Montgomery Some places can immediately make you think of your hometown. Maybe it’s your favorite barbecue joint or an off-the-beaten-path trail that offers stunning views of a secret waterfall. It could be a live music venue where the shows are electric, and history is carved right into the walls. It might even be a seafood restaurant that your family returns to year after year on your annual vacation on the coast. The South is a treasure trove of authentic locales that each offer an experience you can only have there. From dining on the best regional delicacies (like a Hot Brown in Kentucky or a Cuban sandwich in Florida) to listening to live music in legendary venues that range from beachfront dive bars to historic theaters, these local spots have become classics for a reason. We asked our readers to tell us all their favorite spots in the states they call home, and they delivered with insider tips, endless personal anecdotes, and raving reviews for the places they simply can’t get enough of. Keep reading to uncover 23 local treasures, from lighthouses in North Carolina to margarita bars in Texas, that you can’t leave the South without visiting. South's Best Voting Process An online survey was conducted by third-party agency Proof Insights among Southern Living consumers, asking them to rate their favorite places across the South for the South's Best Awards 2024. The survey was fielded from July 12 to August 23, 2023, and had over 20,000 respondents. 01 of 23 Alabama’s Best Banana Pudding Courtesy of Dreamland Barbecue Dreamland Bar-B-Que Multiple locations Best known for their slow-cooked, hickory-smoked ribs, this favorite barbecue joint (which started as a singular café in Tuscaloosa in 1958) has spawned into 11 locations across Alabama, Georgia, and Florida. Though expertly prepared pork is the restaurant’s specialty, one of their three best-selling menu items is vegetarian. Dreamland’s banana pudding came out on top of our reader voted poll for Alabama’s best banana pudding. CEO Betsy McAtee says one of the secrets to the restaurant’s recipe is swapping Nabisco Nilla Wafers for vanilla wafers from local brand Bud’s Best Cookies. dreamlandbbq.com Read More 02 of 23 Alabama’s Best Dive Bar The Flora-Bama Orange Beach Don’t let the official address fool you (it’s technically in Florida), Alabamians have laid claim to this iconic dive bar known for live music, fresh oysters, and boozy, milkshake-like Bushwackers since it opened on the Alabama-Florida state line in 1964. It’s hard not to have a good time here. There’s white sand between the floorboards, permanent-marker-penned love notes on the walls, and a clothesline of ladies’ unmentionables strung above the dance floor (this is a dive bar, after all). Kids can enjoy the scenery ‘til 5:30 p.m., and everybody else can hang around until they close at 2:30 a.m. On Sunday mornings, you can come back for church at 9 or 11. At the Flora-Bama, everybody’s welcome, and for many folks, their first pilgrimage to this sprawling shack on the beach begets a second one—and maybe a hundred more after that. florabama.com; 17401 Perdido Key Dr., Perdido Key, FL 32507; 251-980-5118 Read More 03 of 23 Arkansas’s Best Scenic Trail Arkansas Tourism Buffalo River Trail Ponca Many scenic trail systems wind through Arkansas, but only one follows America’s First National River. The Buffalo River Trail, which begins in Ponca, accompanies the namesake waterway as it courses through 135 free-flowing miles of rich Ozark wilderness. Established in 1972, the Buffalo’s National River designation has helped to preserve its pristine natural surroundings and protect its undammed watershed. nps.gov/thingstodo/hike-the-buffalo-river-trail.htm Read More 04 of 23 Florida’s Best Cuban Sandwich Columbia Restaurant The Columbia Tampa It began in 1905 as a humble saloon where trolley conductors and cigar factory workers ducked in for a slurp of strong coffee. Today, Tampa’s Columbia Restaurant is Florida’s largest eating establishment with seating for 1,700 people. Hardly anyone makes a visit to The Columbia without ordering a