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CuisineBagels
Executive ChefMatteson Koche
LocationMiami, United States
Opinionated About Dining

On Biscayne Boulevard in Miami's MiMo district, El Bagel has earned a place on Opinionated About Dining's 2025 Cheap Eats list for North America — a recognition that puts it in a narrow tier of casual spots held to the same scrutiny as serious fine dining. Under chef Matteson Koche, the operation treats the bagel as a craft object, not a commodity, in a city that has historically underinvested in the form.

El Bagel restaurant in Miami, United States
About

Biscayne Boulevard and the Bagel as Craft Object

The stretch of Biscayne Boulevard running through Miami's MiMo district — the postwar architectural corridor between roughly 50th and 77th Streets — has accumulated a particular kind of tenant over the past decade: small, independent operators more interested in doing one thing well than in building scalable concepts. El Bagel, at 6910 Biscayne Blvd, fits that pattern precisely. The address places it among wine bars, neighborhood cafés, and the sort of casual spots that attract serious eaters without advertising themselves as serious. Approaching the building, there is no spectacle, which is part of the point. The ritual here starts before you order.

What the OAD Recognition Actually Means

In 2025, Opinionated About Dining named El Bagel to its Cheap Eats list for North America , a designation that carries more weight in food-critical circles than it might appear to casual readers. OAD's Cheap Eats program applies the same evaluative rigor to inexpensive, high-volume formats that its main lists apply to tasting-menu restaurants. Inclusion places El Bagel in a peer set that spans the continent, alongside operations in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, and other cities with far longer traditions of serious casual dining. In Miami's context, where most critical attention flows toward tasting-menu formats like ITAMAE or the high-end theater of L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon Miami, a bagel shop earning national cheap-eats recognition is a meaningful signal about where the city's food culture is actually moving.

For context, the OAD list is crowd-sourced from a community of frequent, informed diners and weighted toward technical execution and consistency rather than atmosphere or novelty. A 4.1 Google rating across 459 reviews reinforces the consistency argument , that number, at that volume, suggests a kitchen that performs reliably rather than brilliantly on one occasion and badly on the next.

The Ritual of the Bagel Counter

Eating at a bagel counter is one of the few American food rituals with its own codified pacing. You arrive, you scan what's been made that morning, you make decisions quickly, and you eat without ceremony. The form does not reward overthinking. What separates a shop operating at this level from a commodity operation is not the theatre around the bagel but the object itself: crust that resists before yielding, crumb with enough structure to hold toppings without collapsing, and a boil-and-bake process that produces the characteristic chew rather than the soft, pillowy texture of a supermarket product. Chef Matteson Koche's involvement signals that the kitchen approach at El Bagel is deliberate rather than inherited , a named culinary lead at a casual format typically means someone is making active decisions about sourcing, fermentation time, and production method.

The bagel as a craft category has seen significant critical recalibration in the Northeast over the past several years. In New York, operations like Absolute Bagels and newer entrants like Apollo Bagels have demonstrated that the format sustains serious critical attention. Miami, until recently, sat largely outside that conversation. El Bagel's OAD placement suggests the city now has at least one operation that belongs in it.

Miami's Casual Dining Tier and Where El Bagel Sits

Miami's restaurant scene is frequently read through its Michelin-starred tier: Ariete, Boia De, and Cote Miami anchor different segments of that formal dining market. But the more instructive comparison for El Bagel is the café-and-casual tier, where operations like Bachour occupy the mid-range. El Bagel operates below that price register while attracting a caliber of critical recognition that most casual Miami restaurants do not. That positioning , low price, high critical standing , is actually rare in a city where casual dining often settles for adequate rather than precise.

Nationally, the restaurants that occupy the highest tiers of fine dining , from Le Bernardin in New York to Alinea in Chicago to The French Laundry in Napa , depend on a healthy casual ecosystem beneath them. Cities with serious food cultures produce serious cheap eats alongside serious tasting menus. Miami is in the process of building that full-spectrum culture, and El Bagel is evidence of progress at the accessible end of the range. Other reference points , Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Emeril's in New Orleans , represent cities where the casual and formal ends of the dining spectrum developed together. Miami is catching up.

Planning Your Visit

El Bagel operates at 6910 Biscayne Blvd in Miami's MiMo corridor, an area most easily reached by car or rideshare. Given that this is a breakfast-and-lunch format serving a made-to-order product at a Cheap Eats price point, arriving early on weekends is advisable , the combination of OAD recognition and a relatively contained production output means that popular items do not last until midday. There is no booking system for a counter like this; the visit is walk-in by design, and part of the ritual is accepting that the leading version of the morning's product goes to those who show up first. Checking current hours before visiting is sensible, as these are not published in this listing. For the broader Miami dining and travel picture, see our full Miami restaurants guide, our full Miami hotels guide, our full Miami bars guide, our full Miami wineries guide, and our full Miami experiences guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

What dish is El Bagel famous for?
The operation's reputation rests on the bagel itself as a craft product rather than on any single topping combination. Chef Matteson Koche leads the kitchen, and the OAD Cheap Eats recognition points to execution at the level of the core product. Specific current offerings are not listed here; checking directly with the venue is the reliable approach.
How hard is it to get a table at El Bagel?
El Bagel operates as a walk-in counter format, so there is no reservation system to contend with. The practical constraint is production volume: a morning-format operation with national critical recognition and a 4.1 rating across 459 Google reviews attracts consistent demand. In Miami, where this type of serious casual breakfast spot is relatively rare, early arrival on weekends is the practical advice. The price point keeps the barrier low; availability of fresh product is the real variable.
What do critics highlight about El Bagel?
Opinionated About Dining's 2025 Cheap Eats for North America is the primary critical signal on record. OAD evaluates consistency, technical execution, and value within format , inclusion means the operation met a standard that most casual restaurants in the country do not. In Miami's critical context, this kind of recognition in a traditionally underserved casual category is the most useful frame for understanding what El Bagel represents.

Recognition Snapshot

A short peer set to help you calibrate price, style, and recognition.

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