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Posts Tagged ‘Visit Historic Charleston’

December 17th, 2015

Historic Charleston Eats! Husk, Charleston, South Carolina, Restaurant, Review, “A Destination to Savor”

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The fun part of staying in Historic Charleston is that you can walk everywhere.  During my stay last week I noticed that Christmas decorations were very traditional and understated.  So en route to Husk at 76 Queen St. I was.

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I was anticipating a very nice dinner.  This is one of the top restaurants in Historic Charleston.  Tel. 843-577-2500.  You can find it on Facebook.  Website? http:/www.huskrestaurant.com.

Husk is operated and managed by the Neighborhood Dining Group.  You can find this group managing and operating restaurants throughout the southeast.  For more info., please visit http://www.neighborhooddininggroup.com.

Husk opens 7 days a week.  Lunch is served Monday through Saturday from 11:30 a.m. until 2:30 p.m.  Sunday Brunch is from 10:00 a.m. until 2:30 p.m.  Dinner is from Sunday to Thursday from 5:30 p.m. until 10:00 p.m.  And, Friday and Saturday dinner is from 5:30 p.m. until 11:00 p.m.

Wednesday evening was crowded so my photos were limited to my dining experience.

The bread was sprinkled with sea salt.  It was brought to the table promptly.  The service from this point on was impeccable.

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Through my stay in Charleston I always asked for the signature dish of the restaurant.  I figured it is one that is tried and true and really liked by the public.  So I started with Kentuckyaki Glazed Pig’s Ear Lettuce Wraps, Sweet Vinegar Marinated Cucumber, Red Onion and Bourbon Barrel Togarashi.  Togarashi is the Japanese word for red chili peppers and a general name for a group of condiments that blend chili pepper with other ingredients.  The pig’s ears were thinly sliced and were crisped.  The cucumbers were all preserved by Husk as they usually do with all their summer veggies.  This dish was awesome.  And when upon posting the photo on Facebook my friend, Shelley, mentioned….Oh you could get those at Southern States….she seems to still have a good sense of humor.

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Another Signature Dish at Husk is the Cornmeal Dusted Carolina Catfish.  Field Peas and Butterbeans, Smoked Tomato Gravy, Mustard Greens.  Once again the flavors on this entree were terrific.  I also enjoyed this dish because I knew my late husband, John, would have ordered it, as well.  This Catfish had a bit of a bite to it even though the flavor was mild and the dusting was light.

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A side order of Wood Fired Geechie Boy Mill Grits, and Cheddar from TN.  I ate grits everywhere I found them.  These were delicious. Geehie Boy Mill Grits are from Edisto Island, South Carolina. You can order online.  Please visit http://www.geechieboymill.com

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My dessert was again decadent.  Olive & Sinclair Chocolate Fudge Cake with homemade Peanut Butter Ice Cream and a dusting of peanut butter powder.  I missed my partners in crime to help eat this cake, so what can I say, I ate it all myself.  Olive & Sinclair chocolate is stone ground in Nashville Tennessee.  More information, please visit http://www.oliveandsinclair.com.

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So, 3 nights in Historic Charleston, 3 delicious dinners, 2 great breakfasts, and 1 very nice lunch…..TTYL  Have Good One!!

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December 14th, 2015

Historic Charleston Eats! SNOB, Slightly North of Broad, Restaurant, Review, Lunch & Dinner, Gluten Free Menu, Charleston, South Carolina

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If you are in Charleston at this precise moment, SNOB is open for lunch.  I went back to this popular restaurant having visited last February.  I was intrigued by the fact that there is a new ownership since I last visited.  Apparently everything is going well.  Nevertheless, I wanted to try it for myself.

So off I went to 192 E Bay St.  Tel. 843-723-3424  They are open 7 days a week.  Lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and Dinner from 5:00 p.m.  Reservations are accepted but for the Chef’s Table is first come first serve.

I sat once again at the Chef’s Table.  This table, I believe has 6 seats.  Usually, diners sit here because they are foodies and also get the opportunity to chat with others, more so if you are by yourself.  You get a good view towards the kitchen.

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Plus you get a little starter from your server….a small crab cake tasting.

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Last February I had their signature dish.  That is worth a try.  Shrimp & Grits no less, with house sausage, country ham, tomatoes, green onions, on top of delicious Geechie Boy grits.

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At the Chef’s Table this year:  Steamed Local Clams with parsley, roasted garlic cream and grilled baguettes which were perfect for dipping into the broth.

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The Beef Carpaccio looked beautiful, perfect for a light lunch…thinly sliced raw beef, capers, pecorino Romano, and grilled baguette.