Cuban sandwich. Their version is set apart by a few superior ingredients: glazed ham with subtle sweetness, pork shoulder instead of pork loin, and perfect bread made locally at La Segunda Central Bakery. columbiarestaurant.com; 2117 E 7th Ave., Tampa, FL 33605; 813-248-4961 Columbia Restaurant Voted Florida's Best Cuban Sandwich 05 of 23 Florida’s Best Snorkeling Spot Christ of the Abyss Statue, John Pennekamp Park, Key Largo, Florida. Image Source/Getty John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park Key Largo Established in 1963 as the United States’ first undersea park, this unique state park offers a firsthand glimpse of Florida’s Coral Reef, a 350-mile coral reef system that runs from the Dry Tortugas to St. Lucie on the Atlantic coast. For 70 nautical miles around Key Largo, marine life and habitats can be seen in several ways: snorkeling and scuba diving lessons and tours, glass-bottom boat tours, and canoeing, kayaking, and paddleboarding trails. On land, boardwalks and paths meander through mangroves and tropical hardwood forests, and the visitor center holds six saltwater aquariums for more up-close views. pennekamppark.com; 102601 Overseas Highway, Key Largo, FL 33037; 305-451-6300 Read More 06 of 23 Georgia’s Best Live Music Venue Georgia Tourism and Travel Fox Theatre Atlanta “The Fabulous Fox,” as the locals call it, possesses a grandeur and mystery that captures the hearts and minds of any visitor. It is a stunning example of 1920s Moorish Revival architecture that was originally designed to serve as a Yaarab Shriners temple, but in a fateful turn of events, the money ran dry. The 4,665-seat auditorium was purchased and completed by the Fox Theatre Company to convert it into one of the most distinctive theaters of all time. There are decades of music history seeping from the ornate walls of the near-100-year-old theater, and that’s perhaps what has kept it so beloved in the hearts of Georgia’s music lovers. foxtheatre.org; 660 Peachtree Street NE, Atlanta, GA 30308; 885-285-8499 Read More 07 of 23 Kentucky’s Best Hot Brown The Brown Hotel J. Graham’s Café at The Brown Hotel Louisville Sit down to eat in a Kentucky restaurant—whether upscale or country casual—and there’s a good chance there will be a Hot Brown on the menu. The open-faced turkey sandwich, traditionally served warm on a thick slice of toast with bacon, tomatoes, and Mornay sauce, is a headliner on the Bluegrass State’s long list of culinary contributions. For the true original, you’ll have to head to J. Graham’s Café at The Brown Hotel, where the dish was born. There, chef de cuisine Arkan Bajalani is a caretaker of the historic recipe, a responsibility he takes seriously. As the Hot Brown approaches its centennial, its enduring popularity can be chalked up to its time-tested recipe and the staff’s refusal to go on autopilot, even when creating hundreds of the sandwiches daily. brownhotel.com/dining/j-grahams-cafe; 335 West Broadway, Louisville, KY 40202; 888-888-5252 Read More 08 of 23 Louisiana’s Best Gumbo Photo: Robbie Caponetto Dooky Chase’s Restaurant New Orleans Gumbo recipes are a dime a dozen in Louisiana. But none are as sought after as the legendary gumbo z’herbes at Dooky Chase’s Restaurant in New Orleans. The restaurant is busy year-round, but on the Thursday before Easter Sunday lines stretch down the sidewalk. It’s the only time of the year (known by Catholics as Holy Thursday) that the restaurant serves its special green gumbo, as it has done since the late chef-owner Leah Chase started the tradition in 1973. Her grandson Edgar “Dook” Chase has taken the mantle in the kitchen, along with other family members who keep the place running up to Leah’s standards. dookychaserestaurants.com; 2301 Orleans Avenue, New Orleans, LA 70119; 504-821-0600 or 504-821-0535 Read More 09 of 23 Louisiana’s Best Jazz Club Cedric Angeles Preservation Hall New Orleans There aren’t many places in New Orleans’s French Quarter that don’t sell alcohol and still draw a packed house. Preservation Hall has been doing just that since 1961, attracting tourists (and