Food festivals

One of the best things about living near farming areas is the abundance of festivals that revolve around a certain crop or food. My friend has made it his mission to seek out as many of these events as possible, and he has identified over a dozen festivals within a few hours’ drive of the Twin Cities. There an Apple Fest, Rhubarb Fest, Raspberry Fest, even a Rutabaga Fest. Events like these celebrate not only a particular food but also the community as a whole, with parades, dances, craft fairs, and other activities.

How to make sauerkraut from Great British Chefs Blog Recipes by Monica Shaw

My hometown in North Dakota has celebrated Sauerkraut Day for 100 years, with a free dinner that attracts thousands of visitors, more than tripling the town’s population. Celebrations such as this provide a time for people who have moved away to return to visit family and friends, and to reinvigorate community pride and fellowship for those who still live there. The food being celebrated in these festivals is not some fancy creation crafted for Instagram, it is usually a cash crop produced in the area or has significance for the people in the community.

Sometimes the festivals outlive the farming as a particular crop diminishes in importance, but in many places it is still a major part of the economy, as is the case with Cranberry Fest in Warrens, Wisconsin. Two-thirds of the US cranberry crop comes from Wisconsin, and cranberries are the state’s largest fruit crop in both size and economic value, providing plenty of reason to celebrate.

Nostalgia features prominently at local food festivals, which often feature old-fashioned machinery on display so people can marvel at the antique technologies used in the past to harvest the crops. If you have ever seen a vintage threshing machine being used, you understand why OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration) was created. Parades, music, petting zoos, and hayrides contribute to the nostalgic feel.

Even with all of the other festivities, the food is the focus and you can usually find it used in many ways. With festivals revolving around fruits like apples and cranberries there will be beverages, pies, cakes, salads, and more featuring the celebrated fruit. I am not certain that is the case with Rutabaga Fest, but at the Gilroy (CA) garlic festival they make garlic ice cream, so I guess anything is possible. In my hometown, they keep it simple by having one massive meal of sauerkraut, wieners, speck, and mashed potatoes. The vat in which volunteers cook the sauerkraut is large enough to use as a hot tub, so the aroma is pervasive. But I love it because it feels like home. What’s your favorite food fest?

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3 Comments

  • Fyretigger  on  August 24, 2025

    The Gilroy Garlic Festival is quite an experience. And while garlic ice cream is a bit of a stunt, I have to admit that chocolate garlic chip is actually quite nice. But the real treat of the festival is getting to sample the cooking of multiple world class chefs.

    The other two big ones near me are the Morgan Hill Mushroom Festival and the Half Moon Bay Art & Pumpkin Festival. I somehow keep missing the mushroom festival, hearing about it after it’s happened; I need to fix that as I’m a mushroom fiend. The pumpkin festival requires a bit of commitment; it’s hugely popular and involves festival congested coastal roads and parking miles away and shuttle buses.

  • FuzzyChef  on  August 24, 2025

    We don’t actually have many of these in Oregon. There’s the truffle festival and the crab feed, but the mushroom festival’s been suspended since lockdown. We do have a lot of beer fests I suppose.

  • hillsboroks  on  August 25, 2025

    Fuzzy Chef don’t tell me you’ve never heard of or been to the North Plains Garlic Festival in Oregon? I first tasted garlic ice cream there. I’m sure there are other small local food festivals here too. I know of several crab festivals in the Portland area and at the coast.

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