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Queen of the Food Age

Charleston Restaurant News

Edmund’s Oast Introduces Nightly Tasting Menu at Chef’s Counter

January 29, 2016

Executive Chef Reid Henninger will begin to offer a special seven-course Tasting Menu at Edmund’s Oast. The menu will change nightly and is only available at the Chef’s Counter. Reservations must be booked in advance and substitutions are not available. The cost is $80 per person and there will be an optional beverage pairing as well for an additional charge. Guests can still dine at the Chef’s Counter and order off the regular menu.

edmunds-oast-chefs-dinner

“We are often asked about tasting menus and thought it would be something special to add at the Chef’s Counter,” stated Reid Henninger. “It will be a great way for the talented kitchen team to do something a little more formal than the norm. We think it will be a nice addition to the ever-evolving menu.”

To learn more, visit us at www.edmundsoast.com or to make reservations call 843-727-1145.

Charleston Restaurant News

5Church Introduces Lunch Service Starting February 1st

January 28, 2016

On Monday, February 1, 5Church Charleston will begin serving lunch Monday through Friday from 11 a.m.3 p.m., offering delicious appetizers, sandwiches, salads and entrees ranging from hearty to healthy.

beet-burger-5church

Patrons can choose from a variety of Chef Jamie Lynch’s expertly-crafted sandwiches such as the Italian Hoagie, French Onion Roast Beef, Reuben, Cubano and famed 5Church Lamb Burger with red onion marmalade and gorgonzola fondue.

Diners looking for a lighter lunch can enjoy a number of fresh salads such as the Roasted Beet Salad with shaved fennel and goat cheese crostini or Mixed Green Salad with marinated mushrooms and porcini-thyme vinaigrette.

Entrée options include Prime Bistro Steak, Mussels and Fries, Bolognese Pasta and 5Church’s signature Crab Cakes with red pepper emulsion. Guests looking to linger a bit longer over lunch can also choose from a selection of appetizers like Jerk Chicken Lettuce Wraps and Fried Calamari.

5church-lunch

5Church Charleston is located at 32B N. Market Street, near the corner of East Bay Street. Follow the restaurant on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

Charleston, SC Restaurant Reviews

Mercantile and Mash

January 27, 2016

I have been so excited to try Mercantile & Mash ever since I first heard about the project way back when. I’m so glad they finally found something to do to revamp the old cigar factory, because it’s such a great space.

Doesn't it just look like a place you want to come hang out for a few hours? Or forever?

Doesn’t it just look like a place you want to come hang out for a few hours? Or forever?

The idea behind Mercantile & Mash is simple, but unique: Mercantile is a self-described “gourmet food emporium” featuring homemade and local products such as charcuterie, cheese, fresh baked goods, grab-and-go items, and other food essentials. They also recently introduced the Chef’s Counter, a gourmet lunch experience that I was lucky enough to try out last week. The menu changes regularly, but I’ll give you the rundown on each of the dishes I tried.

I'll have one of everything, please.

I’ll have one of everything, please.

First, the Rappahannock River Oysters (shallot, cucumber, and housemade kimchi mignonette, $13). The oysters were perfectly prepared and I’ve never had anything like the kimchi mignonette before. The sourness of the kimchi paired perfectly with the oysters and the sweetness of the shallot. I highly recommend these if you like oysters!

It's like lunch AND a work of art!

It’s like lunch AND a work of art!

Next, the Smoked Tuna Crudo (fennel, orange, pistachio, and pomegranate, $14). I love tuna, so I was really excited for this dish. I loved the combination of the fish with the pistachio and pomegranate, but the orange felt a little superfluous to me. My dining companion was also a little disappointed and wanted a little more flavor out of the dish. Regardless, if you like tuna, you’ll probably enjoy this dish.

Like a little bite of sunshine.

Like a little bite of summertime and sunshine.

Next, my favorite dish, was the Beef Carpaccio (crispy sweetbreads, mustard, apple, and a mustard seed aioli, $14). The beef carpaccio itself was full of flavor and perfectly spiced. The mustard and apple offered some sweetness and tanginess to the dish, and the buttermilk-fried crispy sweetbreads were perfection. Our waitress described them as “adult chicken nuggets” and they practically melted in your mouth. I’d come back for this dish alone.

Plus, this photo got me like a thousand likes on Instagram. #score

Plus, this photo got me like a thousand likes on Instagram. #score

Next up was the Local Acorn Squash Soup (goat cheese, sherry, brown butter, and sage, $9. The soup was creamy and velvety, but lacked some depth that I was looking for.