yes, locals, too) 360 nights a year to hear live jazz by some of the city’s best—and oldest—musicians. But this New Orleans institution isn’t frozen in the past. A major expansion is underway, with plans to add an 8,000-square foot theater, additional performance spaces, and more. There’s no doubt this jazz club will be rocking and rolling for many years to come. preservationhall.com; 726 Saint Peter Street, New Orleans, LA 70116; 504-522-2841 10 of 23 Maryland’s Best Public Garden Visit Montgomery Brookside Gardens Wheaton You could spend sunrise to sundown (coincidentally the park’s open hours) exploring this 50-acre garden wonderland and still not see it all. In spring, the Trial Garden bursts with 10,000 flowering bulbs. The Azalea Garden holds more than 300 species of the popular plant, and the Aquatic Garden is a great place to spot water-loving plants growing alongside two ponds. Traverse the Woodland Walk where an elevated boardwalk creates a great viewing platform to see 124 species of native Maryland plants. A stroll in the garden has never been lovelier. montgomeryparks.org/parks-and-trails/brookside-gardens; 1800 Glenallan Ave, Wheaton, MD 20902; 301-962-1400 11 of 23 Maryland’s Best Crab Cakes The Crab Claw St. Michaels Crabs are the official state food of Maryland, but crab cakes are what really have people talking. At the Crab Claw, a no-frills waterfront seafood shack on the Eastern Shore, the crab cakes come broiled or fried (your choice), but are always packed with blue crab meat and little else. This family-owned spot started out as a clam and oyster shucking house in the 1950s, and eventually became a restaurant 1965. Note: The restaurant is open seasonally from March through October, so don’t plan your trip for colder months. thecrabclaw.com; 304 Burns Street, St. Michaels, MD 21663; 410-745-2900 12 of 23 Mississippi’s Best Blues Venue Ground Zero Blues Club Clarksdale If it’s a Saturday night in Clarksdale–or a Wednesday, Thursday, or Friday night for that matter–there’s only one place to be, and it’s Ground Zero Blues Club. Inside a former cotton grading warehouse, where the walls are plastered with old concert posters and heavily graffitied with Sharpie signatures, the audience is buzzing with anticipation for the night’s show. Waitresses deliver baskets of hot tamales, catfish, and fried green tomatoes to tables cramped with mismatched chairs and people as diverse as the world flags hanging overhead. Music lovers–young and old, local and visiting from all over the globe–have converged in this corner of Mississippi to hear the blues in the place it was born. Fun fact: The joint is co-owned by Academy Award-winning actor, native Mississippian, and blues lover Morgan Freeman. groundzerobluesclub.com; 387 Delta Avenue, Clarksdale, MS 38614; 662-621-9009 Read More 13 of 23 North Carolina’s Best Lighthouse Courtesy The Outer Banks of North Carolina Cape Hatteras Lighthouse Buxton Close your eyes and imagine a lighthouse. If you picture a conical brick tower wrapped in black-and-white candy cane striping that’s set against a backdrop of gently blowing sea oats and waves lapping onto a sandy beach, then you’ve probably got Cape Hatteras in mind. One of seven remaining lighthouses that dot the North Carolina coast from Brunswick to the Outer Banks, Cape Hatteras is the tallest and most recognizable of all. In fact, at 198 feet from ground to lightning rod, it is the tallest one in the country. The lighthouse is currently undergoing renovations, so you can’t trek the 257 steps to the top just now, but when it reopens the views will prove to be just as stunning as they ever were. nps.gov/caha/planyourvisit/chls.htm; 46379 Lighthouse Road, Buxton, NC 27920 14 of 23 North Carolina’s Best Diner Angie Mosier / Visit Raleigh Poole’s Diner Raleigh Diners often feel frozen in time, and while Poole’s has the retro chrome edging, and red artificial leather stools and booths, you won’t find anyone in old-school waitress uniforms. Instead, tattooed servers shuffle around under dim lighting to a Phoebe Bridgers soundtrack. They’re happy to walk