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15 Legendary Foods and Drinks That Originated in the Lone Star State

15 Legendary Foods and Drinks That Originated in the Lone Star State

15 Legendary Foods and Drinks That Originated in the Lone Star State
© Kiian Oksana/Shutterstock.com
BBQ brisket
© J_K/Shutterstock.com
Chicken-fried steak
© "Chicken Fried Steak" by KB35 is licensed under BY 2.0.
Chili con carne
© "Tonight it's chili con carne in da house" by lejoe is licensed under BY 2.0.
Corn dogs
© Gayvoronskaya_Yana/Shutterstock.com
Dr Pepper
© Chinnachart Martmoh/iStock via Getty Images
Fajitas
© Toasted Pictures/Shutterstock.com
Fritos
© Brent Hofacker/Shutterstock.com
Frito pie
© Brent Hofacker/Shutterstock.com
Frozen margaritas
© "Frozen Margarita" by GillyBerlin is licensed under BY 2.0.
Nachos (sort of)
© stockcreations/Shutterstock.com
Queso
© Brent Hofacker/Shutterstock.com
Ruby red grapefruit
© iStock.com/ValentynVolkov
Shiner Bock
© "Shiner Bock" by Dave Newman (newmanchu) is licensed under BY 2.0.
Texas sweet onions
© Dominique James/Shutterstock.com
Texas toast
© Anne_K/Shutterstock.com
15 Legendary Foods and Drinks That Originated in the Lone Star State
BBQ brisket
Chicken-fried steak
Chili con carne
Corn dogs
Dr Pepper
Fajitas
Fritos
Frito pie
Frozen margaritas
Nachos (sort of)
Queso
Ruby red grapefruit
Shiner Bock
Texas sweet onions
Texas toast

15 Legendary Foods and Drinks That Originated in the Lone Star State

The United States is comprised of 50 states. Texas is the second-largest state in area (268,597 mi²) - Alaska ranks first with 665,400 mi² - and second in population, with around 30,000,000 residents - California ranks first with around 39,000,000 residents. This immense state is known for gifting the nation with several legendary foods and drinks that originated in the Lone Star state.

Texas is famed for many things, some of which are: The Alamo, "Dallas", Barbecue, Tex-Mex, Cowboys and The Cowboys, NASA, Texas Longhorns, the live-music capital of Austin…and of course food and drink. It may, or may not, come as a surprise to know that many of the foods and drinks we consume regularly were invented or developed in the Lone Star state. (Some origin stories are disputed, but we’ve depended on the most reputable sources available for our information.)

Not included is the thriving, Texas wine industry (the first vines were planted here by missionaries in the 1650s, and there are now more than 1,000 wineries in the state) or those two quintessentially American if diametrically different food purveyors — 7-11 and Whole Foods, both with roots here.

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