"ACORN SOUP FOR YOU" - Hipster Soup Nazi

“ACORN SOUP FOR YOU” – Hipster Soup Nazi

The Butternut Agnolotti (duck confit, dates, hazelnuts, and vanilla bacon, $12) was really interesting. The vanilla was very strong, but was a great complement to the creaminess of the butternut pasta and dates. I liked that the duck confit was not inside the agnolotti, but rather served alongside in the pasta.

Like little pasta pillows.

Like little pasta pillows.

The Seared Scallops (roasted cauliflower, parsnip, almond, and citrus, $16) were perfectly cooked and were huge on the plate. The sauce that they were served with was amazing, and I wished they would bottle it so I could put it on everything.

Is this ambrosia?!

Is this ambrosia?!

The final entree of the meal was the Heritage Farms Cheshire Pork Chop (ham hock, brussels sprouts, cider, and ginger, $18). The pork was amazing… it was moist and flavorful and I loved the cider and ginger that went along with it. The brussels were also perfectly cooked; not too hard and not too mushy….juuuust right.

Like the Goldilocks of vegetables.

Like the Goldilocks of vegetables.

We also tried an iced coffee from the “coffee wizard,” a concoction that he created dubbed the“Steve Palmer” (named after the owner). Instead of lemonade and tea, they combined limeade and iced coffee, which was surprisingly delicious.

Go into this one with an open mind.

Go into this one with an open mind.

The space itself is breathtaking and perfect for lunch with friends, a casual coffee date, or working remotely. They also offer great take-and-go options like their “dinner for two” deal. Be sure to stop by and check out this amazing space if you haven’t already!

And so whimsical!

And so whimsical!

I was feeling lazy the other day so I decided to try out the aforementioned “dinner for two.” It has all the makings of a home-cooked meal, without the hassle of a bunch of dishes. Remember that scene from Mrs. Doubtfire when Robin Williams (as the title character) orders a bunch of take out and puts it on the plate to pretend like she cooked the whole thing herself? This is basically that.

Just call me "Sydney Doubtfire."

Just call me “Sydney Doubtfire.”

The week that I chose had the following options:

  • Bone-In Cheshire Pork Chop with a South Carolina BBQ glaze, herbed confit fingerling potatoes, bourbon buttered mushrooms, and baby greens salad for $30
    OR
  • Seared Blue Crab Cakes with pickled okra and mustard seed aioli, sweet potato purée, steamed broccoli and bell peppers and baby arugula salad for $32. It was a tough choice, but I ended up going with the pork.

Everything came packed neatly in little tin containers. To cook, you preheat your oven, remove the plastic covers, place the containers on a tray, and cook for the recommended time in your oven. Easy peasy.

Easy peasy lemon squeezy.

Except the salad. Don’t cook that, ya crazy.

Once everything was nice and hot, I plated it like normal and pretended like I’d made the whole thing from scratch. Which no one believed because I am nowhere close to a gourmet chef (except in my own mind).

 

I'm so profesh.

I’m so profesh.

No good dinner is complete without a tasty dessert to go with it. Although it’s not part of the dinner-for-two deal, I stopped by the baked goods case and grabbed something nice and chocolatey in the form of a chocolate, bacon, peanut butter, and banana bar.

Chocolate heals all wounds.

Chocolate heals all wounds.

Basically, I’m in love with Mercantile and Mash. It’s a great place to come for a morning coffee, brunch with friends, a lunch meeting, or to grab something quick to put together for dinner. Try it, and I bet you’ll fall in love, too.

Now you're speakin' my language.

Now you’re speakin’ my language.

Mercantile and Mash
701 East Bay Street
Charleston, SC 29403
(843) 793-2636

Mercantile And Mash Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato

Charleston Restaurant News Events

Coast Beer Dinner at Bay Street Biergarten 1/21/16

January 19, 2016

On Thursday January 21, 2016 at 6:30pm, Bay St Biergarten will host a delicious all-inclusive four course dinner created by executive chef Vaughn Collins featuring Charleston’s own Coast Brewing Co.