you through the long list of craft beers, or decipher the menu handwritten in chalk above the door. Chef and owner Ashley Christensen serves up thoughtfully modern takes on comfort food, be it roast chicken or potato salad. There’s not a speck of iceberg lettuce or a sticky Heinz bottle in sight. If you go, the Macaroni Au Gratin is a must. ac-restaurants.com/pooles; 426 S. McDowell Street, Raleigh, NC 27601; 919-832-4477 Read More 15 of 23 Oklahoma’s Best Chicken Fried Steak Courtesy of Cattlemen's Cattlemen’s Steakhouse Oklahoma City The picture-perfect cowman’s paradise of Stockyards City is true to its stripes—and nowhere is this more evident than in Cattlemen’s Steakhouse. While the restaurant is known for its aged and charcoal-grilled steaks, another regional classic is perfected here. Chicken-fried steak became a part of Oklahoma’s state meal in 1988, and the version they make at Cattlemen’s is worthy of that revered status. Most chicken-fried steaks feature beef that has been pounded into a hamburger-like consistency, but at Cattlemen’s the meat is tender while retaining its texture, more akin to filet than ground meat. It’s coated with a light, flour-based breading and fried to crisp, almost flaky excellence. The special seasoning kicks it up a notch, and in an ingenious move, the peppery cream gravy is served underneath the steak, preventing any trace of sogginess from compromising the breading before you scarf it all down. cattlemensrestaurant.com; 309 S. Agnew, Oklahoma City, OK 73108; 405-236-0416 Read More 16 of 23 South Carolina’s Best Shrimp and Grits Courtesy of Soby's Soby’s Greenville Soby’s, a modern Southern restaurant in the heart of downtown Greenville, has been paving the way for the city’s culinary revolution since 1997. Like its ever-growing hometown, Soby’s shrimp and grits recipe is constantly evolving. Over the years, it has appeared on the menu in five distinct versions, each reflecting the personal taste of the chef at the helm of the operation, but all offering something new to love. Past iterations have been done in the style of New Orleans barbecue shrimp and included pairings like kiwi and Watauga County ham. Chef Kyle Swarzendruber’s version, which has been on the menu since 2022, features a cream-based sauce flavored with piquillo peppers, tarragon, Grana Padano, and Andouille sausage. No matter what form Soby’s shrimp and grits takes on, South Carolinian’s agree: It’s more than worth ordering. sobys.com; 207 South Main Street, Greenville, SC 29601; 864.232.7007 17 of 23 South Carolina’s Best Island Rachid Dahnoun / Getty Images Hilton Head Island Hilton Head’s tenure as a beloved Southern vacation destination dates to 1956 when Charles Fraser, whose family owned much of the island, sparked the creation of the area’s first resort called Sea Pines Plantation. The same year, Hilton Head became connected to the mainland via a bridge, and a steady stream of visitors–and now 40,000 locals–have been shuttling to the offshore oasis ever since. For all the pomp and circumstance surrounding Hilton Head as a bustling resort town and world-class golfing destination, at its core, the island is still the same wild escape it’s always been. And it’s that authentic spirit that has kept it so revered among generations of Southern vacationers. Read More 18 of 23 Tennessee’s Best Attraction Dollywood Pigeon Forge Since opening in 1986, Dollywood has evolved with the times as much as the country star herself. What started as a small-scale park with a restaurant, a handful of rides, and a replica of her Tennessee Mountain Home, is now the state’s most visited attraction. In May, The Dolly Parton Experience will open with an interactive museum, a “Behind the Seams” exhibit of her wardrobe, DreamSong Theater, and a retired tour bus. Like the star who has transcended country music to be loved by people from all over the world, Dollywood has that special something, which means an already-fun amusement park has achieved legendary status like Ms. Parton herself. dollywood.com; 2700 Dollywood Parks Blvd., Pigeon Forge, TN 37863; 