Charleston: Poogan's Porch (November 2016)



Poogan’s Porch – Plentiful Portions


My spouse and I enjoyed lunch at Poogan’s Porch on a Friday afternoon in mid-November 2016. We booked our table using the online Open Table reservation system. Poogan’s Porch is open for lunch and dinner daily (including holidays), and weekend brunch (beginning at 9:00 am on Saturdays and Sundays). Note that the restaurant is not open continuously from lunch through dinner; it has a brief shutdown period between meals.


Built as a spacious and grand Victorian home in 1888, the historic house on Queen Street first opened as a restaurant in 1976. Reportedly, the home’s owners sold the house and moved away, but a stray dog named Poogan stayed behind. Poogan was a neighborhood fixture for years, wandering from porch to porch in search of back-scratches and table scraps, endearing himself to everyone. The restaurant owners honor Poogan’s memory by incorporating his story into the restaurant’s name. Poogan’s Porch is a family business, and the current manager began working there as a delivery boy at the age of 13. He worked his way up from dishwasher to busboy to server to manager, and he has worked in NYC at Jean-Georges (Vongerichten), Momofuku Noodle Bar (David Chang), and Aquavit (under Marcus Samuelsson). The chef attended Johnson & Wales University, and he worked as executive chef in many restaurants in North and South Carolina before settling down at Poogan’s Porch. Martha Stewart Living magazine, Wine Spectator, and The Travel Channel have recognized the restaurant. 


Poogan’s offers both indoor and outdoor dining, as well as private dining space for up to 20 people. Al fresco dining is available on the first-floor porch, second-story piazza, or on the wrought-iron fence-enclosed front yard patio. A tiny deck adjacent to the rear dining room offers additional outdoor seating. Indoor dining spaces include a front dining room, a center bar room (with dining at the bar or at high-top communal tables), or in one of the dining rooms on the second floor that you reach by climbing a high wooden staircase. You must also climb a high set of stairs to reach the first/main level of the restaurant, so we are not sure that this restaurant is not handicap-accessible (except for perhaps the street-level patio). 


Poogan’s Porch serves Lowcountry cuisine, including specialties such as buttermilk biscuits, sausage gravy, she-crab soup, shrimp and grits, and buttermilk fried chicken. Poogan’s offers a full bar, including beer and cocktails; their wine inventory includes 28 wines by the glass and a 1500-bottle wine cellar. We shared the pimento fritters and the macaroni and cheese as appetizers. Initially, we ordered the she-crab soup instead of the mac and cheese, but our server said that the restaurant had run out. When he later realized that more soup was ready, he brought us a complimentary cup to try. We eagerly anticipated tasting their famous biscuits, but regrettably, we had to ask our server at least three times before we received any; unfortunately, they arrived along with our entrees. (We would have savored the biscuits, served warm and accompanied by a whipped sweet butter spread, more if they had arrived while we were perusing the menu, or even while we were eating our starters.) As main courses, we ordered the shrimp and grits and the fried chicken (accompanied by mashed potatoes and collard greens). The shrimp and grits was different than we expected because the delicious creamy grits were covered with tails-off shrimp, sausage slices, and sautéed onion and red and yellow bell pepper chunks swimming in a brownish gravy. Portions were enormous; in fact, we were so stuffed afterwards that we returned to our hotel for a nap, and we cancelled our evening dinner reservations because our stomachs were still too full to contemplate another meal even six hours later. (Although some diners might find that degree of fullness desirable, but we were disappointed that we had to cancel our much-anticipated dinner reservation later than evening at a “hot” Upper King Street restaurant.)


We were happy to have tried some Lowcountry dishes at Poogan’s Porch, but we should have exercised some constraint and not gorged ourselves!