Legendary | Worth driving from anywhere
Red Shed Diner & Produce
Review by: Michael Stern
*** THIS RESTAURANT IS PERMANENTLY CLOSED ***
After cleaning one’s plate at the Red Shed, it is customary to get up from the table and browse a display of the day’s desserts. There are too many for the waitstaff to enumerate, and the array of them is too beautiful not to browse. That’s the worst thing about eating in this happy little roadside stand and diner: no appetite is big enough to sample even half of everything that looks good.
In the dessert case, warm buttermilk pie with its lightweight, eggy custard and big dollop of freshly whipped cream on top is a must. But so is opulent tuxedo cake, which is a dense chocolate brownie topped with cheesecake. And triple-layer strawberry cake, loaded with fresh berries … and Key lime cake … and pig pickin’ cake … and sour cream coconut cake … and peanut butter pie … and blueberry cream cheese cake … and peach cobbler … and Moon Pie banana pudding … and, and, and …
Not that the meals preceding dessert aren’t terrific in their own right. I love “Angry meatloaf” — a sandwich that contains a half-pound slab of juicy, full-flavored loaf topped with melted pepperjack cheese, jalapeno ketchup, mustard, mayo, lettuce and — in season — slices of garden-fresh beefsteak tomato. Chicken, cooked on a grill out in front of the restaurant, is so tender that it is difficult to pick up a piece without the meat and bone separating. Thursday’s Mississippi pot roast is a study in beef-as-comfort food but with occasional pops of jalapeno pepper.
Side dishes are such southern cafe classics as braised cabbage, collard greens, rutabagas, mac ‘n’ cheese, field peas, and a spectacularly flavorful hash on rice. Cornbread that comes alongside meat-and-three meals is extraordinary — not the sweet, cakey stuff that is typical of this region, but rather a tender block of buttermilk-tweaked, earthy savor that is too tasty to be thought of as a merely peripheral breadstuff. It is cooked in a cast iron skillet, meaning its edges get wickedly crisp.
Such a fun place: ramshackle in the extreme, decorated floor to ceiling with vintage memorabilia both culinary and otherwise, staffed with an ebullient team of friendly git ‘er done waitresses. Out front in growing season, customers browse tables of produce: tomatoes, peaches, watermelon, squash, and cucumbers. All, of course, are South Carolina-grown.
Directions & Hours
Information
Price | $ |
Seasons | All |
Meals Served | Lunch, Dinner |
Credit Cards Accepted | Yes |
Alcohol Served | No |
Outdoor Seating | Yes |
What To Eat
Grilled Chicken
DISH
Buttermilk Pie
DISH
Angry Meat Loaf
DISH
Tuxedo Cake
DISH
Strawberry Cake
DISH
Banana Split Cake
DISH
Barbecue Sandwich
DISH
Cabbage
DISH
Hash on Rice
DISH
Peanut Butter Pie
DISH
Super Skip Pimento Cheese Sandwich
DISH
Shed Burger Basket
DISH
Pig Pickin Cake
DISH
Chocolate Strawberry Shortcake
DISH
Pork Barbecue Plate
DISH
Peach Blackberry Cobbler
DISH
Lemon Blueberry Buttercream Cake
DISH
Sour Cream Coconut Layer Cake
DISH
Apple Praline Cake
DISH
Gourmet Chicken Salad
DISH
Tomato Soup
DISH
Meat Loaf Blue Plate Special
DISH
Club Sandwich
DISH
Ham Dinner
DISH
Chipotle BBQ Slider
DISH
Fried Bologna Sandwich
DISH
Carolina Cake
DISH
Tomato Pie
DISH
Peaches N Cream Cake
DISH
Mounds Cake
DISH
Blueberry Pound Cake
DISH
Hushpuppies
DISH
Cabbage Casserole
DISH
Low Country Boil
DISH
Banana Pudding Cake
DISH
Mississippi Pot Roast
DISH
Egg Salad & Bacon Sandwich
DISH
Blueberry Cream Cheese Cake
DISH
Shrimp & Grits
DISH
Tenderloin
DISH
Skip Burger
DISH
Hamburger Steak
DISH
Meat Loaf
DISH
Red Shed Diner & Produce Recipes
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