Foodie News
With its first Texas festival, Food & Wine snubs Houston for Austin
The good news is that Food & Wine is finally bringing one of its prestigious foodie festivals to Texas. The bad news is that it's skipping Houston, Texas' culinary melting pot, and setting up in Austin instead.
The first Austin Food & Wine Festival is scheduled for March 30-April 1. Tyson Cole announced the festival to Eater Austin. The festival is being produced by C3, which also put on the Austin City Limits Festival and Lollapalooza, with Cole, La Condesa restaurateur Jesse Herman, and Fort Worth's Tim Love as partners.
The Austin Food & Wine Festival is taking the place of the 26-year-old Hill Country Wine & Food Festival, so I'll admit that having an experienced big-event producer, a committed and well-known team of chefs and a history of food tourism are three excellent reasons to focus on Austin.
But reason and logic aside, it just seems so ... unfair. Houston has been the site of the Super Bowl, the NCAA Final Four, Rendez-vous Houston, and a Republican National Convention, so clearly we are capable of putting on massive events. But Austin gets all the cool stuff, and it gets it annually, like South by Southwest and Austin City Limits. Wouldn't it be nice to make Austinites travel here for something other than an international flight?
A quick glance at the Food & Wine guide to both cities shows more love for Houston (with 56 restaurants recommended) than Austin (with only 37).
I'm not trying to diss Austin's food scene — the city has some truly great restaurants. But can it really compete with Houston?
Are you looking forward to Austin Food & Wine Festival? Do you think a Houston Food & Wine will ever happen? Who should have bragging rights as the best city for food and drinks in Texas?