Maxim has put together a gallery of some hot SEC girls. These are professional shots of girls from Florida, Alabama, Ole Miss, LSU, Tennessee, Georgia, Mississippi State, and South Carolina. Shockingly, no girl from Vandy is included.
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Maxim has put together a gallery of some hot SEC girls. These are professional shots of girls from Florida, Alabama, Ole Miss, LSU, Tennessee, Georgia, Mississippi State, and South Carolina. Shockingly, no girl from Vandy is included.
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Outside of fraternities, most people don’t wear a coat and tie tailgating these days. Many of us though have suffered the horror of the dreaded fall wedding . Southern Proper makes sure you can still sport some team pride while you’re chugging free bourbon and constantly checking your phone for scores. They have a collection of neck and bow ties adorned with the mascots of a variety of colleges. By my count they have Alabama, Auburn (though tiger paws), Clemson, East Carolina, Florida, UGA, Georgia Tech, LSU, Mississippi State, North Carolina, NC State, Ole Miss, Texas, and Virginia all covered. You may have to click on their sample to see the logo in a different color (like UGA and MSU in red and maroon). In addition to their online store, these ties are available at a bunch of stores across the Southeast and beyond.
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Most of you who have been to other tailgating sites or been on a college football message board have seen the following photo of what appears to be two UGA fans.

What you rarely see is the second photo that reveals that one girl is actually wearing a black Texas Tech jersey. Neither logo appears to be photoshopped. So what’s going on here? Are either of them fans or did they just grab matching red and black jerseys at the store? Are they an apartment divided? Do they make flags or license plates for that?

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Unfortunately, we didn’t find out if this Georgia girl knew to turn the boot and make sure she didn’t spill. If you want to impress random tailgaters who also loved Beerfest you can pick up a 67oz. Glass Beer Boot from Amazon for just $25 (and add the DVD for $10 more).
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If you’re tailgating for the Texas/A&M game next Thursday on Thanksgiving or just looking to use some leftovers as part of your fare, we’ve got a couple of links and suggestions for you.
Beeriety has a post on pairing beers with your Thanksgiving meal. They also have a more general post on how to pair beer with food.
Turkey – Oktoberfest (Paulaner), Biere de Garde (3 Monts), Bock (Anchor Bock).
Sweet potato – Brown Ale (Newcastle), ESB/English Bitter (Fullers), Pumpkin Beer (Dogfish Head Punkin).
Stuffing – Rye Ale (Founder’s Red Rye).
Pumpkin pie – Dunkelweiss (Weihenstephaner Dunkel), Dopplebock (Ayinger), Cream Ale (Sam Adams), Pumpkin Beer (Dogfish Head Punkin).
Green beans/veggies – Pale Ale (Sam Smith).
Cranberry sauce – Lambic (Lindemans Framboise).
The Georgia Sports Blog made a Turducken for their tailgate a few years ago. A Turducken consists of a chicken that is stuffed inside a duck which is then stuffed inside a turkey. Read about the recipe and planning and the aftermath.
The Real Simple website has a recipe for using your leftover turkey to make Reuben sandwiches that you can serve hot by grilling over a campfire stove.
Turkey Reuben Sandwiches
1. Spread 4 slices rye bread with Dijon mustard and another 4 with Russian dressing.
2. Dividing evenly, top the mustard-spread bread slices with 8 slices roasted turkey, 1 cup sauerkraut, 8 slices Swiss cheese, and the remaining bread.
3. Pan-fry the sandwiches in olive oil until the cheese melts.

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