Alabama
12 Alabama restaurants to put on your 2024 calendar
We’re just a few days into the new year, but we’re ready to hit the road and check out some new places to eat in Alabama, as well as revisit a few old favorites.
We’ve put together this list of 12 Alabama restaurants to put on your 2024 calendar — one for every month of the year — and we hope to hit them all this year.
Maybe we’ll run into you somewhere along the way.
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Dot’s Soul Food Restaurant in rural Hillsboro, Ala., always draws a crowd for lunch — especially on Sundays after church. (Bob Carlton/bcarlton@al.com)
JANUARY: Dot’s Soul Food Restaurant in Hillsboro
Dot’s Soul Food Restaurant, which AL.com included on its 2023 list of Alabama’s Top 10 meat-and-three restaurants, is an off-the-beaten-path dining gem that’s tucked away in an otherwise inconspicuous, red-brick building in the small Lawrence County town of Hillsboro, just west of Decatur. All those cars and trucks in the parking lot give it away, though. Inside, the lunch crowd forms a long, steady line that typically stretches from the steam table to the front door, as guests patiently wait to be rewarded with some of Alabama’s most glorious soul food, including righteous fried chicken, transcendent mac and cheese and collard greens that made you want to shout, “Hallelujah!” By all means, though, save room for a slice of Dot’s classic caramel cake for dessert.
Dot’s Soul Food Restaurant is at 18152 Alabama Highway 20 in Hillsboro, Ala. The phone is 256-637-8002. For more information, go here.
Alabama’s best meat-and-three: Our Top 10

The Rougaroux, named after a Louisiana folklore legend that looks a lot like a werewolf, opened in 2017 in the “Pink House” in Birmingham’s Forest Park neighborhood.
FEBRUARY: The Rougaroux in Birmingham
A quirky, New Orleans-inspired eatery named after a Louisiana folklore legend that looks a lot like a werewolf, Birmingham’s The Rougaroux is home to some of the best po’ boys, muffulettas and gumbo this side of the Big Easy. The restaurant opened in 2017 in the “Pink House” in the alley across from the old V. Richards grocery in Birmingham’s Forest Park neighborhood, and the owners are expected to open their second location in the former Sneaky Pete’s space in Mountain Brook Village sometime this year. The po’ boys are the stars of the Rougaroux menu, and chef Ryan Champion offers both traditional (including fried oyster, fried shrimp and roast beef debris) and specialty (including oysters Rockefeller, blackened catfish and smoked chicken and bacon) versions of the classic New Orleans sandwich. The menu also Creole fries, red beans and rice, and white chocolate bread pudding. If you’re looking for a fun place to celebrate Mardi Gras, which falls on Feb. 13 this year, The Rougaroux is your spot.
The Rougaroux is at 817 39th St. South in Birmingham, Ala. The phone is 205-518-6677. For more information, go here.
This Birmingham restaurant makes the most authentic po’ boys
Callaghan’s Irish Social Club has been a mainstay in Mobile’s Oakleigh Garden District since Woodrow Callaghan opened his namesake pub in a former meat market in 1946. (Bob Carlton/bcarlton@al.com)
MARCH: Callaghan’s Irish Social Club in Mobile
If you’re making plans for St. Patrick’s Day, we can’t think of many places better to get your green on than at Callaghan’s Irish Social Club, a legendary neighborhood watering hole and burger joint in Mobile’s Oakleigh Garden District. Housed in a former meat market, Callaghan’s has been a mainstay at the corner of Marine and Charleston streets since Woodrow Callaghan opened his namesake pub in 1946. Over the years, Callaghan’s has been recognized as the South’s greatest bar, as well as the home of the state’s best burger. Hand-patted and cooked on a flat-top grill, the Angus beef burgers are seasoned with a secret blend of spices and topped with your choice of American, cheddar, pepper jack, Swiss or provolone cheese. If you go on a Wednesday or Thursday, be sure to order the L.A. (Lower Alabama) Burger, a blend of ground beef and Alabama’s own Conecuh Sausage.
Callaghan’s Irish Social Club is at 916 Charleston St. in Mobile, Ala. The phone is 251-433-9374. For more information, go here.
This Mobile burger is almost too much: ‘I can’t even finish one’
Tre Luna Bar & Kitchen in Hoover, Ala., is the ideal spot for a casual dinner under the twinkling patio lights. (Photo by Sara Walker; used with permission)
APRIL: Tre Luna Bar & Kitchen in Hoover
When spring arrives and the weather starts to warm, you’ll be looking for a casual spot to sit back and enjoy a nice meal under the stars. Tre Luna Bar & Kitchen, the Italian-inspired restaurant that the husband-and-wife team of Brian and Erin Mooney opened five years ago in The Village at Brock’s Gap development in Hoover, is just the ticket — whether you want to grab a table outside under the twinkling patio lights or indoors in the vibrant dining room. The dinner menu strikes a nice balance between familiar and refined, with such sharables as beef carpaccio, short rib sliders, baked oysters and brick-oven-baked pizzas, along with entrees such as veal piccata, eggplant parmigiana, pan-seared scallops and one of our favorite dishes, chicken francese with Brussels sprouts and McEwen & Sons polenta.
