• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Home
  • The Magazine
    • Current Issue
  • Featured Articles
  • Chefs
  • Restaurant Maps
    • Lowcountry Restaurant Map
    • Beaufort / Bluffton / Hilton Head SC Restaurant Map
    • Charleston SC Restaurant Map
    • Daniel Island SC Restaurant Map
    • Folly Beach SC Restaurant Map
    • Georgetown / Pawleys Island SC Restaurant Map
    • Isle of Palms SC Restaurant Map
    • James Island SC Restaurant Map
    • Johns Island SC Restaurant Map
    • McClellanville SC Restaurant Map
    • Mt Pleasant SC Restaurant Map
    • Mt Pleasant (North) SC Restaurant Map
    • North Charleston SC Restaurant Map
    • Sullivan’s Island SC Restaurant Map
    • West Ashley Restaurant Map
  • Restaurants
    • Takeout / Delivery
    • Charleston SC Restaurants
    • Daniel Island SC Restaurants
    • Georgetown SC Restaurants
    • Hammock Coast Restaurants
    • Isle of Palms SC Restaurants
    • Mt Pleasant SC Restaurants
    • Murrells Inlet SC Restaurants
    • North Charleston SC Restaurants
  • Caterers
    • Lowcountry Catering Directory
    • Charleston SC Caterers
    • Mt Pleasant SC Caterers
  • Mobile Meals

Lowcountry Cuisine Magazine

Read Lowcountry Cuisine Magazine online
  • Recipes
  • Happy Hour
  • Healthy Eats
  • TV Eats
  • Golden Spoon Awards
    • What are the Golden Spoon Awards?
    • Vote 2019-20 Golden Spoon Awards
    • Golden Spoon Winners
  • Events
  • Cooking & Foods
  • Wine

July 26, 2018

Melvin’s Barbecue: Fresh Look, Classic Techniques

Melvin’s Barbecue: Fresh Look, Classic Techniques. Photo courtesy of Melvin’s Barbecue.
While Melvin’s Barbecue has been a staple for locals in Mount Pleasant for years, their new sign – and wood-fired only techniques – are beckoning old friends and new to enjoy one of the hottest barbecue destinations in the nation. With a new logo and freshly designed label, the look may be different, but the sauce and unbeatable flavor stay the same – and nothing beats the original!

While Melvin’s Barbecue has been a staple for locals in Mount Pleasant for years, their new sign – and wood-fired only techniques – are beckoning old friends and new to enjoy one of the hottest barbecue destinations in the nation. With a new logo and freshly designed label, the look may be different, but the sauce and unbeatable flavor stay the same – and nothing beats the original!

Now digging back to those roots, pitmaster David is smoking meat over all-wood pits at Melvin’s on a daily basis.

“That’s how it all started you know – smoking pigs in the ground with family and folks,” he said.

While smoking with all wood is the time-honored way, it is not the easy way. You need an all-wood pit and seasoned wood, without the help of gas.

David started researching the conversion back to all wood about eight years ago. In 2016, Melvin’s Barbecue in Mount Pleasant unveiled South Carolina’s first “stick burner” Jambo pit made by Jamie Geer in Texas.

“When I learned that Jamie rolled his own steel, and he tested the airflow on biscuits, I knew his pits were the real deal,” David explained.

David is as selective about the wood as he is the meat and the smoker.

“If the wood isn’t seasoned right, you are going to have dirty smoke, and that will affect the taste,” he said.

It’s not easy to find properly seasoned wood, but David discovered it in South Carolina. It is kiln-dried more than 30 days after splitting so it is seasoned, dry and ready to burn.

It’s not just the food and smoke that draw people in, however. The family atmosphere welcomes and embraces visitors, tempting them to order a Nehi or hand-spun milkshake and stick around for a bit. At the counter, chances are you’ll be greeted by one of David’s children or teens who grew up going to Melvin’s as a kid and now work at their favorite family restaurant. That explains the smiling faces.

The barbecued pork, ribs and burgers, regularly voted among the best, are staples at Melvin’s, and Emeril Lagasse himself once rated Melvin’s cheeseburger as the best in America. On the other hand, many regulars are lured in by the Texas-style brisket, smoked chicken wings, burnt ends and smoked turkey. When you finally decide on the meat, the most daunting decision at Melvin’s may involve the sides: fresh collards, butter beans, handcrafted mac ‘n’ cheese, fried okra, authentic South Carolina barbecue hash and coleslaw, to name a few. The epochal doughnut-style onion rings are worth the trip by themselves. If you don’t leave room for Betty’s banana pudding, be sure to take some home with you.

Melvin’s offers pickup, delivery and full-service catering. To learn more, visit www.melvinsbbq.com or call 843- 881-0549.

By Krysta Chapman

Filed Under: Charleston SC Restaurants Tagged With: bbq

Previous Post: « Electronic Merchant Systems: Purpose and Passion
Next Post: Food Guide: Find Lowcountry Barbecue »

Primary Sidebar

Search…

Check out South Carolinas' Hammock Coast.
We're on Instagram
Find Lowcountry Cuisine Magazine on Facebook
Charleston Cuisine YouTube

Watch Chef Laurie Prepare a 5 Course Lunch

Read Lunch with Chef Laurie

Charleston Cuisine Scene
82 Queen, Iconic Charleston Cuisine (300x250)
Recipes from Charleston Restaurants
Georgetown, Pawleys Island, Litchfield, Murrells Inlet Restaurants

Copyright © 2025 · Lowcountry Cuisine Magazine. All Rights Reserved

Cleantalk Pixel