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    Restaurant in Charleston, United States

    Husk

    750Pearl Points

    Serious Southern cooking, ingredient-first, no compromises.

    Husk, Restaurant in Charleston

    About Husk

    Pearl-recommended and ranked #256 on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list (2025), Husk is the go-to for serious Southern cooking in Charleston. Chef Ray England's daily-changing menu is built entirely from Southern-sourced ingredients — no exceptions. At $$ pricing with easy booking, it delivers clear value for a food-forward dinner on Queen Street.

    Verdict

    Husk is the right call for anyone who wants a serious Southern dinner in Charleston with a clear sense of place and ingredient discipline. The menu changes daily based on what local farmers deliver, which means you cannot pre-plan your order and you should not try. That seasonality is the whole point. Pearl-recommended for 2025, ranked #256 in Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list this year (up from #262 in 2024), and carrying a 4.5 Google rating across more than 4,000 reviews, this is a restaurant that earns its reputation consistently, not just on opening night.

    Dinner runs Monday through Sunday, 5–10 pm. Saturday and Sunday add brunch from 10 am–2 pm. Booking is easy by Charleston standards — you should not struggle to get a table with reasonable advance planning.

    Portrait

    The founding philosophy at Husk is simple and strict: if an ingredient does not come from the American South, it does not come through the door. That rule, established when the restaurant opened under Chef Sean Brock (who has since departed), still drives every plate under current Chef Ray England and General Manager David Fluharty. The kitchen treats Southern foodways as a living archive, not a nostalgia act — heirloom crops, regional producers, and historical techniques are the actual structure of the menu, not a marketing layer on leading of it.

    For a food-focused traveller, this is the architecture worth understanding before you book. There is no fixed tasting menu in the traditional sense, but the daily-changing format creates a progression of sorts: what arrives on your table reflects exactly what the South is producing right now, in this season. In late spring and summer, that means produce-forward cooking with intensity and sweetness; in the colder months, the kitchen leans into preservation, smoke, and depth. The experience is less about a curated arc of courses and more about encountering Southern ingredients at their most current. If you want to understand what the region actually grows and eats, this is among the clearest answers available at a restaurant table.

    Chef Ray England leads the kitchen with Sommelier Megan Schneeberger running a wine list that covers roughly 200 selections and 1,500 bottles in inventory. The list skews toward California and France, priced in the mid-range ($$ tier) with decent coverage across price points. A $40 corkage fee applies if you bring your own. For wine-focused diners, the list is functional and well-matched to the food without being a destination in itself , comparable in seriousness to what you would find at FIG or Edmunds Oast in the same city.

    Cuisine pricing sits at the $$ tier ($40–$65 for a typical two-course meal before drinks and tip), which is fair positioning for what you get. This is not a budget dinner, but it is well short of the $$$+ territory you would encounter at, say, Vern's or destinations further afield like The French Laundry or Alinea. For a Southern-focused dinner at this level of sourcing discipline, $$ is competitive.

    The address is 76 Queen St in downtown Charleston, well within walking distance of the main hotel corridor. If you are building a broader Charleston itinerary, our full Charleston restaurants guide, hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide are worth checking. For Southern dining in other cities, Olamaie in Austin and Virtue in Chicago offer useful points of comparison , different regional inflections, similar seriousness about sourcing.

    Ratings & Recognition

    • Pearl Recommended Restaurant (2025)
    • Opinionated About Dining , Casual North America: #256 (2025), #262 (2024)
    • Google: 4.5 / 5 (4,071 reviews)
    • Featured: Chef's Table, Volume 6, Episode 4

    Booking & Practical Details

    Booking difficulty is easy. Dinner is served nightly 5–10 pm; weekend brunch runs Saturday and Sunday 10 am–2 pm. The daily-changing menu means the kitchen's direction shifts with available supply, so check in closer to your visit for a sense of what is in season. The $40 corkage fee is worth noting if you plan to bring a bottle. Wine pricing is $$ across the list with a 200-selection range and 1,500-bottle inventory, covering California and France with the most depth. No dress code data is available in our records, but the setting on Queen Street in a historic Charleston property reads as smart casual at minimum , overly casual dress would be out of place.

    FAQ

    What should I wear to Husk?

    • No official dress code is listed, but the Queen Street address and $$ price point put this firmly in smart casual territory.
    • Think well-fitted jeans or trousers with a collared shirt or blouse , the room will not be formal, but it rewards some effort.
    • Avoid beachwear or overly casual resort wear, which would read as underdressed for a Pearl-recommended dinner in this bracket.

    Can I eat at the bar at Husk?

    • Bar seating availability is not confirmed in our current data.
    • If bar dining matters to you, call ahead to ask , the general format at comparable Charleston spots like 167 Raw and Lowland suggests bar access is common, but we cannot confirm it for Husk specifically.

    Is Husk good for a special occasion?

    • Yes, with the right expectations. The daily-changing menu, sourcing story, and $$ price tier make it a good fit for a celebratory dinner where the food itself is the focus.
    • It is better for a food-forward birthday or anniversary than for a business dinner requiring quiet and formality.
    • If maximum occasion impact matters, Vern's at $$$ offers a more refined service register; Husk delivers more character and place-specificity at a lower price point.

    What are alternatives to Husk in Charleston?

