Restaurant in Portland, United States
Meat Cheese Bread
100ptsBread-First Sandwich Craft

About Meat Cheese Bread
Ranked #629 on Opinionated About Dining's 2024 Cheap Eats in North America list, Meat Cheese Bread is a Southeast Portland sandwich counter open seven days a week from 7am to 3pm. A 4.6 Google rating across 546 reviews reflects the kind of sustained local trust that daytime-only operations have to earn through consistency alone. It occupies a specific tier in Portland's food culture: serious craft, no dinner service, no pretension.
Daytime-Only and Built for It
Portland's dining conversation tends to tilt toward evening: the tasting menus at Langbaan, the wood-fired late-night energy at Nostrana, the Haitian cooking at Kann. Lunch gets treated as a logistical problem rather than a deliberate experience, and breakfast is often an afterthought. Meat Cheese Bread, on Southeast Stark Street, operates entirely within the hours that most serious restaurant coverage ignores: 7am to 3pm, seven days a week. That constraint is not a limitation. It is the format.
The daytime-only sandwich counter is a distinct culinary category, one that rewards a different kind of attention than dinner. Without an evening service to anchor revenue or prestige, these operations live or die on repeat customers and word of mouth. A 4.6 Google rating from 546 reviewers at a lunch counter is not the same as a 4.6 at a restaurant that hosts anniversary dinners and birthday celebrations where people are primed to feel generous. Daytime regulars are harder to impress and faster to leave if quality slips.
What the OAD Ranking Signals
Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in North America list operates as one of the more methodologically serious crowd-sourced rankings in North American food criticism. A placement at #629 in 2024 is not a headline number, but it means the operation has been evaluated and logged by the kind of eater who tracks these things across cities. For a sandwich shop in a mid-size Pacific Northwest city, that level of cross-market recognition puts Meat Cheese Bread in a peer set that extends well beyond Portland.
For context: OAD's Cheap Eats rankings sit alongside entries from major coastal markets including New York, where the sandwich category alone runs deep, with counters like 'wichcraft and Amy's Bread representing the kind of craft-focused daytime operations that set market expectations. Making a national list from a Southeast Portland address means something, even at a ranking that won't generate social media traffic the way a top-ten finish would.
The Lunch Divide in Portland
Portland has a specific relationship with its daytime food culture. The city's food cart infrastructure has historically absorbed a lot of the lunch demand, offering variety and price accessibility that sit-down counters have to compete against differently. Sandwich shops occupy an interesting middle tier: above a cart in terms of environment and often in product complexity, but priced and paced for midday rather than the evening dining dollar.
The lunch-versus-dinner divide shows up in format discipline. Dinner operations in Portland, from the Vietnamese cooking at Berlu to the wood-fired pizzas at Ken's Artisan Pizza, can build experience across two or three hours. A sandwich counter compresses everything: sourcing decisions, bread quality, protein selection, construction technique, and speed. The guest makes a judgment in about four minutes of eating. There is no wine pairing, no pacing, no narrative arc of courses to smooth over a weak component. Everything has to be right immediately.
That compression is why the category rewards genuine craft. At the level of nationally ranked cheap eats, the differentiation usually comes from ingredient sourcing and bread quality. Bread is the structural argument of any sandwich, and shops that treat it as a commodity rather than a variable tend not to hold repeat customers long enough to accumulate the review volume Meat Cheese Bread has. The name itself is a position statement about hierarchy of components: the architecture is announced before any specific filling is named.
Southeast Portland as Context
The SE Stark Street address places Meat Cheese Bread in a corridor of Southeast Portland that has long supported independent food operations. The neighbourhood sits outside the more heavily trafficked Pearl District or Division Street circuits, which has historically given it a more local-facing character. Foot traffic here is less tourist-driven than some of the city's more photographed food blocks, which suits a daytime-only format well. The customer base for a 7am-to-3pm counter is primarily commuters, neighbourhood residents, and people making deliberate detours rather than visitors following a map.
That local density is reflected in the review volume. Just over 500 Google reviews for a sandwich counter that has never served dinner is a number built slowly over years of repeat visits, not a spike from viral exposure. It sits in different territory from the broader Portland dining scene that EP Club covers in its full Portland restaurants guide, but it is a meaningful part of the city's food character.
Where It Fits in the City
Portland's premium dining tier, represented by reservation-required operations and nationally reviewed tasting formats, occupies a different register entirely from Meat Cheese Bread. Nationally, that upper tier includes operations like Le Bernardin in New York City, Alinea in Chicago, The French Laundry in Napa, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, and Emeril's in New Orleans. These are evening anchors that define a city's ambition tier. Meat Cheese Bread belongs to an entirely different and equally necessary category: the daytime operation that sustains a city's food culture between the headline moments.
That is the category the OAD ranking captures. Not a runner-up to something greater, but a well-executed version of a specific and demanding format. The sandwich counter that earns national recognition does so precisely because the format has no structural safety nets.
Planning a Visit
Meat Cheese Bread is open every day of the week, Monday through Sunday, from 7am to 3pm at 1406 SE Stark St in Portland. The hours make it accessible for breakfast and lunch, and the seven-day schedule removes the planning friction that weekday-only operations create. Arriving closer to opening than to the lunch rush tends to be the more practical approach at counters with this kind of local following. For those exploring the rest of the city, EP Club's guides to Portland hotels, Portland bars, Portland wineries, and Portland experiences cover the broader picture.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Meat Cheese Bread?
The name gives the clearest answer to this: the operation is structured around the relationship between its three core components, which means bread quality is the foundation of any order worth making here. No specific dishes are confirmed in EP Club's data, so the directive is direct: order based on what uses all three named elements rather than variations that bypass any one of them. The OAD Cheap Eats recognition in 2024 and the 4.6 Google rating across more than 500 reviews suggest the kitchen's core sandwiches are the reason people return, not the periphery of the menu.
Hours
- Monday
- 7 am–3 pm
- Tuesday
- 7 am–3 pm
- Wednesday
- 7 am–3 pm
- Thursday
- 7 am–3 pm
- Friday
- 7 am–3 pm
- Saturday
- 7 am–3 pm
- Sunday
- 7 am–3 pm
Recognized By
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