Tre Luna Bar & Kitchen is at 1021 Brocks Gap Parkway, Suite 145, in Hoover, Ala. The phone is 205-538-5866. For more information, go here.
Pizza Ed opened its second location at 373 Gunter Ave. in Guntersville, Ala., in August 2023. The original location opened in Hartselle in 2019.(Bob Carlton/bcarlton@al.com)
MAY: Pizza Ed in Guntersville and Hartselle
The husband-and-wife team of Eddie and Chandra Gwin opened Pizza Ed on “a pie and a prayer,” as Eddie likes to say, in downtown Hartselle five years ago. Buoyed by its success, the Gwins opened a second Pizza Ed in Guntersville this past summer. The Pizza Ed menu features classic New York hand-tossed, Chicago deep dish, and thin-and-crispy Chicago tavern-style pizzas, which are made with Stanislaus tomatoes, Bacio cheeses and Fontanini sausages and pepperonis, among other toppings. Although running two pizzerias in two different cities keeps them hopping, in their spare time, the Gwins love to travel to some of the top pizza restaurants in the country to learn more about the craft and the business. That extra effort shows in every pie they serve, and in 2023, Pizza Ed topped AL.com’s list of the 10 best pizzerias in Alabama.
Pizza Ed is at 373 Gunter Ave. in Guntersville Ala. The phone is 256-486-3633. The original Pizza Ed is at 305 Main St. West in Hartselle. The phone is 256-502-9959. For more information, go here.
The Alabama pizza place built on ‘a pie and a prayer’

Jesse’s on the Bay, the Fort Morgan outpost of the popular Jesse’s Restaurant in Magnolia Springs, opened in April 2023.(Bob Carlton/bcarlton@al.com)
JUNE: Jesse’s on the Bay in Fort Morgan
If you’re beach-bound this summer, let us recommend a visit to Jesse’s on the Bay, the Fort Morgan outpost of the beloved Jesse’s Restaurant in Magnolia Springs. The newest Jesse’s, which opened last spring, promises spectacular sunset views, a lively beach vibe and a menu that caters to both seafood and steak lovers, with blue crab and crawfish gumbo, diver scallops, pan-seared redfish and a dry-aged ribeye.
Jesse’s on the Bay is at 1631 Crosswinds Court in Fort Morgan, Ala. The phone is 251-965-3827. For more information, go here.
Brenda’s Bar-B-Q Pit has been an institution in Montgomery, Ala., since 1942.(Photo by Art Meripol, from the book “Alabama Barbecue: Delicious Road Trips”)
JULY: Brenda’s Bar-B-Q Pit in Montgomery
Owned and operated by Montgomery’s Bethune family since 1942, Brenda’s Bar-B-Q Pit played a key role in the civil rights movement in the 1950s and ‘60, serving as a gathering place for organizers of the movement. So, there’s a lot of history here. There’s also some great barbecue. The menu at Brenda’s is carry-out only, and it’s been that way for decades. Customers order at the take-out window and either eat in their cars or take their food with them. While Brenda’s is best known for its ribs, a close second is the pig ear sandwich, a hard-to-find soul food delicacy that is served on white bread and splattered with ketchup, mustard and hot sauce. “If we run out of pig ears, oh my God, we’ve got trouble on our hands that day,” Donetta Bethune, the granddaughter of founders Jereline and Larry James Bethune, says. “The customers are not going to be happy with us if we run out of pig ears.”
Brenda’s Bar-B-Q Pit is at 1457 Mobile Road in Montgomery, Ala. The phone is 334-262-9349.
This Alabama barbecue joint has been smoking since 1942
Hunt’s Seafood Restaurant & Oyster Bar in Dothan, Ala., began in the 1960s as a three-stool oyster bar but has since grown into a full-service seafood and steak restaurant that now seats more than 200 guests. Jared Boyd
AUGUST: Hunt’s Seafood Restaurant & Oyster Bar in Dothan
One of the oldest restaurants in Alabama’s Wiregrass Region, Hunt’s Seafood Restaurant & Oyster Bar has been in business since the early 1960s, when Billy Joe Reeves converted his full-service gas station into a three-stool oyster bar. In 1989, Reeves added on to the original building, attaching a seafood and steak restaurant. Now, Hunt’s seats more than 200 guests. Tim Reeves, Billy Joe’s son, is the restaurant’s second-generation owner. In addition to oysters, the menu includes shrimp, snapper, salmon, chicken, catfish, ribeyes and filets, as well as Hunt’s signature battered-and-fried grouper fingers, which have been featured on the Alabama Tourism Department’s list of “100 Dishes to Eat in Alabama Before You Die.”
