Susan wrote:Great biscuits and cheese grits are that important to me.
Good thing is, you really can't go wrong in the Biscuit Belt. Even the chains are good, and put the majority of biscuits in the rest of the country to shame. I would kill for a Bojangles biscuit right now, and kill twice for a biscuit from my go-to spot,
Sunrise Biscuit Kitchen in Chapel Hill which would even make a guy named Jim from Logan Square swoon. Good biscuits are so easy to find I would let my desire for
filling guide my choice. Some places have great country ham, fried chicken, or a noteworthy gravy, but the biscuits - the biscuits - they were always damn good everywhere.
You'll find
Bojangles and
Biscuitvilles along your route, just make sure not to pass a dozen of them, only to find out you've passed them all by just because you didn't have to pull over to pee. Check the locations on their websites and plan accordingly.
Biscuitvillehttp://www.biscuitville.com/default.aspxBojangleshttp://www.bojangles.com/Sunrise Biscuit Kitchen1305 E. Franklin
Chapel Hill, NC
919-933-1324
As for barbecue in the Triangle, I would probably opt for
Allen & Son in Chapel Hill (not the one in Pittsboro). The Q Shack is what I imagine Smoque is like (and their Eastern NC style pork butt isn't really in the same class as others in the area - I actually prefer their other offerings, like brisket). You are not going to find anybody smokin' hog in Chicagoland like they do at Allen & Son.
For something totally one-of-a-kind and definitely detour-worthy, stop in at
Keaton's Barbecue in Cleveland, NC. Forget about the menu, you are here for the chicken. Which is deep-fried and dipped in house barbecue sauce, but that alone is a travesty of a description. There is some kind of other magic at hand, some of kind of beautiful alchemy, that, well, I'll let
Stern at Roadfood describe it:
Michael Stern wrote:"The menu calls it barbecued, which it is, sort of, but it is also fried. In fact, what happens is that it is first fried to a crisp then momentarily immersed in a bubbling cauldron of founder B.W. Keaton’s fire-hot barbecue sauce. The hot sauce penetrates the crust and meat of the chicken and caramelizes all around its outside edges, resulting in pieces of chicken that are hot, sweet, and savory all at once: a culinary sensation.
They have a "No Profanity" sign there, because it really is that f#%&'n good.
Allen & Son Barbecue6203 Millhouse Rd
Chapel Hill, NC 27516-8101
Phone: (919) 942-7576
Keaton's Barbecue17365 Cool Springs Rd
Cleveland, NC
704-278-1619
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I'm drawing huge blanks for other ideas right now, but if I can think of anymore I'll post them here later tonight hopefully in time for your trip.