Blue Cheese Revival, Honest Deviled Eggs, and More in Upcountry South Carolina

The story below is an excerpt from our July/August 2015 issue. For the rest of this story and more like it subscribe todayview our digital edition or download our FREE iOS app!


Not to mention historic hot dogs, record-setting sweet tea and blues-infused barbecue. Let’s get going!


Hot-Dogging it  on the Swamp Rabbit Trail

Chili recipes have a resilience about them. They are survivors. Dunean Elementary School, in the northwest corner of South Carolina, closed long ago. It educated the children of millworkers. But the school’s principal, the late Icy Brannon, managed to save the cafeteria’s hot dog chili recipe, its meat poached, not fried.

In nearby Travelers Rest, another chili recipe has been salvaged. It was served at The American Café, which has been in the same family since 1945. Its patriotic name was a reflection of the times and the sense of national pride that permeated the country during the days of World War II.

Troy “Junior” Styles took over the restaurant from his father in 1963 and ran it until 2009. His chili recipe has been revived and the old restaurant renamed. Now under the ownership of Junior’s niece Vicki Vernon Hawkins, the business has been transformed into The Whistle Stop at the American Café. Junior’s name is still associated with his enduring chili. Order a hot dog there today, and you’ll get the same kind of chili Junior prepared, and on the same kind of hot dog. The mustard and onions are on the bottom and the greaseless chili on top.

“My mother says that hot dogs were not served until Junior came home from the Army in 1953,” Hawkins says. “He was one of the cooks and wanted to put hot dogs on the menu, which my granddad was at first against! Hot dogs became a big part of the history of the café. Rachel Henderson, who had cooked them for 55 years, came and taught us exactly how Junior made his chili.”

The Whistle Stop pays allegiance to the history of Travelers Rest, a storied stop at the foot of the Blue Ridge Mountains where Conestoga wagons once passed through and where the Swamp Rabbit steam engine stopped for coal. Today, bicyclists traverse the Swamp Rabbit Trail, taking breaks for walk-up drinks and shaved ice at the Caboose Express, on the back side of The Whistle Stop.

Inside, you can sit on the original stools at the original counter, installed at the Williams Café in 1932. It’s a place where customers once loaded their Dr Peppers and Coca-Colas with peanuts. Hawkins says her usual spot was the second stool from the end.

The Whistle Stop is filled with fascinating railroad history. An electric train circles the ceiling. The Swamp Rabbit smoker, a replica of the original steam engine, sits outside.

As further testament to the restaurant’s regional ties, we found Appalachian-style apple and peach fried pies, homemade, in the dessert case. And, yes, with a name like Whistle Stop, there are fried green tomatoes.

Whistle Stop at the American Café, 109 South Main Street, Travelers Rest, South Carolina

864-944-7853; whistlestopattheamericancafe.com

Lobster Bisque on Tiger Boulevard

“There was almost nothing on this highway in the early 1970s except kudzu,” says George Corontzes. That’s the time when Bill Hopkins and his wife Pixie opened Pixie & Bill’s in Clemson, South Carolina.

Talk to most anyone around Clemson, and you’ll find out quickly that Pixie & Bill’s is the community’s go-to place for any kind of celebration imaginable.

“This was Clemson’s first fine-dining restaurant and had the only prime rib for miles,” says Corontzes, who waited tables and worked in the kitchen there while he was in graduate school at Clemson University. Corontzes ended up buying the restaurant from the Hopkins estate in 1991, five years after Bill’s death.

In addition to Clemson Tiger orange, Corontzes has restaurant work in his blood. His grandparents – a Lebanese grandmother and Greek grandfather – opened The Capitol Café, a 24-hour diner in front of the South Carolina state capitol in Columbia, in 1911. Corontzes worked there as a young man. The restaurant stayed in the family for 75 years.

The Corontzes family’s respect for tradition is evident throughout the menu at Clemson’s Pixie & Bill’s. Prime rib remains from the early days. So does lobster bisque. And so do dessert crepes. The one we chose was filled with ice cream, decorated with puffs of whipped cream, surrounded by almonds, and doused with amaretto.