Hunt’s Seafood Restaurant & Oyster Bar is at 177 Campbellton Highway in Dothan. The phone is 334-794-5193. For more information, go here.
Alabama’s Best Oyster Bar: Five things to know about Hunt’s
The Waverly Local is at 1465 Patrick St. in the small town of Waverly, Ala. The restaurant opened in January 2018.(Bob Carlton/bcarlton@al.com)
SEPTEMBER: The Waverly Local in Waverly
Auburn football fans traveling to and from the Loveliest Village on the Plains this fall should make dinner or brunch plans at The Waverly Local, a destination restaurant in the tiny town of Waverly, just a few minutes outside of Auburn. Longtime friends Andy Anderson and Christian Watson, who grew up together in Auburn, opened their restaurant six years ago in the former home of Waverly’s old Yellow Hammer Restaurant, and folks in Lee County and the surrounding area took to it almost from the start. “I think Waverly just felt like it was missing something when this building sat empty,” Anderson said in a 2021 interview with AL.com. “We were excited to bring it back to life.” Guests are drawn by the restaurant’s nostalgic charm, its laid-back vibe and the inspired but unpretentious menu, which includes such appetizers as bacon-wrapped Wickles Pickles okra and such entrees as a grilled ribeye with horseradish cream, blue crab cakes and pan-roasted Atlantic salmon.
The Waverly Local is at 1465 Patrick St. in Waverly, Ala. The phone is 334-539-6077. For more information, go here.
A tiny Alabama town, an old restaurant and the two guys who’ve given it new life

The “Breakfast of Champions” menu at The Historic Waysider Restaurant in Tuscaloosa, Ala., features country ham with red-eye gravy, creamy grits, made-from-scratch biscuits and, on Alabama football game days, elephant-shaped pancakes.
OCTOBER: The Historic Waysider Restaurant in Tuscaloosa
A must-do on any hardcore Alabama football fan’s bucket list, Tuscaloosa’s Historic Waysider Restaurant — or simply “The Waysider,” as most people know it — is typically packed on home football weekends in the fall. The little red house on Greensboro Avenue is a shrine to Bama football history – from the Daniel Moore prints and framed newspaper stories that cover the walls to the little, two-seater table where the late, legendary Paul “Bear” Bryant used to sit and read the newspaper while he ate his breakfast. But folks come here for the food, not just the memories, and the Waysider’s “Breakfast of Champions” menu features country ham and red-eye gravy, made-from-scratch biscuits, bottomless cups of coffee, and, on game-day weekends, elephant-shaped pancakes for the kids. If you happen to go on a Friday morning, you might run into Tide stars Jalen Milroe, Caleb Downs and Terrion Arnold, who are such loyal customers that owner Linda Smelley shipped them a batch of the Waysider’s famous biscuits before this year’s Rose Bowl in Pasadena.
The Historic Waysider Restaurant is at 1512 Greensboro Ave. in Tuscaloosa, Ala. The phone is 205-345-8239. For more information, go here.
Taste a little Alabama football history at this iconic restaurant
The Wildflower Cafe is located on top of Lookout Mountain in the heart of Mentone, Ala. (Bob Carlton/bcarlton@al.com)
NOVEMBER: Wildflower Cafe in Mentone
Nestled atop Lookout Mountain in idyllic Mentone in the northeast corner of the state, the quaint and quirky Wildflower Café is an Alabama treasure, a fun and funky restaurant renowned for its Roma tomato pie and strawberry crepes. But the inventive menu also includes everything from a spinach quiche and a chicken salad wrap to prime rib and wild-caught salmon. Presiding over it all is the Wildflower Café’s colorful owner, L.C. Moon, who makes sure that everyone who comes to her place not only gets fed well but also has a good time. She’s been known to belt out a tune or two with some of the café’s musicians on occasion. “I love helping people to feel good,” Moon told AL.com in 2019. “When they come in here and walk in this space, they can just have a great experience. They get fed with food. They get fed with soulfulness.”
Wildflower Cafe is at 6007 Alabama Highway 117 in Mentone, Ala. The phone is 256-634-0066. For more information, go here.