1-800-DOLLYWOOD Read More 19 of 23 Tennessee’s Best Music Venue The Grand Ole Opry in Nashville, TN. Frederick Breedon IV / Stringer/Getty Images Grand Ole Opry Nashville The program known today as the Grand Ole Opry got its start in 1925 when National Life and Accident Insurance Company flipped the switch on a new Nashville radio station. It began hosting the “WSM Barn Dance” radio program which, in 1927, was re-named the “Grand Ole Opry.” Though the show has been hosted in different locations over the years, it has made its home in the custom 4,400-seat Grand Ole Opry House since 1974. Today, it hosts a big schedule of concerts featuring artists such as Keith Urban, Darius Rucker, and Old Crow Medicine Show, as well as the annual Country Music Association Awards and special programming honoring members of the Opry family. The faces and voices singing the tunes may change, but the Grand Ole Opry always lives on. opry.com; 600 Opry Mills Drive, Nashville, TN 37214; 615-871-6779 Read More 20 of 23 Texas’s Best Margarita Joe T. Garcias Joe T. Garcia’s Fort Worth This Fort Worth institution’s lushly landscaped gardens have seating capacity for up to 1,000 diners, and on balmy nights, they easily meet that quota. People order huge plates of Tex-Mex, but they’re just an accessory to the main attraction: Joe T. Garcia’s illustrious margaritas. Behind the colorfully tiled bar, hundreds of margaritas are rimmed with salt and sent out at lightning speed. The house drink has a famously potent reputation, but the restaurant’s other citrus-laced renditions are just as tantalizing. Have one any way you’d like, from infused with sweet strawberry to refreshingly frozen. You can order it skinny or top shelf. They’ll even bring you a pitcher while you queue for a table. These aren’t the wishy-washy, watered-down limeades of your neighborhood chain. These are the real deal. joetgarcias.com; 2201 N Commerce Street, Fort Worth, TX 76164; 817-626-4356 Read More 21 of 23 Virginia’s Best Historic Site L. Toshio Kishiyama / Getty Images Colonial Williamsburg Colonial Williamsburg Colonial Williamsburg is regarded as the "Oldest Living History Museum" in the U.S. Founded as the capital of the Virginia colony in 1699, colonial history has been painstakingly preserved here. While Virginia is full of historic places and landmarks that together tell the story of our nation's founding, nowhere is the past easier to imagine—or rather, immerse yourself in—than at this one-of-a-kind attraction and historic site. colonialwilliamsburg.org; 101 Visitor Center Drive, Williamsburg, VA 23185; 888-965-7254 Read More 22 of 23 West Virginia’s Best Park Visit Southern West Virginia New River Gorge National Park & Preserve One of West Virginia’s best treasures is New River Gorge National Park and Preserve, a 70,000-acre park where the world’s second-oldest river cuts through a vast valley of geological formations and ecological wonders. Visitors can get a great tour of the park via the 83-mile scenic drive that offers stunning views of the river and its gorge around every twist and turn of the three-hour journey. nps.gov/neri/index.htm Read More 23 of 23 West Virginia’s Best Food Festival Picking Strawberries. Michael Möller / EyeEm / Getty Images West Virginia Strawberry Festival Buckhannon The West Virginia Strawberry Festival celebrates this bounty and is one of the longest-running festivals in the state. The first inaugural event was held in 1936 in support of the state’s fruit growers. It took a 5-year pause during World War II but resumed after the war’s end. In the years that have followed, the strawberry-centric celebrations have only grown. Now the festival is a week-long event with a host of family-friendly events taking place in downtown Buckhannon. The schedule includes a parade, Strawberry Auction, Strawberry Run, canoe race, road bowling, carnival, live music, quilt show, fireworks, and classic car show. And of course, there are plenty of sweet strawberry desserts to go around. wvstrawberryfestival.com Was this page helpful? Thanks for your feedback! Tell us why! Other Submit