#FBF: Cola’s food scene, 80s style ⏪

Free Times

Photo by @chaseheatherly

Free Times

Photo by @chaseheatherly

Free Times turns the #DirtyThirty this month – and to celebrate, this week’s issue took a look back at what the Columbia restaurant scene was like in 1987.

Fine dining in Cola in the late 80s was typically French (or faux French) cuisine think tableside flambé. Then, Lowcountry chefs started bringing back traditional Southern fare (i.e. shrimp + grits), but that took a while to hit Cola. And unfortunately (and arguably differently than now) national chains thrived + independent establishments went under quickly.

Some fav foodie spots in 1987:

El Menchaca | Two Notch Rd. | Tex-Mex with fresh-made ingredients

Le Petite Chateau | Devine St. | Served some of the area’s first softshell crabs

Rockaway Athletic Club | Rosewood Dr. | Burgers + bar fare (still open today)

Camon Japanese Restaurant | Assembly St. | Hole-in-the-wall sushi (still open today)

Another 30-year difference: Apparently in the late eighties, you could walk around downtown Cola with a beer in hand. Like St. Pat’s, but err’day. Five Points was slower-paced back then, and The Vista didn’t emerge until 1990, after a city-led streetscaping project.

5 min read / Free Times

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