Crackin’ Crawfish Restaurant plans to raise the bar on fresh seafood

Jan 27, 2014 | Business Growth

Crackin' Crawfish seafood and logo

Crawfish and other shellfish are featured at Crackin' Crawfish Seafood Restaurant

University City will soon add another “gastro-sensational” restaurant to our dining scene.  Our community is home to many fantastic, cultural and international restaurants and Crackin’ Crawfish is a new Louisiana-style seafood gig we are glad to welcome. Owners Mike Nguyen and Michelle Tu promise some of the freshest seafood in Charlotte, with lobster, crab, clams, oysters and crawfish kept alive until cooked and served.

“We will have a tank in the back of the restaurant where we will have live seafood,” Michelle said. “When customers place an order, we will take it out of the tank and cook it. Even the crawfish will be delivered to us fresh daily.” Other seafood such as shrimp, crab’s legs and catfish will be fresh though not kept live.

 

So many choices!

 

Much of the menu at Crackin’ Crawfish is a la carte. Begin by choosing from four categories of entrees. The main one is the Specials: crawfish and seven other kinds of cooked shellfish, flavored with lemon pepper or garlic butter and seasoned, if you want, with various levels of spiciness from mellow to Extremely Crackin’ – so hot “it might burn your tongue,” Michelle says, giggling.

You can order any quantity of seafood you wish and pay by the pound, based on the day’s market price. Fill out your plate with sides such as corn, potatoes, rice, sausage and Cajun fries.

If you come with a crowd, consider the Combinations. Get a pound each of cooked crawfish, shrimp and clams plus corn, sausage and potatoes for $30; add a lobster for $15 more. Available for takeout, too. Other categories include:

  • Grilled (oysters, mussels or clams);
  • Fried (catfish, chicken wings and fish tacos); and
  • Combination Rice Plates (crawfish, catfish, shrimp or several meat choices, plus rice and vegetables).

 

Come casual, ‘cause Crackin’ can be messy!

 

While the focus on fresh fish sounds upscale, Michelle recommend that diners come to Crackin’ Crawfish dressed for a mess, since the shellfish specials are meant to be eaten with your hands.

“You don’t want to come dressed up. Come dressed down. Come to eat, to dig in and get dirty.”

The restaurant’s décor matches the informal dining: fishnets on the walls, lobster dangling from the ceiling and several big-screen TVs for catching a game. Beer and wine are also on the menu.

You’ll probably have a chance to talk with the owners, too, and tell them about University City. The couple  come from San Jose, where Mike’s family has run restaurants, and where restaurants similar to Crackin’ Crawfish are popular, Michelle said. They moved here recently to open Crackin’ Crawfish. They live nearby with their two young children.

Michelle said she and Mike chose University City for their restaurant after walking the boardwalk at University Place. They decided on Grande Promenade because of its location near UNC Charlotte and nearly 27,000 college students.

 

Learn more

 

Crackin’ Crawfish will open by early February in Grande Promenade II, on Harris Boulevard just south of North Tryon Street. The restaurant is at 440 E. McCullough Drive, Suite A-120, beside Shane’s Rib Rack. Meals are available for takeout. Phone: (980) 237-8570.

Keep up with Crackin’ Crawfish at https://www.facebook.com/crackin.crawfish

Crackin' Crawfish seafood and logo

Crawfish and other shellfish are featured at Crackin' Crawfish Seafood Restaurant

and at http://www.crackincrawfish.net.

 

0 Comments


Receive Up to Date News


Receive Economic Development News


View Past Newsletters


View Post by Category


Press Releases

Meet our new intern, Haley Chilcott

Haley Chilcott is our new Marketing Communications Intern here at University City Partners. Haley is an undergraduate student at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte and is majoring in Communications, with a concentration in Public Relations. After graduation...

University City Partners welcomes our newest board members

  University City Partners welcomes its newest members of the UCP Board of Directors: Charlotte City Manager Marcus Smith and Michael Fung, a regional leader for Wells Fargo's Corporate Properties Group. The University City Partners Board of Directors consists of...

Response to tragic police incident and unrest

Last night our community was at the center of a tragic police incident followed by several hours of demonstration, aggressive agitation and unrest. Our neighborhoods, businesses, retail centers and institutions were impacted with activity that has left us all feeling...

Introducing our UNC Charlotte interns

University City Partners is proud to introduce our "Class of 2016" - our fall semester interns from UNC Charlotte. Seniors Hollis Maye-Keye and Cagney Reeves will help us with communications and planning - key functions for our success. We encourage you to consider...

UCP video report: Planning for our transit-powered future

University City Partners has launched a new feature - a monthly video report on how we are investing time and resources to build University City. Today's report: UCP is leading a planning effort to make the area around the future JW Clay Transit station a more...

Our 2016 Annual Report chronicles a landmark year

The dramatic changes taking place across University City can be hard to keep up with - unless you have the University City Partners annual report. Our brand new 2016 University City Partners Annual Report chronicles these changes over the past year (July 2015-June...

University City Partners welcomes new board members

University City Partners welcomes four new members to its board of directors, including two UNC Charlotte grads. Tracy Dodson with Lincoln Harris, John McAlister with Electrolux, Phil Nicholenko with TIAA and Jane Wu, founder of Carolina States Regional Center, have...

Thanks for taking our survey; we heard you!

Our recent invitation to take a brief survey about University City Partners drew more than 100 participants and many useful responses. ”The survey was like a pulse check to make sure that what we are hearing in our meetings also represents the opinions of all of the...

University City Partners adds planning & development director

Tobe Holmes has joined University City Partners as its planning and development director. Holmes, formerly with Center City Partners, will oversee all UCP planning and development initiatives. At Center City Partners, Holmes managed economic and community development...

Meet our UNC Charlotte interns

One benefit of having UNC Charlotte nearby is the amazing wealth of student interns. We landed three of the best this semester: Meredith Avant (Communications with PR concentration), Miguel Avila (Economics with innovation focus), and Charles Trowell (Architecture...