Very Merry Island

Christmastime on Nantucket brings new meaning to White Elephant gift.

Christmas on Nantucket

Nantucket often conjures images of yachts, preppy attire in a certain shade of red, and clapboard siding aplenty. A friendly rivalry with Cape Cod and the Hamptons enhances the fun-loving, frat-party-for-grownups vibe, especially in the busy summers. But on the first weekend of December, that party is attended by reindeer-ear-clad carolers, mulled cider in hand, who await the arrival of none other than Santa Clause via the Coast Guard.

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Food+Travel

Retro Fits

At Houston native Ford Fry’s new sister setups, Superica and La Lucha in the Heights, nostalgia for old-school, pointedly unpretentious Tex-Mex and Southern-fried fun is the main ingredient.

Trevor Gerland

Ford Fry, the tall, bright-eyed Atlanta restaurateur, admits that it was “pretty ballsy” to open an outpost of his wildly popular Tex-Mex restaurant called Superica here in Houston. “There were a lot of naysayers,” he says. “‘What’s a guy from Atlanta doing opening a Tex-Mex spot here?’ But people don’t realize, it’s what I grew up eating in my hometown.”

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Food+Travel

Tell It on the Mountain

This is not your father’s Branson. In Missouri’s Ozarks, a legendary entrepreneur’s vision of an upscale conservationist’s paradise comes to life.

Fans of the brooding Netflix organized-crime drama Ozark — Jason Bateman plays a former suburban soccer dad morphing into a low-level mobster seeking to blend into the scenery of the Ozark Mountains of Missouri — may be disappointed by a couple cold truths. The show is filmed in Georgia, on a lake made by a film crew as a TV-show backdrop. And in the real Ozarks, which are much prettier than the Netflix version, there’s nary a hint of money laundering or extortion. Just about the only thing that could pass for intrigue is the occasional lost golf ball or a fish that slips off the hook.

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