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FRENCH LICK, Ind. (Inside INdiana Business) — Historic Hotels of America has unveiled its 2022 Top 25 Most Unique Culinary Heritage and Culinary Traditions list. The list includes one Indiana hotel known for the invention of tomato juice.

The Historic Hotels program says culinary heritage refers to a food or beverage that was created or first served at a historic hotel and is still served today. Culinary tradition is defined as a food or beverage that was perfected by the hotel’s chefs or has been served to guests for a least 25 years regardless of its origin.

The French Lick Springs Hotel in Orange County is the only Indiana hotel represented on the list. The hotel is known for the invention of tomato juice in 1917 by Chef Louis Perrin, who needed a substitute for orange juice after running out of oranges.

“News of the drink spread quickly throughout the country and people arrived at the hotel just to try the interesting concoction,” the list said. “Soon there were too many orders for tomato juice and The Springs kitchen could not keep up with the demand. A tomato juice company was formed in French Lick and given the secret recipe to make the juice in massive quantities for the hotel.”

While French Lick Springs is the only Hoosier hotel on the list, there is another Indiana connection. Grand Hotel in Mackinac Island, Michigan is included for its signature dessert, the Pecan Ball, which was originally created at the tea room of the L.S. Ayres department store in Indianapolis.

You can connect to the full list by clicking here.

FRENCH LICK, Ind. (WISH) — The Wilstem Wildlife Park in French Lick has opened its new Fall Festival of Lights.

It’s a drive-thru, family-friendly show getting Hoosiers ready for Halloween.

The event features a drive-thru light show and the chance to add on a twilight drive-thru safari with mini-animal encounters. If you are looking for a safe alternative to pumpkin patches and trick or treating, the park wants you to come create a new tradition with your family and it’s all from the comfort of your own vehicle.

The Fall Festival of Lights stretches a half-mile long and showcases large-scale light installations of a Halloween town with witches brew, ghosts and ghouls, spiders, a graveyard and more. The light show will be available Saturday through Halloween night from 7-9 p.m. EST.

It costs $25 per vehicle to attend.