Holiday Foodie Gift Guide 2020

We’re finally here, the end of 2020! [Insert what month it is here]

With the holiday’s rolling around the corner, this holiday season will be a little different for everyone. And so, I wanted to put a list together comprised of foodie gift trends, ways to support small businesses, women owned businesses, black women owned businesses, and most importantly a lot of friends on this list.

This list covers a little bit of everything for the food fam out there.

Happy Holidays Y’all! xoxo

Kitchen Gadgets:

Holiday Food Gifts:

Advent Calendars:

Food Thangs:


Chocolate Lovers Gifts:

Boozy Gifts:

  • Spoonable Spirits: Booze-infused pudding shots made fresh in NYC.

  • Simple Vodka: With every bottle of Simple Vodka, they provide 20 meals to those in need through direct support of the local and national hunger relief organizations.

  • Hangover Helper: Hangover Helper is a playful cookbook filled with tried and true recipes to cure your hangover, collected from culinary traditions from around the world.

  • Cheeky: Syrups & juices for cocktails in the home

  • Corkzy: Fancy and easy way to open your wine bottles.

Black Women Owned Businesses:

  • Boss Blend Coffee: Small batch coffee brand. Artisanal coffee for every boss.

  • Chicago French Press: Chicago based, women led coffee company.

  • Trade Street Jam Company: Vegan, Brooklyn, and Black Owned jam company.

  • Blondery: Handmade blondies inspired by generosity. Founded by professional pastry chef, Auzerais Bellamy. Baked to order in Brooklyn and shipped Nationwide.

  • The Salty Heifer: Black woman-owned gourmet online bakery with the best fresh-baked cookies and more.

  • The Glam Kitchen: e-cookbooks and seasonings (My friend Shauntay from middle school is the founder and owner. All her recipes are amazing!)

  • Mama Biscuit: America’s first gourmet biscuit company located in the Washington DC, Maryland, and Virginia area. Biscuits that contain No Trans Fat, No Preservatives, No Artificial flavors, colors or dyes and use real butter.

  • Stuyvesant Champagne: The vineyard stretches from the Ardre Valley to the Aisne via the Marne Valley. Marvina Robinson is one of the few African American women owning a Champagne brand. Her love for her hometown, Bedford-Stuyvesant (Brooklyn, NY), inspired the name of her brand, Stuyvesant Champagne.

  • Camella’s Kitchen: Black-women owned mother/daughter business based out of Prince George’s County, Maryland. Specializing in bold Caribbean flavors handcrafted in small batches.