- NBC Sports presents the 149th Kentucky Derby this Saturday, May 6, at Noon ET on NBC and Peacock live from Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky. Kentucky Derby week coverage gets underway with the Kentucky Oaks this Friday, May 5, at 1 p.m. ET on USA Network and Peacock.
Here are a few traditional dishes that you will want to have at your Derby Party – THANKS TO OUR FRIENDS AT NBC SPORTS.
- Keep it traditional with a classic and simple fried chicken like racing owner and celebrity chef Bobby Flay’s recipe. Throw in some waffles and syrup for some added Southern flare.
- Make it unique with a more flavorful, yet still themed, spin on fried chicken like Food Network’s bourbon brined fried chicken.
Related: Recipes for traditional Mint Julep and other Kentucky Derby drinks
Journey deep into Kentucky cuisine with Burgoo, a meat and vegetable stew that was traditionally made with whatever items were available, like rabbit, squirrel and possum.
- Keep it traditional yet accessible with the Kentucky Derby’s official burgoo recipe that uses store-bought meats, including steak, pork and turkey.
- Make it unique by dressing it up with a variety of breads to dip in your stew.
Get your Kentucky Derby party started early with a hearty serving of biscuits and gravy, a mainstay in Southern cuisine.
- Keep it traditional with a buttery, six-ingredient biscuit and a classic sausage gravy. Bump up the flavor by using hot sausage instead of mild.
- Make it unique by going for a casserole-style bake that combines biscuits and gravy with cheese and eggs. What more could you want?
Related: Enter to win a #DerbyAtHome Mint Julep kit
You can’t have a Derby party without a Derby pie, a chocolate and nut (pecans or walnuts—dealer’s choice) pie that originated in the 1950s at the Melrose Inn in Prospect, Ky.
- Keep it traditional with my personal, ridiculously simple Derby pie recipe, which uses pecans:
- 9″ unbaked pie shell (homemade or store-bought)
- 1/4 cup of butter (melted and cooled)
- 1 cup of granulated sugar
- 1/2 cup of flour
- 2 eggs (beaten)
- 1 tsp of vanilla
- 1 cup of chocolate chips
- 1 cup of chopped pecans
- 2 tbsp of bourbon
- Combine all ingredients, pour into unbaked pie shell and bake at 350 for 35 minutes or until a knife comes out of the pie with only chocolate sticking to it.
- Make it unique by adding a tablespoon of honey to your batter before you bake it, which adds to both the texture and taste. You can also leave the bourbon out (though the alcohol cooks out) for a younger crowd. Then it basically becomes a giant cookie pie.
Related: What to know about the 147th Kentucky Derby
If you really have a sweet tooth, satisfy it with rich bourbon balls, a chocolate-coated bourbon and nut delicacy that was invented by Ruth Booe of Rebecca Ruth Chocolates in 1938.
- Keep it traditional with a straightforward recipe like this one, which requires soaking the pecans in bourbon overnight.
- Make it unique by mixing up your mix-ins and using a bourbon liqueur instead, adding sea salt or dipping the bourbon balls in different types of chocolate.
Transparent pie is a custard-ey pie that originated in Maysville, which sits on the Kentucky-Ohio border. This simple yet sweet dessert dates back to the 1800s and is entirely made out of everyday kitchen staples.
- Keep it traditional with a recipe straight from Kentucky Tourism.
- Make it unique by separating the pie batter into smaller, individual-sized tartlets to share (or not).