Current:Home > NewsUSA TODAY's Restaurants of the Year for 2024: How the list of best restaurants was decided -TrueNorth Capital Hub
USA TODAY's Restaurants of the Year for 2024: How the list of best restaurants was decided
View
Date:2025-04-17 11:38:22
When food writers dine together, sharing is the norm. Before anyone digs into their own order, plates go around the table so everyone can try a bite or two.
That love of sharing is what spurred the creation of our list of 2024 USA TODAY Restaurants of the Year.
We know other "best restaurant" lists exist. This idea is hardly new. So what makes ours stand out? While other organizations deploy teams of writers to parachute into places and try the food, our journalists live in the communities they cover.
The restaurants on our list are places we frequently recommend, places we take friends and family. These places are so lovable, we're often planning our next visit while sitting at the table finishing dinner there.
"Our food writers live here, they work here, they eat here," said project leader Liz Johnson, a senior director at The Record and northjersey.com and a former food writer. "They know their beats. These may not be the fanciest restaurants in the USA, though some are. These are the restaurants we want to eat at over and over again."
How many have you been to?Check out USA TODAY's 2024 Restaurants of the Year.
You'll notice our list doesn't skip flyover country, like many do. Yes, you can get a great meal in Los Angeles or New York (we have restaurants from those cities on our list, by the way), but you also can have excellent dining experiences in Goshen, Kentucky, and Shreveport, Louisiana.
With more than 200 sites in 42 states, the USA TODAY Network's roots run deep. We tapped into that expertise, asking our writers to share their favorites, the best of the best from the towns and cities they cover. We received more than 150 nominations.
A team of seasoned editors and writers then culled the list to 47, looking for places with consistently great service, unique atmospheres and food that never fails to delight.
We also looked for a rich buffet of flavors, and we found it — from a third-generation, counter-service seafood shack in Cortez, Florida, to a Laotian restaurant in Oklahoma City helmed by a James Beard Award-finalist chef.
Our criteria forUSA TODAY's Restaurants of the Year for 2024
"For me, reading this list was a delicious journey across America," said Todd Price, who writes about restaurants across the Southeast and is a former James Beard Award nominating committee member. He's one of the writers who helped choose and edit our Restaurants of the Year. "The restaurants from places large and small show how varied dining is today in this country. So many other national lists rarely do more than dip their toes outside the biggest cities, and they miss so much of how, and how well, people are eating today in the USA."
The majority of the restaurants we've spotlighted are in the communities we cover, though we have a few out-of-town entries. When not covering their home turf, our writers love traveling for food. If we didn't, how would we know how comparably great our hometown spots really are?
Now, we invite you to dig in and enjoy our USA TODAY Restaurants of the Year 2024.
Suzy Fleming Leonard is a features journalist with more than three decades of experience. Find her on Facebook:@SuzyFlemingLeonard or on Instagram: @SuzyLeonard.
veryGood! (2447)
Related
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- South Korea says apparent North Korean hypersonic missile test ends in mid-air explosion
- Mississippi sets new laws on Medicaid during pregnancy, school funding, inheritance and alcohol
- Guardians prospect homers in first MLB at-bat - and his former teammates go wild
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Stock market today: Asian shares advance ahead of U.S. inflation report
- Dawn Staley to receive Jimmy V Award for Perseverance at ESPYS
- Don't Miss Free People's 4th of July Sale with Summer-Ready Essentials Starting at $19
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- US shifts assault ship to the Mediterranean to deter risk of Israel-Lebanon conflict escalating
Ranking
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- Study Maps Giant Slush Zones as New Threat to Antarctic Ice
- Debate takeaways: Trump confident, even when wrong, Biden halting, even with facts on his side
- Indictment accuses former Uvalde schools police chief of delays while shooter was “hunting” children
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- At 61, ballerina Alessandra Ferri is giving her pointe shoes one last — maybe? — glorious whirl
- Landon Donovan has advice for Alex Morgan after Olympic roster heartbreak: 'It will pass'
- Tesla Bay Area plant ordered to stop spewing toxic emissions after repeated violations
Recommendation
Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
After split with NYC July 4 hot dog competition, Joey Chestnut heads to army base event in Texas
Arkansas panel awards Cherokee Nation license to build casino in state
New Hampshire teacher says student she drove to abortion clinic was 18, denies law was broken
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
Supreme Court blocks enforcement of EPA’s ‘good neighbor’ rule on downwind pollution
You’ll Be a Sucker for Nick Jonas and Daughter Malti's Adventurous Outing
Connecticut governor to replant more than 180 trees, thousands of bushes cut down behind his house