For Chris Williams, chef-owner of Roy’s Grille in Irmo, South Carolina, community is key. He grew up in Olar, a rural town on the edge of the Lowcountry, before moving to the Midlands as a kid. The chef celebrates his South Carolina and Gullah Geechee roots at events like Taste of Lake Murray and Columbia Food & Wine Festival, and will compete this fall in the World Food Championships in Indianapolis. We chatted with Williams, a2022 South Carolina Chef Ambassador, about food, culture, and community.

The Local Palate: Tell us about your community and how it influences your food.
Chris Williams: To me, [community] means everything. It’s who you are. It shapes and it moves your being. And that permeates and comes out through the food—whether it be local farmers or produce growers in the community [whose] products I’m using to cook with, or just talking to the elders in the community and getting inspiration about older recipes, older heirloom grains that are harder to find.
The dishes that I cook now have a historical undertone, like my collard greens, my mac and cheese, my green beans. It’s just a part of my upbringing. The cobblers that I do when the holidays come around, the sweet potato pies that I make—a lot of my meals have to do with how I grew up and how I was raised. The barbecue sauces that I make, the barbecue that I do, all of those are reminders of who I am, where I come from, and the people who did it before me.
A lot of the things that I do are community-based and -oriented, because it’s my community that feeds me, and it’s because of those people that you guys know who I am.
TLP: What led you into this career path?
Chris Williams: I’ve always had a love for food. My grandmother was an excellent cook. My grandfather was a handyman/farmer/ your favorite man’s favorite man. So, he would grow the crops and grow the animals. We’d harvest them, and then I’d go on inside with my grandmother and learn how to cook these different cuts of meats and these different vegetables, and how to just make things taste good.
TLP: Do you source locally for the restaurant?
Chris Williams: I’m a member of the Certified SC program. So the majority of my produce, meats, and things that I cook with are locally sourced, whether it be here in Columbia or in South Carolina, too. In order to be a chef ambassador, I had to be a part of that program. In order to be a part of that program, your ingredients have to be local. I know a lot of the people personally that I get my stuff from.
TLP: What does being a South Carolina Chef Ambassador mean to you?
Chris Williams: It’s a sort of validation that, hey, we see you, we know what you’re doing. It’s not going unnoticed. We see things that you’re doing in your community. We see the things that you’re doing as a chef. Then we just see who you are as a person. It means I get to represent myself, my company, my brand, my ancestors in the state of South Carolina, everywhere I go. I’ve been able to travel the world. My confidence, a lot of it’s been directly tied to the ambassadorship. I wouldn’t have gotten the ambassadorship if I wasn’t who I am, but I’m still not oblivious to the doors that the ambassadorship has opened for me.
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