Coast Beer dinner

The menu for the dinner is as follows:

  • Shrimp Bisque paired with Shreddin Wheat- an American wheat ale which consist of vienna malt, wheat malt, American hops and American ale yeast.
    • Why it works with bisque: the vienna malt lends a slight toastiness, the wheat gives the beer a higher protein content which allows for a fuller mouth feel, and the moderate hop content will cut through the creaminess of the bisque
  • Arugula and crab salad with asparagus and tear drop tomatoes paired with 32/50 Kolsch- a traditional German ale which consist mainly of pilsner malt, a little bit of wheat, Kolsch yeast and a mix of German and American hops.
    • Why it works with this type of salad: The Kolsch yeast which calls for a cooler fermentation temperature, along with the use of pilsner malt allows the beer to be light bodied and crispy clean which does not over power the subtle flavors of the crab. The earthy character of the hops work very well with the arugula and asparagus, and the slight acidity of the beer matches the acidity of the tomatoes.
  • Bourbon marinated filet with goat cheese risotto paired with Alterior Motive- a traditional German ale which consist of Pilsner malt, munich malt, a mix of German and American hops, and Kolsch yeast.
    • Why it works with beef and risotto: The munich malt provides a nice caramelized malty backbone which works with the caramelized beef. The hop character cuts through the rich fat of the beef and the creaminess of the the goat cheese risotto.
  • German Chocolate Cake paired with Blackbeerd- a Russian Imperial Stout which consist mainly of 2 row malt, munich malt, caramel and roasted malts, smoked malt, oats, American hops and American ale yeast.
    • Why it works with this dessert: The full dark body and slight sweetness work well with the richness of the chocolate. The oats provide a nice silky mouth feel and the hops help to balance out the sweetness of the dish.

Menu is subject to change. 
Tickets are $50/person and can be purchased at www.BSBbierdinner.com  Only 30 tickets available.

Charleston Restaurant News Events

John Lewis Collaboration Dinner at Edmund’s Oast

January 18, 2016

 

In anticipation of the soon-to-open neighborhood bbq restaurant—Lewis Barbecue—Edmund’s Oast will welcome pitmaster John Lewis for a one-night special collaboration dinner on Wednesday, January 27. Lewis and Edmund’s Oast Executive Chef Reid Henninger will design a menu that is influenced on central Texas barbecue, Tex Mex cuisine, and Gulf Coast favorites. Diners can expect to see some large cuts of prime smoked beef as well. The menu will be different from most of the pop-ups Lewis has held across the Charleston area over the past year, and this will be a break from the traditional food menu offered at Edmund’s. The normal beverage menu, along with a few additions including some mezcal creations and the special Whiskey Wednesday offerings, will be available for the event. Reservations are highly recommended for this one-night menu. To learn more, visit edmundsoast.com or call 843-727-1145.

john lewis

Pitmaster John Lewis is a trailblazer in the neo-traditional style of Central Texas barbecue. A master of craft barbecue, John welds his own custom-designed smokers to create expertly smoked pork spareribs, beef ribs, “Texas Hot Guts” sausage, and his legendary beef brisket. John, also known as the “wood whisperer,” has an unerring devotion to his craft, tending to his smokers by 4 am most mornings and constantly striving to improve his product. Lewis Barbecue is expected to open in spring 2016 nearby Edmund’s Oast in the popular NoMo neighborhood.

Charleston Restaurant News Events

Bay Street Biergarten Oyster Roast

January 15, 2016
bay-st-biergarten-oyster-roast
Always supporting the local community,  Charleston’s first contemporary German biergarten, Bay Street Biergarten, is partnering with local seafood purveyor, St. Jude Farms, for a Locals Oyster Roast on Sunday January 17 from 1-6pm. Local favorites include Charleston Distilling Company, Charleston Mix Bloody Marys, Westbrook Brewing Company, and live, local music from, Dan’s Tamp Stamp and the Money Bags.
  • Oysters: $16 per bucket
  • $5 Bloody Marys with Charleston Distilling Company’s Carolina Reaper Vodka & Charleston Mix Bloody Mary Mix
  • $5 Westbrook Brewing Company White Thai pints
  • NFL playoff football:
  • 1:05 PM Panthers vs TBD
  • 4:40 PM Broncos vs TBD
Charleston Restaurant News Events

2016 Limehouse Produce Citrus Celebration

January 14, 2016

Over twenty of Charleston’s best bars and restaurants are getting into the citrusy spirit as they showcase delicious drinks, dishes, and desserts as part of Limehouse Produce’s 2016 Citrus Celebration. This year, participants were asked to get a little more creative and select from just four citrus items: cara cara oranges, satsuma tangerines, pumellos, and meyer lemons when creating their items.

lime-color

Limehouse Produce is once again sharing more details on these featured dishes and drinks on their website along with recipes for people to download and try on their own. Patrons can also go and ask for the respected dish or drink at the participants locations until the end of February.

A panel of judges will be visiting the top five places from each category and select a winner for the Best Citrus Dish and Best Citrus Drink. Each winner will be promoted on the website, social media outlets, and to the media. NEW THIS YEAR: The restaurant with the winning dish will be featured on the side of a Limehouse Produce truck and the winning drink will be featured in a ½ page ad in The Local Palate.

