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CuisineNew American - Seafood
Executive ChefMike Lata & Jason Stanhope
LocationCharleston, United States
Pearl
Opinionated About Dining

On King Street in Charleston's upper corridor, The Ordinary has built a durable reputation in the city's competitive seafood-forward dining scene. Ranked #403 on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list in 2024 and Pearl Recommended in 2025, it operates under chefs Mike Lata and Jason Stanhope with a New American seafood focus that places it firmly in the serious casual tier. Dinner runs Wednesday through Sunday, doors at 5 pm.

The Ordinary restaurant in Charleston, United States
About

King Street, Seafood, and the Serious Casual Tier

Charleston's dining identity has long orbited around its waterways. The city sits at the confluence of the Ashley and Cooper rivers, and its most enduring restaurant traditions reflect that geography: oysters from Bulls Bay and ACE Basin, shrimp from local trawlers, fin fish that shift with the season. What has changed over the past decade is how that raw material gets treated at the table. The city's more considered kitchens have moved away from fried-everything beach-town defaults toward a register that respects sourcing without retreating into precious tasting-menu formalism. The Ordinary, at 544 King Street, occupies that register — a seafood-forward New American room that reads as genuinely casual while operating with the consistency that earns sustained critical notice.

The address is significant. King Street runs the length of the Charleston peninsula, and its upper stretch, above Calhoun, has become the corridor where the city's better independent restaurants have clustered. Nearby, Malagón Mercado y Taperia brings a Spanish market format, and Vern's operates an American contemporary counter with a more intimate seat count. The Ordinary draws from the same neighborhood energy but at a different scale and with a specific product focus that distinguishes it from both.

Where The Ordinary Sits in Charleston's Seafood Conversation

Charleston has no shortage of places to eat oysters. 167 Raw operates as a focused oyster bar on a shorter format. Lowland pulls from coastal Southern tradition with a broader menu scope. The comparison that matters for The Ordinary is less about which venue does oysters and more about which venues treat American seafood as a serious editorial subject — asking where it comes from, how it should be prepared, and what regional identity it should express.

On that axis, The Ordinary aligns with a cohort of American seafood-forward rooms that take the raw bar as their centerpiece but build a full kitchen program around it. Nationally, that positioning puts it in a conversation that includes Walrus and Carpenter in Seattle, a raw bar institution that treats shellfish with comparable seriousness on the Pacific coast. The distinction between that tier and the high-end tasting format , the register of Le Bernardin in New York or The French Laundry in Napa , is deliberate. The Ordinary's format is built for repeat use, for arriving without ceremony and ordering around the bar.

The Kitchen and the Chefs in Context

Mike Lata's name has carried weight in Charleston's dining conversation for years, built initially through FIG, the New American restaurant on Meeting Street that helped establish the city's credibility as a food destination rather than a regional curiosity. The Ordinary arrived later as a more direct expression of the seafood half of that program. Jason Stanhope joined as co-chef, and the kitchen has maintained consistency across an extended run , something that matters considerably more than launch-year press.

Chefs as credentials matter here not as a personal narrative but as a signal about institutional knowledge. In cities like Charleston, where tourist volume is high and turnover pressure is real, a kitchen that keeps its leadership and maintains OAD rankings across multiple cycles is demonstrating something about operational discipline that opening-night reviews cannot capture. Opinionated About Dining ranked The Ordinary at #608 in its Casual North America list for 2025, after a stronger #403 in 2024 and a Recommended placement in 2023 , a three-year track record that reflects sustained quality rather than a single peak. The 2025 Pearl Recommendation adds a second independent data point in the same direction.

For reference, OAD's Casual North America list sits in a different tier from its fine-dining equivalent but draws from critics and experienced diners who track consistency over time. Placement anywhere in the top 700 of that list, across multiple years, puts a venue in a meaningful minority of American casual restaurants.

The Drinks Program and the American Cocktail Moment

American dining at this level has increasingly treated the bar as equal to the kitchen rather than subordinate to it. The shift has been most visible in major coastal cities , New York's transition from speakeasy theatrics toward technical clarity, the Bay Area's ingredient-led program at places like Lazy Bear in San Francisco , but it has reached Charleston's better rooms as well. A seafood-focused restaurant with serious ambitions has particular reason to invest in the bar: shellfish and cold preparations call for acidic, aromatic, low-intervention drinks, and a well-calibrated cocktail list or wine selection can pull significant weight in the overall experience.

The Ordinary's positioning as a Hall-style space , the name references the historic American institution of the public dining hall , implies a democratic generosity at the bar as much as the table. That ethos, where the counter is as valid a destination as a sit-down table, has been central to the American cocktail renaissance's better expressions: the bar as a place with its own editorial point of view, not just a waiting area for dinner. Venues operating at this level and in this format, from Charleston to Seattle to the more technically focused rooms like Atomix in New York, have all had to answer the same question: what does the drinks program say about how we think about the meal as a whole?

The Ordinary's bar faces that question within a specific context: a room built around raw shellfish and cooked seafood, in a city with a strong hospitality culture and a tourist-adjacent King Street location that could easily default to generic. That it has not defaulted, and that its recognition has continued to accumulate, suggests the answer has been consistently above average.

The Broader Charleston Table

City's dining range is wide enough now that a single night on King Street can move from a barbecue stop at Rodney Scott's BBQ to a full dinner at The Ordinary without any sense of contradiction. That range reflects how much the city has developed since its early reputation rested almost entirely on Southern comfort cooking. For visitors building a fuller picture of what Charleston's restaurant scene offers, our full Charleston restaurants guide covers the breadth, while our full Charleston bars guide maps the drinks scene independently. The hotels guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide round out the city's premium options.

For comparison points further afield , what American serious-casual dining looks like when it has full fine-dining ambitions , Alinea in Chicago, Emeril's in New Orleans, and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg represent different answers to what American cooking can mean at its most considered tier.

Planning a Visit

The Ordinary operates for dinner only, opening at 5 pm on Wednesday, Thursday, and Sunday through to 10 pm, with a slightly extended close of 10:30 pm on Friday and Saturday. Tuesday is dark. The address is 544 King Street, in the walkable upper King corridor. No phone number or website is listed in the EP Club database at time of publication; the most reliable booking route is checking current reservation platforms directly. Google reviewer data sits at 4.6 across 1,378 reviews, a sample large enough to carry statistical weight and consistent with the OAD and Pearl recognition the kitchen has earned.

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