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And, the Grilled Carolina Trout did not disappoint….So moist and perfectly seasoned.  It was served over roasted root veggies, wilted greens and drizzled with a golden raisin vinaigrette.  If you like fish, this is a good one to try.

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Please note that SNOB offers a Gluten Free Menu, so you will be able to have a nice lunch or dinner without any problems.

No dessert this time, I was perfectly satisfied.

Have a Good One!!  TTYL

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December 13th, 2015

Sweetgrass Baskets, A Proud Tradition, Trudy Hicks Baskets, Charleston, South Carolina

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I thought that on this second trip to Charleston I was going to again leave without a sweetgrass basket.  I don’t know, to tell you the truth as I was passing plenty of weavers, none hit it where it should have….my heart.  Except, that on my last day I grabbed a cup of coffee and went down the street by my hotel, The Vendue, towards the Waterfront Park, which is on Vendue Range.  The photo above is exactly what I first saw.  I have never met a stranger, so this time I stopped and engaged Trudy Hicks in conversation.

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As it happened, Trudy is one of Charleston’s finest sweetgrass basket makers.  She was taught as a child and she has passed this art form to her children, grandchildren and plenty of others that want to learn.

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Many years ago, before she took over for her grandmother, Trudy had her own hair salon.  She has a great spot on this street because the previous mayor of the City of Charleston awarded her this particular station because of her connection to Boone Hall Plantation.  Her grandmother is the last living person that lived at Boone Hall.  Her aunt had been born there, as well.  Once she is finished for the day all she has to do is close the doors.  The basket weavers in the market have to take everything down every day and take it home.

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Trudy showed me photographs of her family.  Also a photo of the first road stand in Mount Pleasant where the first baskets were weaved and sold.

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Trudy gives back to the community.  The flowers, wreaths, crosses made out of sweetgrass…proceeds go to The House Of Love.  She takes children out on field days, and helps in every which way she can.

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I think everyone in her family except one of the little ones know how to weave.  She tells her daughter to get those little fingers ready!!

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Sweet grass baskets are so easy to take care.  Since the grasses are from swamps and marsh areas, water will not hurt them.  To clean, just spray the basket with cold water and then let them air dry.  That’s it.  Trudy’s telephone is 843-460-0901.  She also ships.  So, next time while visiting Charleston stop by and say hello.  She will give you a warm smile and plenty of hugs and will really make your day, I promise you, she will.   She is one awesome lady.

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Have a Good One!! TTYL

March 25th, 2015

Destination? Charleston, South Carolina, Edmondston-Alston House, 21 East Battery Bed and Breakfast, Middleton Place Plantation, Exploring America’s Oldest Landscaped Gardens

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The Edmondston-Alston House was the first house museum we visited in rainy Historic Charleston the last week of February.  It is called Edmondston-Alston because Edmondston was the first owner who built this beautiful home in East Battery.  He was a successful merchant.  Financial depressions got the best of him and he had to sell….the new buyer was Alston, who was a member of one of the wealthiest rice-planting families in South Carolina.  The house is very open and, definitely worth seeing.  This house museum is administered by the Middleton Place Foundation who also owns and operates the Gardens, House and Plantation Stableyards at Middleton Place.

In the back of the Edmondston-Alston House there is a privately-owned luxury bed and breakfast.  These were the servants’ quarters.  Guests of 21 East Battery Bed and Breakfast enjoy a complimentary tour of the Edmondston-Alston House museum.  For more information, please visit http://www.21eastbattery.com.  Tel. 843-556-0500

Historic Charleston is full of antique wrought iron.  There are accents pieces and intriguing openings.

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My cousin, Maru, her husband, and I were standing at the Concierge Desk talking to our favorite concierge, Carrie.  She loved us because we did what she told us to do.  So, now we were telling her we wanted to visit Middleton Place.  This plantation has the oldest landscaped gardens in America…plus there was the connection to the Edmondston-Alston House, which we had earlier in the week visited.  How could you visit Charleston and not go to a plantation?

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We told Carrie that we did not want to go in a bus full of people.  We were tourists but we would only go so far.  We wanted a private guide.  No hesitation, Ian Sanchez, would be the one.  Carrie went on and on about how good of a guide he was and how good looking….OMG she said “You are going to love him”.  During this conversation, Maru’s husband was like….”I don’t care if he is good looking.”  Maru and I were like…We do!  He was quickly outnumbered.  We even had to wait an extra day to go with Good Looking Guide Ian.  We hoped he was worth the wait…and not like the coconut cake; they told us so much how good the coconut cake was that once we tried it, was not a big deal…it was okay, though.

