A year after Letty’s on Shamrock owner Letty Ketner shuttered the beloved restaurant in Charlotte’s Plaza Shamrock neighborhood, new life is coming to the iconic space.
Letty’s on Shamrock was open for 12 years, offering a cozy third space for regular diners, serving up honey pecan chicken, burgers, hummus nachos, epic brownies and more.
But Charlotte longtimers will remember that even before Letty’s, another iconic restaurant got its start at the building on Shamrock Drive.
Pike’s Soda Shop’s original location
Pike’s Pharmacy pharmacist Jesse Pike opened Pike’s Soda Shop adjacent to the pharmacy in November 1994. It sold cherry sodas, malted milk shakes, hot dogs, grilled cheese sandwiches and more. “Everybody seems to have great memories of the old days when their parents took them to the drugstore,” Pike told The Charlotte Observer when he opened the shop.
“What makes small drugstores unique are the memories. We can’t compete on price with the Goliaths of the world. They’ll blast us out the water. We’re hoping our soda shop will bring back those memories,” Pike said.
On Nov. 18, 1994, owner of the then-new Pike’s Drug Store and Soda Shop Jessie Pike and wife Elizabeth Pike posed in their new soda shop with the “old drug look”. Diedra Laird Charlotte Observer archives
Pike’s Pharmacy remains next door. The Soda Shop expanded to a second location in South End in 1997, then it closed on Shamrock Drive and opened another location at Birkdale Village in 2005, according to The Charlotte Observer archives. Those locations have also since closed.
From 2007-2012, the Shamrock Drive building was the home of a restaurant named Foskoskies on Shamrock.
Owner Walter Rushton, seated and Executive Chef Caine Ayres sit in the dining area of Foskoskies on Shamrock with an order of crab cake on Sept. 18, 2007. David T. Foster III Charlotte Observer archives
In October 2012, it became the home of Letty’s on Shamrock, before closing on Dec. 31, 2024.
Letty Ketner, owner of Letty’s on Shamrock, shown here on Dec. 14, 2024. Ketner announced her retirement and the closing of the restaurant on December 31, 2024. After 12 years of serving the Plaza Midwood and East Charlotte community, she decided to step back to embrace retirement and her next chapter, she told CharlotteFive at the time. Alex Cason CharlotteFive
Coming soon: PostScript Restaurant
Now, PostScript Restaurant will open in its space, according to a filing with the city of Charlotte.
PostScript’s owner confirmed the opening to CharlotteFive on Friday morning, Dec. 19, and said a full renovation is happening in the space.
More details will be available soon, including an opening date. I know I’m not the only one eagerly awaiting!
Brenda Russell makes a soda fountain Coke, using syrup, at Pike’s Old Fashioned Soda Shop on Shamrock Drive in east Charlotte on Nov. 18, 1994, ahead of its opening. Diedra Laird Charlotte Observer archives
Melissa Oyler is the editor of CharlotteFive. When she’s not writing or editing, you’ll find her running, practicing hot yoga or snuggling with her rescue dogs, X and Charlie. Find her on Instagram or X: @melissaoyler. Support my work with a digital subscription
The Michelin Guide expansion included Asheville, Charlotte and Raleigh, with tourism groups funding inclusion and spotlighting acclaimed North Carolina restaurants.
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Lang Van is not a restaurant that visiting outsiders or new Charlotteans might easily stumble upon.
Its modest Plaza Shamrock storefront, accented with hunter green trim boasting large white lettering, is flanked on each side by a wood privacy fence that’s listing a bit here and there.
There’s no PR team shouting its praises. You won’t even find a true website for the Vietnamese restaurant open since 1990, let alone an Instagram presence.
Yet somehow, Lang Van’s dining room is often packed. Recently, the line occasionally stretches out the door.
Lang Van is so deeply beloved in Charlotte that its customers stepped up to save it via GoFundMe in 2020, when COVID-19 first hit. And now, just five years later, this eatery familiar to residents and foodies has become one of the city’s most talked about restaurants this year.
While visiting for the PGA Championship at Quail Hollow in May, “No Laying Up’s” Todd Schuster (aka Tron Carter) referenced Charlotte as “diet Atlanta,” calling it the “most vanilla, bland place in the world.” Among the places that changed his mind? Lang Van, of course.
In late summer, “Top Chef” host Kristen Kish and judges Gail Simmons and Tom Colicchio landed in Charlotte, bringing all eyes onto the restaurants where they landed to eat. It didn’t take long for Kish to become a Lang Van fan, drawing in her colleagues — along with a good bit of attention yet again.
Now, Lang Van has hit the international stage, achieving Michelin Bib Gourmand status, perhaps to the surprise of many.
The quiet force behind this relatively rare feat of high praise? Owner Dan Nguyen.
Dan Nguyen owns Lang Van restaurant in Charlotte, which was named a Bib Gourmand in the inaugural Michelin Guide American South. Alex Cason CharlotteFive
A look inside Lang Van
Walk in to Lang Van for a weekday lunch, and you’ll be soothed with tranquil, spa-like music. Half walls toped with bamboo divide the dining room, creating a cozy feel on each side of the one-room space.
“Hi, how are you?,” Dan asks, joyfully greeting customers coming in the door, accented with floral curtains. “How many people, love?”
She’s been going through the same routine for decades now, having worked at the restaurant as a waitress since shortly after her arrival in Charlotte in 1999 and eventually purchasing it herself from the Duong family in 2009.
Inside the front door at Lang Van. Alex Cason CharlotteFive
To the left, holiday cards fill the walls, showing off the faces of customers held as close as family. The photos spill over to the wall above the kitchen, where her husband Tuyen Tran cooks, offset by a neat stack of to-go boxes piled high.
