East Tennessee icon Calhounโs is facing a challenge from BBQ legend Myron Mixon BBQ Co. in Gatlinburg
Before there were reality cooking shows and competitions in grocery store parking lots, there was a single restaurant in West Knoxville with a handful of smokers and a dream. It was the fall of 1983 and Calhounโs was about to take off like a rocket. They took the show on the road to The National Rib Cook-Off in Ohio. Thatโs where the folks behind Calhounโs won the right to call their ribs the best in America.
I mean, this competition was in Ohio, which is not exactly known as a bastion of barbecue. But Calhounโs had the legitimacy and the game plan to become the biggest duck on the East Tennessee Barbecue pond.
Today, there are nine Calhounโs locations โ two in the Smokies โ and Calhounโs remains the biggest player in the game.
But a challenger has arrived in the Smokies, backed by another regional culinary powerhouse. Myron Mixon โ a partnership by an award-winning, reality show famous chef and Kennedy Concepts โ has drawn a line in the Gatlinburg sand. Theyโve thrown down the gauntlet and another other clichรฉ you can think of. Thereโs a new battle for the right to be Gatlinburgโs premier barbecue destination.

Are either Calhounโs or Myron Mixon the best barbecue in the Smokies?
No, and I say that with love. In my own personal barbecue hierarchy, Calhounโs and Myron Mixon BBQ Co. occupy a space I call corporate barbecue. That sounds like an insult. But I donโt certainly do not mean it that way. These are large professionally run restaurants, part of a bigger operation. They worry about things like ambiance, having matching tables and lots of big screen TVs and a bar. The menu will have salads, you know?
There are other places in the mountains, less bound by corporate strictures, and frequently run by barbecue artistic geniuses or mad scientists. These are places where the only real goal isnโt profit or expansion. In other words, the real goal is the pursuit of barbecue Nirvana.
Therefore, those places are running a different race than a place like Calhounโs or Mixon. Therefore, it feels a little unfair to consider them in the same category.

The argument for Calhounโs
If youโve grown up in East Tennessee, Calhounโs is likely part of your history. Itโs a place where you mark big events or visit to bond with friends and family. My step-dad and I ate at Calhounโs on the River before the NCAA Tournament games in 1994. Leslie and I went there on a date after a football game in 1996, walking from the Stadium to Calhounโs and then hiking up that massive hill on Walnut Street and all the way over to my apartment on 17th.
My oldest daughter Sofia and I would stop at Calhounโs on our way back from softball tournaments. Last week, after a sports convention at World Fairโs Park, my 13-year-old son โ given the choice of any place in Knoxville โ chose Calhounโs. Weโve gone for birthdays and anniversaries and to celebrate. For my family and many in East Tennessee, itโs part of the fabric of our local culture. Itโs an institution.
As for the food? Itโs consistently good and, if you know what to order, great. It is not, however, the best restaurant in Knoxville or Pigeon Forge or Gatlinburg or Maryville. Itโs true to what I consider to be the culture of East Tennessee barbecue. The flavor is subtle compared to some. The barbecue is tangy, maybe a little sweet. Whereas some barbecue style donโt really need sauce, Calhounโs style of East Tennessee barbecue was built to be enhanced by the sauce. You need a bit to make it happen.
Calhounโs is a barbecue spot first. But its menu is built with the understanding that not everyone in your party is in the mood for the โcue. Does anyone call barbecue โthe cue?โ I feel like I just invented that. I liked it as I was typing it, but now Iโm not sure.
Classic apps include the obligatory fried green tomatoes, fried pickles and pulled pork nachos. But better options are their White Chicken Chili and also the Smoked Sausage and Cheese plate with Kielbasa, sharp cheddar and pepper jack cheese, pimento cheese, spicy pickles, pickled onions, spicy mustard. If Iโm not getting barbecue for a main course, the bacon wrapped beef brisket ends allow me to have the best of both worlds.
Non-barbecue options include six salads as well as fish and chips that Iโm told is quite good. My wife likes it. Will I ever go to a barbecue restaurant and order fish and chips? Unlikely. But I wonโt judge others for it. Well, frankly I will judge, but silently in my head where only the demons can hear.
Non barbecue options I will consider are the Ale Steak and the Ale Pork Chop. The boy โ who battles many food allergies and is therefore a bit picky โ loves the pork chop. Our littlest, who does not suffer food allergies but is also picky, swears by hand-breaded chicken tenders. While Iโm not base enough to recommend chicken tenders after doing two whole paragraphs on why you shouldnโt order the fish, I will say as far as chicken tendies go, these ainโt bad.
In terms of barbecue, the Trio is popular, possibly because you get some of the famous chicken tendies with ribs and smoked pork so you donโt lose your BBQ street cred. The ribs are award winning, of course. The pulled pork is delicious. The prime rib and prime rib sandwich โ both available Fridays and Saturdays only โ are top notch.
In terms of sides, everything is good and what youโd expect. But if you donโt order the Spinach Maria, Iโm not really sure what youโre doing with your life.
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The argument for Myron Mixon BBQ Co.
A Georgia native, Mixonโs competition chops are more recent than Calhounโs. Heโs won a bazillion BBQ tournaments โ but how many of them were in Ohio? I find in general his restaurants BBQ is more flavorful, with more smoke flavor than Calhounโs and I definitely prefer his brisket.
In terms of the overall menu, thereโs nothing terribly surprising in the apps. I will say the fried okra was fine. However, Iโd like a little more flavor. Additionally, I found myself irrationally irritated by the preparation, cutting the okra in halves the long way rather than in smaller pieces, but that might be a me thing.
Mixonโs Menu doesnโt have as many options if you donโt want barbecue. They have two salads, one of them featuring strawberries which I do not believe have been barbecued. Thereโs also a cornmeal crusted catfish and a Faroe Island salmon with Cowboy Butter.
Frankly, I was not aware that the Faroe island had cowboys or, for that matter, their butter. Frankly, being neither an expert in the Faroe Islands nor salmon, I Googled whether there are salmon in the Faroe Island and it turns out, there are. In fact, the cold, clean calm waters with strong ocean currents, stable temperatures and a rich oxygen supply make the Faroe Islands Fjords an especially ripe place to raise Salmon. So, thereโs that.
In terms of the barbecue itself, I donโt have a strong opinion on whether Calhounโs or Myron Mixon has a better offering. More research is required so weโll say for now too close to call. Whie I enjoy the Calhounโs Kielbasa, Myron Mixonโs Smoked Jalapeno Cheddar really kicks things up a notch. The quarter chicken was moist and tasty. I didnโt sauce it at all, actually, even though I generally like sauce. The Smoked Bologna was fine but Iโve had better. Iโd say itโs a skip here and to go to a place that puts a little more emphasis on it.

