RD201907-08

(avery) #1
or slathered on something. Some of
my favorite memories are the smell
of my family’s kitchen when my
dad was making this dish with our
family-raised pork.” —Crystal Jo
Bruns, Taste of Home field editor
Who Knew? The fool’s gold loaf—
featuring peanut butter, blueberry
jam, and a pound of ba-
con in a sourdough loaf—
isn’t everyone’s cup of tea.
But when Elvis tried one
in Denver, he loved it so
much that he returned in
his private jet to get more
for daughter Lisa Marie’s
eighth birthday.

Connecticut
Signature dish: clam pie. In the 1920s,
an Italian immigrant named Frank

Who Knew?
food trucks
are an urban
staple today,
but when Kogi
BBQ hit the streets of LA in 2008,
finding customers was an adventure.
Kogi did it by posting its daily menu
and whereabouts on Twitter. The
smell of spicy, kimchi-covered Kogi
Dogs helped too. “At every stop, it’ll
be hundreds of young people and 12
middle-aged copycats in suits and
ties asking where I buy my cabbage,”
chef Roy Choi told Newsweek.

Colorado
Signature dish: Green chile pork.
“Colorado is one of the few states
where you can find green chile. It’s
on almost every menu, served alone

Connecticut’s
clam pizza pie
has been a
Nutmeg State
signature since
the 1920s.

How we picked: More than 70 editors and field editors from our sister
publication Taste of Home submitted their state’s favorite noshes, as did
TOH and Reader’s Digest readers from around the United States.

rd.com 55

th


is


sp


re


ad


:^ c


ha


d^


zu


be


r/


sh


ut


te


rs


to


ck


(s


al


mo


nb


er


ry


).^


so


ph


ol


wi


ch


n


ilm


an


on


/s


hu


tt


er


st


oc


k^


(e

da

ma

me

).^

al

ex

an

de

r^

ko

nd

ra

te

nk

o/

sh

ut

te

rs

to

ck

(f

oo

d^

tr

uc

k)
Free download pdf