Restaurants and bars part of this promotion include:

Savory:

  • Aaron Lemieux, Vincent Chicco’s: Citrus trek olive oil seared NC Swordfish with artichoke meyer lemon, farro, Tuscan kale with chile
  • Aaron Lemieux, Vincent Chicco’s: SC (Certified Angus Beef) Ribeye with pork cheek, fig ravioli, satsuma cara cara chianti reduction, red wine figs, sorghum and candied pecans
  • Aaron Lemieux, Michael’s on the Alley: Citrus trek crab duo with king crab, pommelo salad, candy cane beets, candied kumquat, pommelo segments, black truffle and hazelnut crusted goat cheese
  • Brannon Florie, The Granary, Hiser Farms Clams with Meyer Lemon, Cara Cara navel, Satsuma mandarin
  • Jason Rheinwald at The Sanctuary, The Ocean Room: Burrata: a collection of citrus
  • Jeremiah Bacon, The Macintosh: Broccolini with pickled  mustard seeds ,red navel oranges , fish sauce and poached egg
  • Katie Dyches, Bohemian Bull, Satsuma Duck Egg Roll
  • Marc Collins, Circa 1886: Cara Cara orange & BBQ crab salad, roasted fennel, pomegranate, black pepper brioche crisp, basil coulis
  • Ryley McGillis, Eleve: Tuna Crudo, Pumello & Cara Cara Oranges, Satsuma Tangerine Gastrique, Meyer Lemon Crosta, Fresno, Fennel & Radish
  • Robert Berry, Pancito & Lefty: Shrimp Aguachile
  • Vinson Petrillo, Zero George Café, hamachi collar, various textures of citrus, chicory, Truffle miso

Sweet:

  • Katelyn Selin, Poogan’s Hospitality Group: Satsuma Cookies & Milk
  • Sarah Parker, Caviar & Bananas: Citrus Tasting Plate
  • Suzanne Stewart, The Glass Onion: Meyer Lemon-Buttermilk Custard

Drinks:

  • Cassandra Stoiber Edwall, Eleve: Élevé au soleil
  • Dan Williams, Cypress: The Naranja
  • David Clarke, SOL Southwest Kitchen & Tequila Bar: Spiked Winter Lemonade
  • Ian Farley, Prohibition: Yeamans Collins
  • Jared Chafin, Indaco
  • Jeremiah Schenzel, The Cocktail Club: What’s The Word
  • John Martindale, Circa 1886: Chelsey’s Dream
  • Kyle DeGolyer, Poogan’s Hospitality Group: Sergeant Jasper’s Satsuma Smash
  • Paul Zekus and Brannon Florie, On Forty One: Chinese Christmas
  • Robert Berry, Pancito & Lefty: Cara Cara Orange Margarita
  • Sean Daniher, Home Team BBQ: Gomero Blanco
  • Shaun Gordan, Prohibition: L’amore Swizzle

 

To learn more and to download recipes, visitwww.limehouseproduce.com.

Charleston Restaurant News Events

Slow Meat Pitmaster Roast – March 5, 2016

January 10, 2016

slow-meat-pitmaster-roast

Home Team BBQ will host a Slow Meat Pitmaster Roast at their new downtown location (126 Williman Street) on Saturday, March 5 to promote the national educational campaign—Slow Meat and to raise funds for Slow Food Charleston. Several of the South’s top pitmasters including Aaron Siegel, Taylor Garrigan, and Madison Ruckel from Home Team BBQ, Jonathan and Justin Fox from the Fox Bros. Bar-B-Q in Atlanta, Carey Bringle from Peg Leg Porker Restaurant in Nashville, and Pat Martin of Martin’s Bar-B-Que Joint in Nashville will participate in the event alongside Chef Michael Gallina, former chef de cuisine at Blue Hill at Stone Barns. Each featured pitmaster and chef will have a station serving up a variety of dishes featuring “slow meat” (some on Cowboy Cauldrons) and there will be an assortment of snacks and sides. Specialty cocktails featuring High Wire Distilling Co. and beer by Holy City Brewing will be available. The event is from 6:00 to 9:00PM and costs $50 per person plus tax. This includes the food and three drink tickets.

slow-meat-roast

After the Roast, attendees will have access to an After Show Concert featuring Big Bill Morganfield™, a multi-award winning blues artist. The son of McKinley Morganfield (a.k.a. Muddy Waters), Big Bill has played all over the world over the past fifteen years. He was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in St. Louis in 2013 as a “Master Blues Artist” and he is owner of his own recording agency Black Shuck Records.

Click here to purchase tickets or to learn more about Home Team BBQ.