    • For New American with similar sourcing seriousness: FIG and Edmunds Oast are the natural comparisons.
    • For a looser, more casual Southern experience: Rodney Scott's BBQ is the move if you want smoke and directness over fine-dining presentation.
    • For seafood and oysters: 167 Raw and Leon's Oyster Shop cover that lane well at a lower price point.
    • For Spanish-inflected casual dining, Malagón Mercado y Taperia is worth knowing about as a contrast.

    What should I order at Husk?

    • The menu changes daily, so specific dishes cannot be pre-planned. The approach is to order around whatever the kitchen is highlighting from that day's farm deliveries.
    • Ask your server what came in that morning , that question is genuinely useful here, not just polite small talk.
    • The wine list from Sommelier Megan Schneeberger is well-matched to the food; lean on it for pairing rather than bringing your own (the $40 corkage fee reduces the value of BYOB unless you have something special).

    Is lunch or dinner better at Husk?

    • Dinner is the stronger choice for the full Husk experience. The evening format runs nightly and gives the kitchen its fullest expression of the daily sourcing.
    • Weekend brunch (Saturday and Sunday, 10 am–2 pm) is the easier booking and a good entry point if you are visiting Charleston over a weekend and want to try the kitchen without committing to a full dinner spend.
    • For a first visit with serious food intent, book dinner. For a lower-stakes try, weekend brunch works well.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to Husk?

    Dress casually but put-together. Husk sits at the $$ price point for a two-course dinner and draws a mix of locals and out-of-towners, so neat casual fits the room without being overdressed. Think clean jeans and a collar rather than a jacket. There is no published dress code in the venue data.

    Can I eat at the bar at Husk?

    Bar seating is not confirmed in available venue data, so call ahead or ask when booking. What is confirmed: the wine list runs to around 200 selections across 1,500 inventory with $$ pricing, so the bar would be a reasonable option for a drink before or after dinner if counter seats exist.

    Is Husk good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with the right expectations. Husk is Pearl Recommended (2025) and ranked #256 on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list, which signals consistent quality rather than a formal tasting-menu event. If you want a celebratory dinner with strong Southern cooking and a serious wine list, it delivers. For a white-tablecloth occasion with a prix-fixe format, FIG is closer to that register.

    What are alternatives to Husk in Charleston?

    FIG is the closest peer for ingredient-driven, chef-led dinners at a similar price point and is worth comparing directly. Leon's Oyster Shop is the right call if you want something more casual with a focus on seafood. For barbecue, Rodney Scott's BBQ operates in a completely different format and price tier. 167 Raw is the go-to for raw bar and oysters without a full dinner commitment.

    What should I order at Husk?

    The menu changes daily based on what local farmers deliver, so specific dishes cannot be predicted in advance. The founding rule — no ingredient crosses the door unless it comes from the American South — means the menu reflects what is in season locally. Arrive open to whatever is running that night rather than targeting a specific dish.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Husk?

    Dinner is the main event. The kitchen runs five nights plus weekend dinner service, and the wine list with 200 selections is structured around the evening format. Weekend brunch (Saturday and Sunday 10 am–2 pm) is worth considering if your schedule is tight, but the full expression of the daily-changing Southern menu is a dinner proposition.

    Location

    76 Queen St, Charleston, SC 29401

    Charleston, United States

    Compare Husk

    Booking Options Near Husk
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    HuskSouthernEasy
    Rodney Scott's BBQBarbecueUnknown
    167 RawOyster BarUnknown
    Edmunds OastNew AmericanUnknown
    FIGNew AmericanUnknown
    Leon’s Oyster ShopSeafoodUnknown

    A quick look at how Husk measures up.

    Also Consider

    Among Charleston's Southern and New American options, Husk sits in a distinct position: more ingredient-focused and place-specific than most, but easier to book and less expensive than the top tier. If your priority is understanding what the American South actually grows and cooks right now, Husk is the clearest answer at the $$ price point. FIG operates in similar territory — serious sourcing, New American framing — and is worth booking if you want a more conventional fine-dining structure. Edmunds Oast offers a comparable spend with a craft beer and New American angle; choose it over Husk if you want a drinks-forward evening with food as a strong supporting act rather than the main event.

    For value and casualness, Rodney Scott's BBQ is the practical alternative if you want Southern food without the restaurant formality — it is a different register entirely, but serves the same underlying interest in regional cooking with real credentials behind it. 167 Raw and Leon's Oyster Shop cover the seafood and oyster lane at a lower price point with less booking friction; go there if the ocean side of the South's larder is what you are after, and save Husk for the farm-to-table argument.

    The clearest booking logic: Husk for ingredient-driven Southern cooking with wine and a sit-down experience; FIG if you want New American polish in the same price range; Rodney Scott's if you want authenticity over presentation; 167 Raw or Leon's for oysters and a lighter spend. Husk is the most versatile of the group for a food-focused visitor who wants one dinner that represents Charleston's culinary identity at a defensible price.

    Hours

    Monday
    5–10 pm
    Tuesday
    5–10 pm
    Wednesday
    5–10 pm
    Thursday
    5–10 pm
    Friday
    5–10 pm
    Saturday
    10 am–2 pm, 5–10 pm
    Sunday
    10 am–2 pm, 5–10 pm

    Recognized By

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