“Calabash” Not long ago it was a name attached to a collection of seafood restaurants, where people would drive several hours just to dine on the best fried seafood in the land.

Today it has become a peaceful enclave of homes, villas and condos, representing some of the best real estate values along the Grand Strand.

Peaceful and family-oriented, it is removed but not remote from the hustle and bustle of Myrtle Beach. All of the attractions of the Grand Strand are a short 30-minutes away, and a dozen championship golf courses are at your door.

Calabash - Woman on the beach

As the town of Calabash has grown, “Calabash” has become the name attached to seafood buffets up and down the Atlantic. In other towns, Calabash-style restaurants serve gigantic buffets, but Calabash seafood is never a buffet. It is deep-fried seafood, served straight from the deep fryer, to your table, so hot it burns your tongue.

A “buffet” is as foreign to Calabash as the ad in the New Yorker several years ago, showing silver candelabra and a wine flagon on a white tablecloth. As a matter of fact, two of the best restaurants, Calabash Seafood Hut and Captain Nance’s, do not serve any alcohol at all.

Photo courtesy Bill Russ — visitnc.com.