We finally met with Ian Sanchez….he was good looking but not drop dead gorgeous as we were expecting.  He spoke Spanish.  I believe one of the parents was from the Dominican Republic and the other from one of the islands.  Needless to say…Latin looks and southern charm work every time; we liked that!  And so we took off with him.  He was a really good guide.  He took his time in explaining Charleston and its history, knowledgeable, very friendly and easy to understand.

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To escape the summer’s heat, the wealthy left their stately homes in Charleston and retreated to their plantation houses.  These plantations had formal gardens backed by rivers and woodlands.

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Middleton Place is located at 4300 Ashley River Rd., Charleston, SC 29414.  Tel. 843-556-6020  Website?  http://www.middletonplace.org.  Please visit the website for events happening at Middleton Place.  We arrived late in the afternoon, so one of our first stops was to tour the only building that is still in operation as a museum.  There were 3 residences at one time.  The original residence was circa 1705 and the north flanker was circa 1755…these were burned by Union troops in 1865, and then leveled by the 1886 earthquake.  The house museum was a gentlemen’s guest wing in 1755.  It contains family furniture, silver, paintings, china, books and documents.

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I think you should give yourselves more than a few hours to tour the plantation….there is much to see and much to learn.

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Eliza’s House dates to 1870 and its 2 family vernacular dwelling provides information regarding the conditions of the African American community at Middleton Place before and after the Civil War.

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We stopped at the Blacksmith Shop, where iron was being heated, forged and shaped.  Middleton Place had both, free and enslaved workers performing different tasks.

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Carpentry and Coopering …building and repairing, the coopers made barrels for storage and shipment of rice.

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Free range…animals were mingling with the guests.

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The Spring House and Plantation Chapel were beautiful.  On the lower level, the spring waters provided the perfect place to store dairy and other foods.  The upper floor was, apparently, added in 1851 and was used as a chapel for the Middletons’ slaves until the Civil War.

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The Mill…It was before the Civil War that the mill was built. Built both as a garden folly and for practical use.

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The gardens have rational order, geometry, symmetry, balance, vistas, focal points and surprises.

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After the Civil War and the Earthquake of 1886 these gardens were overgrown and neglected.  Early in the 20th century restoration began and in 1941 the Garden Club of America gave its highest award by recognizing them as “the most interesting and important gardens in America”.

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It is a little unkempt, and a little wild, when looking at the rest of the formal gardens…family tomb and burial sites.  The last resting place of generations of the Middleton family…the garden called Bosquet and Tomb.

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Notes:  Ian Sanchez can be contacted by calling 843-276-4601.  You may also email him at iansanchez4@gmail.com.  Do you prefer your tour in English, or Spanish?  You pick because he can do both.  His pledge:  “Guaranteed phenomenal tour every time or you don’t pay!!

Information for this post was taken from Middleton Place tour guide info.

Have a good one!!  Talk to you later…

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March 15th, 2015

It’s Sunday, A Day of Worship, St. Philip’s Protestant Episcopal Church, Historic Charleston, South Carolina, National Historic Landmark

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It’s Sunday morning.  It is quiet at home.  I like it that way.  The rain stopped last night.  It is warm at the Delaware Beaches.  It feels like Spring. I am almost out of coffee; not a good thing.

Sundays are just one of those days to put your feet up, read a book, or do nothing at all.  Magical Sundays, I call them.

Visiting Historic Charleston, I still have a few posts to write.  There are so many churches in Historic Charleston, close to each other, as well.  Architecturally, they are wonders and have been able to withstand the test of time.

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It does not matter what religious denomination you are.  If you are visiting Historic Charleston stop by.  They are sanctuaries and not just for Sundays. St Philip’s is a National Historic Landmark.

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I stopped at St. Philip’s, located at 142 Church St., one block east of Meeting Street.  Website?  http://www.stphilipschurchsc.org.  This church is considered the Mother Church of the Diocese of S.C. Est. 1670.  It first was located where St. Michael’s Catholic Church stands today.  The present building was built from 1835-1838, after the original building was completed in 1724 and a fire destroyed it in 1835.

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This church distinguishes itself from others…porticos and columns reminiscing of Roman porticos.  I believe its steeple is the tallest one in Historic Charleston.

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Resting in peace in the Churchyard you will find the graves of John C. Calhoun, Secretary of War and V.P. of the U.S., Edward Rutledge, signer of the Declaration of Independence, and Charles Pinckney, signer of the Constitution, among other notables.

The docent on that particular day was so nice.  She was like a grandmother.  Softspoken, she spoke of the church so proudly.  We talked for some time.  And, not just about the church.  Her personal life had taken her to Historic Charleston.  Her kids behind her after she had been divorced….You see, everyone has a journey.  A positive attitude is half the battle.

Have a great day!!

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