Food & Drink

Garlic-buttered breadsticks are epic at this Macon pizzeria. And, no, they’re not ‘knots’

The garlic-buttered bread sticks are beloved at Macon’s Ingleside Village Pizza. They’re almost as adored as the Elvis statue inside the renowned eatery. (And, pssst, they’re breadsticks, not “knots.”)
The garlic-buttered bread sticks are beloved at Macon’s Ingleside Village Pizza. They’re almost as adored as the Elvis statue inside the renowned eatery. (And, pssst, they’re breadsticks, not “knots.”) The Telegraph

Editor’s note: This article is part of an occasional series“Middle Georgia Delicacies — bite-size homages to fine food offerings, from the unsung to the iconic, at eateries across our region.

When you order, call them what you will — garlic knots, dough knots, garlic twists, bread bites. The folks at Ingleside Village Pizza will know what you mean.

Just do not insist that they are called garlic knots. Because they are not. The menu says so: “Bread Sticks.”

For $4.95 you get a serving coated in Italian Rose garlic spread, sprinkled with shredded Parmesan cheese and accompanied by a plastic cup of pizza sauce. For $2 more you get the sticks unceremoniously slathered in extra garlic goo, which in the establishment’s lingo makes them “Sloppy,” or supremely drenched in said goo.

The garlic-buttered bread sticks are beloved at Macon’s Ingleside Village Pizza. (And, pssst, they’re bread sticks, not “knots.”)
The garlic-buttered bread sticks are beloved at Macon’s Ingleside Village Pizza. (And, pssst, they’re bread sticks, not “knots.”) / Jason Vorhees The Telegraph

Whatever their name, these fresh-baked wonders are anything but boring-sounding breadsticks, the likes of which appear to have first emerged locally in the 1980s, marketed by national pizza chains, often in the form of such as goofily dubbed creations as “Crazy Bread.” They had, in various forms, previously been served at fine Italian restaurants.

At Ingleside Village Pizza, the breadsticks begin as strips of dough that are later parbaked. Cooks fashion them by hand, picking up two corners of the strips and twirling them into tightly spun sticks a few inches long. You could call them dough logs or mini buns or bread swirls.

Their origin was by happenstance around the time the restaurant opened in 1992.

“They totally came as a fluke,” the eatery’s owner, Tina Dickson, says. “They were not intentionally gonna be on the original menu. But the small little crew that we hired, two of the guys were just kind of playing around when they noticed that we didn’t have any kind of appetizers. These two cooks came up with it.”

A garlic-less bread stick at Ingleside Village Pizza shows the structure of the eatery’s beloved appetizer.
A garlic-less bread stick at Ingleside Village Pizza shows the structure of the eatery’s beloved appetizer. / Joe Kovac Jr. The Telegraph

Three decades later, Dickson can’t believe how many orders she has sold.

“Literally,” she says, “they are my bread and butter.”

She also confirms that the restaurant’s doughy delights are, in fact, called breadsticks.

“I had a woman one time, she got really mad at me,” Dickson recalls. “She said, ‘Y’all used to call them ‘dough knots.’ And I’m like, ‘No. No, ma’am, we didn’t. But if you did, we knew what you were talking about.’”

And so it goes, Dickson says, call them whatever you like.

“We’re not gonna give you a hard time. I’m not gonna correct you,” she says. “I will take your money and sell you those things.”

The garlic-buttered bread sticks are beloved at Macon’s Ingleside Village Pizza. (And, pssst, they’re bread sticks, not “knots.”)
The garlic-buttered bread sticks are beloved at Macon’s Ingleside Village Pizza. (And, pssst, they’re bread sticks, not “knots.”) / Jason Vorhees The Telegraph

This story was originally published November 13, 2023 at 7:00 AM.

Joe Kovac Jr.
The Telegraph
Joe Kovac Jr. writes about local news and features for The Telegraph, with an eye for human-interest stories. Joe is a Warner Robins native and graduate of Warner Robins High. He joined the Telegraph in 1991 after graduating from the University of Georgia. As a Pulliam Fellowship recipient in 1991, Joe worked for the Indianapolis News. His stories have appeared in the Washington Post, the Seattle Times and Atlanta Magazine. He has been a Livingston Award finalist and won numerous Georgia Press Association and Georgia Associated Press awards.
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