Why the PGA Tour’s New Food Culture Matters More Than You Think
Look, I’ve spent 35 years watching professional golf evolve, and I’ve learned that the sport doesn’t exist in a vacuum. It reflects broader cultural shifts in how we live, travel, and yes—how we eat. So when I read about the Omni PGA Frisco’s Savor event drawing 600 guests to a gochujang-glazed sticky rib tasting, my instinct wasn’t to shrug it off as just another celebrity chef junket. This is actually something worth paying attention to.
The golf resort experience has fundamentally changed. Back when I was caddying for Tom in the ’90s, the clubhouse meant a decent burger and maybe some decent wine if you were lucky. Today? We’re talking Food Network stars, Michelin-starred experiences, and culinary theater that would make a five-star restaurant jealous. And frankly, I think that’s exactly what the tour needs right now.
The Convergence of Golf and Lifestyle
Here’s what strikes me about Savor: it’s not trying to be a golf tournament with food attached to it. It’s a genuine lifestyle experience where golf is the anchor, not the main event. That distinction matters enormously when you’re trying to attract a demographic that’s increasingly skeptical about traditional sports tourism.
The data speaks for itself. Shaun Tolson racked up 110,000 frequent-flyer miles in 2025 alone covering these kinds of experiences. That’s not someone covering breaking news—that’s someone documenting a legitimate travel and lifestyle phenomenon. And according to the event organizers, the inaugural Savor in May drew enough buzz that four of five participating chefs are returning for the second annual event at the end of April. You don’t get that kind of chef loyalty unless something genuinely resonated.
What really caught my eye was this observation from chef Antonia Lofaso about what distinguished Savor from other food festivals:
“There was an intimate feeling of community that doesn’t always happen at some of the other festivals. What did it for me was the live music. That was the through-line that made it feel very Texas.”
In my experience, when chefs—particularly accomplished ones—start talking about “community” and “intimacy,” you know you’ve tapped into something authentic. These aren’t people easily impressed by spectacle. They work in that world every day. When they notice genuine atmosphere, it means the organizers have done something right.
The Menu as a Marketing Tool
I need to be direct here: the PGA Tour has had a perception problem with younger demographics for years. Golf courses have been seen as exclusive, stuffy, and frankly, a bit boring outside of tournament play. But when you’re serving fire-roasted beef tenderloin with tomato agrodolce and giardiniera alongside your golf experience, you’re not just feeding people—you’re telling them a story about sophistication and craft.
Take Chef Kevin Lee’s gochujang-glazed sticky ribs from the Fork & Fire tasting. According to Tolson’s account, these weren’t just good—they were statement-making:
“Chef Kevin Lee made the boldest statement of the night with his gochujang-glazed sticky ribs. Yes, they were meaty and toothsome, but the ribs also boasted a rich and robust flavor. They had a kick, for sure—that’s to be expected with gochujang, a slightly sweet, fermented Korean chili paste—but it was a rounded spiciness.”
You know what that tells me? Someone brought genuine culinary expertise to a golf resort event, not just celebrity. There’s a difference between hiring a famous name and actually investing in the craft. Lee clearly did the latter.
The Pastry Chef as Unsung Star
Here’s where I really want to give credit where it’s due: Chef Leen Nunn, Omni PGA Frisco’s resident pastry chef, appears to be the real MVP of this operation. Her work—from the deconstructed strawberry rhubarb pie to the show-stopping chocolate cake trifle served in a Dr. Pepper can with edible bubble clouds—represents exactly the kind of theatrical, Instagram-worthy excellence that drives modern resort visitation.
The Dr. Pepper trifle deserves its own paragraph. It’s brilliant marketing disguised as dessert. You’re taking a Texas icon (Dr. Pepper), giving it haute cuisine treatment, and creating something that people actually *want* to post about on social media. That’s not luck. That’s strategic thinking about what modern travelers value.
What This Means for Golf’s Future
In my three-plus decades covering professional golf, I’ve watched the tour chase television ratings and corporate sponsorships with mixed results. But experiences? Experiences are something golf has always done well, and now the industry is finally leaning into it properly. The Omni isn’t trying to compete with Augusta National or Pebble Beach on prestige. It’s creating something different—a destination where golf is one component of a broader lifestyle experience.
The fact that tickets to the April event are still available suggests there’s room for growth here. This isn’t sold out. That means the market is validating the concept without the event having reached saturation. That’s the sweet spot for sustainable growth.
The real takeaway? The PGA Tour ecosystem is finally understanding that modern golf tourism isn’t about exclusivity through gatekeeping—it’s about accessibility through quality. You can’t keep the doors locked anymore. But you can open them to something genuinely excellent, and that’s what Savor represents.
Four chefs returning for round two tells you everything you need to know about whether this experiment is working.