To the right, a collection of art accents the walls: a few florals, a photo of Dan, and a pair of paintings of the restaurant itself.
Staff members starting off their day rush to set up water goblets and cloth napkins as Dan guides the first few customers to tables, many of which are dressed with green tablecloths topped with a machine-embroidered map of Vietnam, each province in a different color.
Lang Van’s No. 19, a crispy bánh xèo pancake, was among the many dishes that won over the “Top Chef” host, Kristen Kish. Timothy DePeugh CharlotteFive
Bursting with nervous energy, the tiny restaurateur with a slicked-back ponytail apologizes needlessly to the early birds who had waited outside, eager for the clock to strike 11 a.m.
After I admitted to a first visit, she snatched up the multi-page menu and took the wheel. “Do you like shrimp?” she asks, sprinting to the kitchen as soon as she hears, “Yes.”
In a blink, she brought back a fat pair of goi cuon, accented with a blast of fresh mint. After she stirred a healthy squirt of Huy Fong sriracha into the peanut dipping sauce, those summer rolls didn’t stick around for long.
Lang Van’s goi cuon, which are Vietnamese summer rolls, come with a side of savory peanut dipping sauce that you can add sriracha to for a spicy kick. Heidi Finley CharlotteFive
Michelin attention
In the Michelin Guide American South, Charlotte’s only Bib Gourmand-designated restaurant is described as such: “Lang Van feels like more than just a restaurant in the Plaza Shamrock neighborhood. Maybe it’s the thank you notes from loyal diners that paper the walls. Or maybe it’s co-owner Dan Nguyen’s warm hospitality. The extensive menu of Vietnamese favorites is yet another reason. Nguyen is something of a legend here, having first joined the restaurant as a team member before she and her husband Chef Tuyen Tran became the owners. Slide into a booth (they’re the best seats in the house) and peruse the menu with everything from pho and spring rolls to hot pot and classic vermicelli noodles. No matter what you order it’s all delicious, and with favorable pricing, it satisfies both your appetite and your budget.”
Lang Van’s Com Chien Ga (chicken fried rice). Lang Van via Michelin Guide
Its designation as a Bib Gourmand means diners can expect “good quality, good value cooking.” Its pricing — categorized with a lone dollar sign — means it’s possible to dine for $25 or less.
As far as celebrating Lang Van’s award at the inaugural Michelin Guide American South ceremony in Greenville, she’s kept a low profile. Dan was absent from the photos on stage and in the lobby, where other Charlotte restaurateurs gathered to cheer each other on.
Regardless, she’s incredibly thankful for the honor.
“I feel good, and I say, thank you,” she told CharlotteFive photographer Alex Cason on a recent visit. “My customers at Lang Van … I love them the same [as] my family.”
As Dan and her husband age, she’s looking to the future — the wear and tear of restaurant life is taking a toll on him quickly. She’s talked to her brother and sister about taking over, but they’re not sure they can handle it, she says.
Dan Nguyen stands outside her Charlotte restaurant, Lang Van. Alex Cason CharlotteFive
She doesn’t want to sell Lang Van, but she’s also open to someone who works as hard as she does taking over.
“Keep the Lang Van name forever in my life,” she tells him.
Vietnamese cuisine
At the restaurant, Dan — who was born in South Vietnam — and her husband have somehow mastered a menu of more than 150 items and kept on going.
Shortly after the summer rolls’ disappearance, she presents an off-menu dish of bac tai noodle, a combination packed with shrimp, chicken, broccoli, cauliflower, carrots, snow peas and bean sprouts over thin, wide noodles.
Lang Van’s bac tai noodle, made with shrimp and chicken, plus an array of vegetables over thin, wide noodles. Heidi Finley CharlotteFive
And she doesn’t ever stay still for long.
“Are you ready, my love?,” Dan asks, running to a neighboring table with two 20-something women. “You like noodles, or you like rice? I make something for you.”
There are no strangers here at Lang Van. Shortly after one of those table neighbors dug into a steaming bowl of noodle soup, Dan returned in motherly fashion to tuck her hair behind her ear, guarding it from falling into her food.
Across that section of the dining room, a similar cadence soon repeats. “What you like, my love? Chicken or shrimp?,” Dan asked an elderly father and middle-aged son on a lunch outing.
Lang Van’s Com Tay Cam (house special hot pot). Alex Cason CharlotteFive
One table over, a businessman dining alone orders the No. 44 curry with chicken.
Close to noon, the pace starts to pick up even faster, and the staff works in concert like a well-oiled machine. Tables are wiped the moment customers leave. More are on the way.
“Last night, it was so busy, I come home at 4 o’clock,” Dan shares when coming to check in and refill my glass.
In the booth where the 20-somethings previously sat, a young couple slide in, ordering Vietnamese coffee and a Lucky Buddha beer.
“How are you? It’s been a long time, yes?,” Dan asks, showing off her famous skill for remembering faces and orders. It’s one of the endearing traits you’ll hear over and over about her hospitality, locking in customers for life.
Before long, he’s soaking rice paper in a bowl with steam pouring out and peeling meat off a skewer before asking for hot chili oil. Across the table, his companion is stringing out rice noodles high in the air with chopsticks — then he starts in, following the pattern.
A few minutes later, the check comes, paired with a fortune cookie and a tamarind candy, plus a tiny shortbread biscuit with just a touch of sweetness and a hit of salt.
“Next time you come in, I remember,” she said. “I get you something different.”
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Lang Van restaurant on Shamrock Drive in Charlotte. Alex Cason CharlotteFive
This story was originally published November 20, 2025 at 5:00 AM.
Heidi Finley is a writer and editor for CharlotteFive and the Charlotte Observer. Outside of work, you will most likely find her in the suburbs driving kids around, volunteering and indulging in foodie pursuits. Support my work with a digital subscription