Charleston Restaurant News Events

Glass Onion Hosts Crab & Oyster Dinner with Chef Bill Smith – February 10, 2016

January 4, 2016

For one special night on Wednesday, February 10, The Glass Onion will welcome legendary Southern chef Bill Smith from Crook’s Corner in Chapel Hill for a dinner highlighting dishes from his new book Crabs and Oysters: A SAVOR THE SOUTH® Cookbook. Chef Chris Stewart and Smith will collaborate on a four course dinner that will feature dishes inspired from the book. Diners can expect a seafood heavy menu featuring crab, oysters, shrimp and more. Plus diners can expect the usual treats and surprises offered at The Glass Onion special dinners. The dinner is $70 per person and includes a copy of the book, or $125 a couple (with one copy of the book). There will also be an optional wine pairing for $25 per person or dinners can order off the normal drink menu as well.

oysters-glass-onion

 “We have been long time fans of Bill Smith and Crook’s Corner at The Glass Onion,” stated Chef Chris Stewart. “This new book is a great reference to two of our favorite seafood staples—crabs and oysters—and we cannot wait to cook with him and showcase some of the tasty dishes.”

Crabs and Oysters: A SAVOR THE SOUTH® Cookbook: A North Carolina native, Bill Smith grew up catching crabs and shucking oysters. For this book, he traveled the coastline, and visited with crab fisherman and oyster farmers and then studied a library’s worth of regional cookbooks and collections of heirloom recipes to compile this collection of fifty recipes. Organized by courses, the book features recipes such as Hard-Crab Stew with White Cornmeal Dumplings, Crabmeat Cobbler, Roasted Oysters and Crabmeat Ravigotte and Oyster Shortcake to name a few.

crab-and-oysters

Chef Bill Smith is as well known for his enduring creativity at Crook’s Corner, one of the South’s most venerable restaurants, as he is for his exceptional food writing. His literary cookbook Seasoned in the South: Recipes andStories from Crook’s Corner and Home was named a New York Times notable and Food & Wine Best-of-the-Best cookbook. A foremost chef-expert in southern foodways, Bill Smith has served for years on the board of the Southern Foodways Alliance. He holds the honorable distinction of being the only chef from a James Beard America’s Classic Award-winning restaurant to have been named a final-five finalist for best chef in the Southeast—and twice. 

 Tickets can be purchased in advance at http://bit.ly/1NtSxSh or call 843-225-1717. Once a ticket is purchased, attendees will select a specific reservation time. To learn more, visit www.ilovetheglassonion.com.

Charleston Restaurant News

Halls Chophouse Opening in Greenville, SC

January 3, 2016

Charleston’s premier steakhouse, Halls Chophouse, will open its second location in the existing High Cotton Greenville space on Main Street on the bank of the Reedy River. Halls Chophouse Greenville will be led by Owner Bill Hall, a veteran in the hospitality and dining industry, along with his family, wife Jeanne and sons Billy and Tommy. Joining Halls Chophouse in January as General Manager is Matthew Blakeley, who brings 15 years of steakhouse experience to the team. Additionally, Pam Falvey has also been named the assistant general manager, having worked previously at Del Frisco’s steakhouse in Dallas and Nantucket Seafood in Greenville. The restaurant will operate as High Cotton through January 4 and will re-open as Halls Chophouse on January 22, 2016.

halls-greenville

“We are excited to introduce our Halls Chophouse dining experience to the Greenville community,” states Owner Bill Hall. “We look forward to continuing to provide guests with exceptional hospitality and service in addition to offering an elevated menu including our signature premium steaks.”

meat-halls-greenville

Since the 2009 opening of Halls Chophouse in Charleston, the Hall Family has been steadfast in their commitment to operate their flagship steakhouse with dedicated precision and a finely-tuned penchant for impeccable hospitality. Halls Chophouse has received national acclaim and numerous awards, including recently being named the #5 Best Restaurant in the U.S. by TripAdvisor’s 2015 Traveler’s Choice Awards and #4 Best Restaurant in the U.S. 2016 by OpenTable. The Hall Family plans to apply the same principles of unsurpassed service and exquisitely-prepared cuisine refined over seven years to the forthcoming Halls Chophouse Greenville.

oysters-halls-greenville

Located at 550 S. Main Street in downtown Greenville, Halls Chophouse will be open for dinner seven nights a week, serving until 11 p.m. on weekdays and midnight on the weekends. The bar will be open until 2am daily.

salad-halls-greenville

For more information, please visit www.hallschophouse.com.  Like us on Facebook: facebook.com/hallschophouse and follow us on Twitter: @HallsChophouse and Instagram:@HallsChophouse.