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one of the locations. Describe how a

chef is selected.

Reichman:

There are a few criteria.

Foremost, is the chef doing something

special with food? Is it important

to the city’s cultural identity? Can

the chef hold interest? And can

the restaurant support production?

Not every place has all of this. For

example, being at McCrady’s on the

peninsula, where George Washington

once dined, is entertaining for viewers

and provided multiple story layers.

Mount Pleasant Magazine: Which

parts of this season have been a

favorite?

Reichman:

There are a couple

things we’re excited about. We did

a luncheon honoring Edna Lewis,

a well-known food matriarch for

Southern cuisine. We also sent chefs

to home-cooked meals in historic

homes. The homes included those of

BJ Dennis, Carrie Morey and others.

Mount Pleasant Magazine: Has the

fact that Charleston is still a fairly

small place (despite its cosmopolitan

feel) affected this season of Top Chef,

and how so?

Reichman:

I think that the cities

always get excited we’re there. In

Charleston and the surrounding areas,

locals helped us get access to certain

places. We got to see cool things, not

the typical tourism checklist. From

a small town standpoint, Charleston

is hospitable and gracious. There’s

a fraternity, you might say, of chefs

here as well. When we’re in New York

or Los Angeles, it’s harder to focus.

Charleston is a nice size. The city that

we’ve been to that most resembles

Charleston, geographically and

population-wise, is New Orleans.

Mount Pleasant Magazine: Do

you see any variation between the

specific areas of the Lowcountry –

Mount Pleasant, downtown, Johns

Island – as far as cuisine/menu/

style?

Reichman:

We covered a lot of

ground. We shot at all those places.

We tried to find backdrops that

support the creative and show all the

things happening in the Charleston

food scene, from outdoor casual

to barbecue to fine dining. When

you’re on King Street, there are some

beautiful restaurants and steakhouses.

Out on the islands it’s more casual,

like eating shrimp with your hands.

Mount Pleasant Magazine: Where

did you spend time in Mount

Pleasant and East Cooper?

Reichman:

We shot at the Wreck

of Richard and Charlene – it’s one

of those special outdoorsy spots I

mentioned! What we wanted to do

was play off the pirate theme and the

coastal geography. That’s how we are

on the show; we try to get off of the

beaten path. We also shot at Whole

Foods in Mount Pleasant and Boone

Hall Plantation. And the chefs lived

together in a house at Isle of Palms.

Mount Pleasant Magazine: How

has the Charleston food scene helped

drive enthusiasm for the episodes of

Top Chef shot here?

Reichman:

What’s happening in

Charleston is happening across the

country – getting into the heritage

behind foods. It’s at the top of

everyone’s radar. We were very happy

to capture it at peak.

IGT 7

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