Lorraine and Antwan Smalls create a joyful celebration of Caribbean heritage right in the heart of Charleston. With reggae in the air and spices lingering before you reach the door, dishes like curry goat and jerk chicken deliver warmth, fire, and deep cultural pride. Taste of the Islands is more than a meal—it’s a vibe, a gathering place, a home away from home. It captures the heartbeat of the Caribbean and blends it beautifully with Southern hospitality.
Season 1
Season: Season 1
BINTU ATELIER
Chef Bintou N’daw cooks from a place of purpose, bringing the warmth, strength, and heritage of Senegal into Charleston’s dining scene. Dishes like goat fufu egusi and shito spicy crab rice feel less like meals and more like lessons in culture and connection. Her food is bold, soulful, and deeply rooted in tradition, yet her vision feels entirely modern. Bintü Atelier shows Charleston how cuisine can heal, teach, and unite, one plate at a time.
MA’AM SAAB
Charleston’s first Pakistani restaurant arrives with color, spice, and centuries of culinary tradition. Owner Raheel Gauba transports diners through the Mughal era with deeply aromatic dishes like butter chicken and shrimp biryani, each one crafted with reverence and joy. Ma’am Saab is more than a restaurant; it’s an invitation into a vibrant culture that’s been waiting to be shared. Charleston embraces it fully, proving once again that flavor has no borders.
RUE DE JEAN
Chef Letha McClary brings the spirit of the Lowcountry into a French brasserie that feels lifted straight from a Parisian side street. Her coq au vin, chicken francaise, and deeply rooted memories of her grandmother’s red rice turn classic dishes into shared stories. 39 Rue de Jean becomes a meeting place for cultures, where French finesse and Southern soul dance on the same plate. It’s a reminder that honoring where you come from can create something beautifully new.
MY THREE SONS
My Three Sons feels like stepping into a family reunion, the kind where everyone is welcome and every dish tastes like a memory. “Cake Daddy” and “Cake Baby” bring the fun, but it’s the seafood rice, crab soup, and signature red velvet cake that keep folks coming back. Charleston’s warmth, resilience, and tradition live here, in a kitchen that cooks with love and legacy. It’s soul food the way it was meant to be: personal, comforting, unforgettable.
WILD COMMON
Chef Orlando Pagán brings Puerto Rican soul and fearless creativity to one of Charleston’s most exciting kitchens. His dishes break rules with intention, blending unexpected flavor combinations that somehow feel perfectly balanced. Wild Common pushes fine dining into playful, emotional territory, fresh, fun, and entirely original. It’s the kind of place that reminds you why Charleston’s food scene stays on the rise.