The story behind Mentone’s Wildflower Cafe and the woman who keeps it funky
The pork osso buco with plantain gnocchi is one dish that never leaves the menu at Purveyor in Huntsville, Ala. (Matt Wake/mwake@al.com)Matt Wake
DECEMBER: Purveyor in Huntsville
Known for its eclectic menu and electric vibe, Purveyor in downtown Huntsville offers an ever-changing, seasonal menu that’s inspired by locally sourced ingredients. So what you ordered last week might not be available next week. But a few dishes are so good they’ve earned a regular spot in the Purveyor rotation, including the Wagyu tacos, the crisp oyster mushrooms and the glazed Kabocha squash salad. Purveyor’s show-stopping dish, though, and one that never leaves the menu, is the pork osso buco, a fork-tender pork shank that takes chef Juventino “Tino” Manuel more than three days to prepare. “The result,” AL.com’s Matt Wake writes, “is a tender as any meat I’ve ever consumed.”
Purveyor is at 201 Jefferson St. North in Huntsville, Ala. The phone is 256-419-2555. For more information, go here.
This awesome Huntsville dish takes more than three days to make
Alabama
Katie Windham Highlights Alabama Areas of Improvement on The Joe Gaither Show
Let’s crank up a Thursday edition of “The Joe Gaither Show on BamaCentral” with Mason Woods and Katie Windham as we start getting ready for next week’s College Football Playoff game between Alabama and Oklahoma. Windham detailed how the Crimson Tide can improve over the next few weeks, we discuss the team’s health and look back at our last road trip to Norman. The show then discusses the Heisman Trophy finalists before addressing a Kalen DeBoer coaching rumor.
The program opens by power ranking the holidays before discussing Windham’s three areas the Crimson Tide can improve over the next week. Our trio picks the easiest area the team can improve and how Alabama must perform in Norman. Windham details our last trip to Oklahoma as we go down memory lane to the Sooners’ 24-3 victory last season.
The show continues on by getting Windham’s thoughts on Alabama’a College Football Playoff selection and if the Crimson Tide actually deserved its place in the field. She brings up a unique aspect of Alabama’s blowout loss in the SEC Championship and how it played into the program’s inclusion in the College Football Playoffs.
We move from next week’s game into a small discussion on Notre Dame’s reaction of being left out of the field and how it relates to Alabama’s future home-and-home dates with the Fighting Irish. Will the two esteemed programs still face off in a few years?
The show heads into the only college football action of the weekend by highlighting the strong Heisman Trophy finalist field. Who brings home the bronze statue?
Lastly, we spend the final bit of the show talking about Michigan firing Sherrone Moore and the reports of the Wolverines considering persuing Kalen DeBeor for their next head coach. Will DeBoer leave Tuscaloosa for Ann Arbor?
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Call (205) 462-7340 Extension 800 to leave your thoughts in a voicemail, and you’ll be featured on the show. You can also join us live in the comment sections Monday through Friday at 8:15 a.m. CT.
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Alabama
New Alabama law raises penalties for porch piracy
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (WSFA) – As holiday deliveries ramp up, a new Alabama law aims to deter package theft by raising penalties for so-called “porch piracy.” The law, which went into effect on October 1, 2025, makes repeated package theft a felony and can carry prison sentences of up to 10 years in the most serious cases.
What changed
Previously, many package thefts in Alabama were charged as misdemeanor theft because the value of individual stolen packages often fell below felony thresholds. Under the new law however, lawmakers established penalties that focus on the number of homes targeted rather than the dollar value of items stolen:
- Stealing from 1 to 9 homes: most serious misdemeanor
- Stealing from 10 to 29 homes: felony
- Stealing from 30 or more homes: can result in up to 10 years in prison
The law also increases penalties if stolen packages are used to commit identity theft or fraud. In addition, anyone who knowingly receives packages stolen by a porch pirate can be charged under the new rules.
Lawmakers weigh in
Senator April Weaver, one of the bill’s sponsors, said the change was meant to protect Alabama families during the holidays.
“It was really important to protect the people not only in my district but throughout the state of Alabama and to make sure their hard-earned money is going to their children’s Christmas,” she said.
On camera, Senator Weaver added with holiday humor, “It means the Grinch may have stolen Christmas in Whoville, but if he does it in Alabama, he’ll have plenty of time in state prison for his heart to grow three sizes.”
What police recommend if your package is stolen
If you discover a stolen package, law enforcement recommends:
- Report the theft to police immediately.
- Preserve any doorbell or surveillance footage that may show the theft.
- Contact the delivery company right away to report the missing item.
- Consider requiring a signature on delivery to reduce the risk of theft.
The law went into effect on October 1, 2025; this December marks the first holiday season it is in effect. Alabama is now one of more than a dozen states that have passed laws specifically targeting package theft. Supporters say the law sends a stronger message that porch piracy will no longer be treated as a minor offense.
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