What does the internet say?
Calhounโs scores a 4.1 with more than 5,000 reviews on Google. I believe specifically those are reviews of the Gatlinburg location. It got a 3.6 on Yelp!
Myron Mixon BBQ Co. got a 3.7 on Google, with 334 reviews. There are far fewer reviews which can move the score pretty significantly. I think it was over 4 last month. On Yelp? Itโs a 3.8 with 86 reviews, up a little from the last time we checked.
Iโve been adding the internet ratings off and on with our restaurant reviews and I wonder sometimes how valuable they are. I suppose Iโm no different, a hillbilly with an internet connection and an opinion, but so many of these reviewers seem like they live to complain or want to be the next Anthony Bourdain.
One reviewer โ leaving a positive review โ called Calhounโs a hidden gem right out in the open, which is a nifty phrase I suppose. But itโs also 100 percent incorrect. There is no world in which Calhounโs is a hidden gem, out in the open or otherwise.
And while Iโve never had a bad experience at Calhounโs, many of the bad reviews focus on bad service or what the reviewer sees as bad service. One mentioned having to wait for a table despite there being several empty. That seems to be a recurring issue at restaurants throughout the Smokies, especially in off hours. Restaurants are either having a hard time staffing up or are cutting back staff at less than peak times. They would rather have someone wait at the lobby until a table with an assigned server comes open than seat them at a table where there are not enough servers to attend to them as would be expected.
Mixon has had quite a few complaints on this front despite having only been open since May. We have experienced a bit of it. On our most recent visit we were seated a few minutes before our server was notified we were there and came and got our drink order. It wasnโt a big deal but since other are mentioning it, itโs at least worth acknowledging.
In terms of sides, they were mostly fine except for the bacon peach baked beans which were excellent, with more flavor than the brisket chili, actually.
We should also mention that Mixonโs is on the second floor. There was a very small elevator that was either not working or I couldnโt figure out how to work it on our latest visit.
Choosing the winner
Going just by the barbecue alone, itโs Mixon even though it pains me a little to say it. The smoky flavor is just more prevalent. I still think Calhounโs offers the better overall experience with the full menu, the apps, sides and other options. So, the winner is probably Calhounโs.
The good news for me, as a local, is I can enjoy other Calhounโs other locations and then try other spots whilst in Gatlinburg and Pigeon Forge. If you have to choose between one or the other on vacation, I could see the value in each. So, if you want to eat like an East Tennessean, Calhounโs is the spot. If you want to tell the folks back home you tried a celebrity chefโs restaurant while in the mountains, Mixonโs is the place.
The truth is you couldnโt go wrong with eitherโฆ. as long as youโre a little patient.
Do you have an opinion on Calhounโs vs Mixon? Let us know in the comments and on the socials!