Corontzes says it was important to keep those dishes that had attracted a loyal following over the years. I ask him what it’s like in the restaurant on a weekend when the Clemson Tigers are playing football at home.

“That’s what we live for, high energy,” he says. “Football season is huge here, and we’re energized by all the returning alumni.”

Building on the original menu, Corontzes has added some touches of his own—one dish in particular echoing the flavors of his grandfather’s homeland. Here is the menu description of the Grecian Filet Mignon: “A sautéed mixture of mushrooms, bacon, oregano, spring onion, and feta crumbles in a garlic wine butter with a splash of rich beef stock.” Corontzes calls it “a family favorite.”

Often for the nightly special, the kitchen staff will top a cut of prime rib with crab meat and serve it with house-made béarnaise sauce. Corontzes points out that making the au jus for the restaurant’s prime rib is a three-day process, using rib bones.

Diners from out of town frequently ask about Clemson Blue Cheese. It’s used at Pixie & Bill’s in salad dressing, in creamed spinach, and in a compound butter with chives and herbs, served over steaks.

Pixie & Bill’s, 1058 Tiger Boulevard, Clemson, South Carolina

864-654-1210; TigerGourmet.com


The story above is an excerpt from our July/August 2015 issue. For the rest of this story and more like it subscribe todayview our digital edition or download our FREE iOS app!

You Might Also Like:

White jelly snow fungus growing in the author’s Botetourt County, Virginia woodlot.

May’s Wild Edible: White Jelly Snow Fungus

“Pass the fungus,” is not common dinnertime conversation in the Blue Ridge Mountains region, but that’s because folks perhaps have not heard of the white jelly snow fungus.
Elizabethton, Tennessee, USA, - May 15, 2021: Reenactment at Sycamore Shoals State Historic Park of the Siege of Fort Watauga in 1776.

Revolutionary Roundup

On July 4, 1776, a new nation was born. In honor of this historic day, we explore the forts, battlefields, museums, trails, and more that trace the Patriots’ journey to freedom in the Blue Ridge Mountains.
A happy 8-year-old Eula Mae standing in front of her father, Woodrow, in this Golding family photo taken in 1952.

My Beloved Scenic

Before it became America’s Favorite Drive, the Blue Ridge Parkway was a farm family’s front yard, playground, and memory lane.
Owner Jennifer Hughes is a constant and comforting presence at Elizabethton’s City Market.

Connecting a Community Through Chicken Salad and Chocolate Pie

City Market in East Tennessee has always stepped up to take care of its neighbors.
Wild garlic growing in Fayette County, West Virginia.

April’s Wild Edible: Wild Garlic

Fayette County, West Virginia’s Mitchell Dech is one of my foraging mentors, and when he wants me to try an edible new to me … I’m ready to learn about it.
Hikers willing to take on a moderate climb are rewarded with incredible panoramas from the summit of Marys Rock.

An Insider’s Guide to Shenandoah National Park

This year is a landmark one for this treasured piece of mountain land in Virginia: the 100th anniversary of Congress authorizing its establishment and the 90th anniversary of its dedication.
Blue Ridge Country Parkway Guide 2026

2026 Blue Ridge Parkway Guide

Start planning your next trip on America's Favorite Scenic Highway
A Virginia Historical Marker stands at the entrance to Green Pastures.

Green Pastures’ picnic area was build by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the late 1930s.

Green Pastures Reborn

When it officially opened in 1940 — in the depths of the Jim Crow era — Green Pastures was likely the first U.S. Forest Service recreation area in the nation constructed for African Americans.
Chimney Tops Trail in Great Smoky Mountains National Park rewards a steep climb with exceptional mountain views.

Inset: Gatlinburg, Tennessee’s Chimneys Picnic Area sits beside the West Prong of the Little Pigeon RIver.

11 Picnics with a View

These bucket-list destinations are perfect spots to kick back, enjoy a delightful meal and take in the great outdoors.
At Hayfields State Park in Highland County, Virginia, easy-to-moderate trails wind through quiet forests and past historic structures.

Greening the Blue Ridge Region

New Parks, Healthier Creeks, Solar Power, Protected Lands and More.

CALENDAR OF EVENTS