Fred's Meat & Bread
.png)
Housed inside Krog Street Market, Fred's Meat & Bread is a counter-service sandwich and burger operation from chef Todd Ginsberg that has earned consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in 2024 and 2025. Its price point sits at the accessible end of Atlanta's Michelin-recognised dining scene, making it one of the few award-bearing spots in the city where lunch costs less than a cocktail at a full-service restaurant nearby.
Pearl is the En Primeur Club membership app — saves, bookings, and concierge access live there. Same editors, same standards.
- Address
- Krog Street Market, 99 Krog St NE, Atlanta, GA 30307
- Phone
- (404) 688-3733
- Website
- fredsmeatandbread.com

The Counter at Krog Street
Krog Street Market occupies a converted warehouse in the Inman Park neighbourhood, and the food hall format it operates shapes the physical experience of eating at Fred's Meat & Bread before any food arrives. The stall opens onto a shared floor of vendors and communal tables, with high ceilings, exposed steel, and the ambient noise of a working market. There is no threshold to cross and no host stand. You join a queue, you order at the counter, and you find a seat. That physical container is not incidental to what Fred's does, it defines it. The restraint of the format is part of the point.
Counter-service operations inside food halls occupy a distinct tier in American urban dining. They forgo the architecture of a full-service restaurant, the table spacing, the lighting design, the choreography of service, and ask the food to carry the entire weight of the experience. Most cannot sustain that ask. Fred's Meat & Bread has done it well enough, and consistently enough, to earn consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in both 2024 and 2025, placing it in a small category of American food-hall-format venues where casual premises and serious recognition coexist without contradiction.
Where Fred's Sits in Atlanta's Award Tier
Atlanta's Michelin-starred tier runs through full-service restaurants operating at the $$$$ price point. Bacchanalia, Atlas, Lazy Betty, and Staplehouse each hold a Michelin star and price accordingly. The Bib Gourmand designation, awarded to venues offering good cooking at moderate prices, which Michelin defines as a two-course meal plus wine or dessert under a set threshold, operates as a separate recognition track. It does not rank below the star tier so much as assess a different set of criteria. A venue like Fred's is not competing with Miller Union or Five & Ten for the same diner on the same occasion. It is recognised for doing something different with discipline: producing food worth seeking out at a price point that does not require planning a special occasion around it.
That positioning matters in a city where the gap between casual and fine dining has historically been wide. The Bib Gourmand entry in Atlanta is a shorter list than the starred tier, and consecutive appearances on it across 2024 and 2025 indicate consistency rather than a single strong year. Chef Todd Ginsberg's connection to the operation provides the culinary grounding behind that consistency, even if the format keeps his name off the front of the room.
The Case for the Sandwich Format
The American sandwich has a legitimate claim as one of the more technically demanding formats in casual cooking. The ratio of protein to bread, the moisture management of sauces and condiments, the structural integrity of the build across the duration of eating, these are not trivial problems, and most operations solve them badly. The burger sits in adjacent territory, where the same ratio and structural challenges apply under higher temperature pressure. What distinguishes the operators who do this well is usually sourcing discipline and the willingness to say no to excess: fewer ingredients, better executed, rather than more ingredients assembled loosely.
Fred's operates in that tighter mode. The $ price tier reflects the format, not a compromise on sourcing intent. The Bib Gourmand designation implies that Michelin inspectors found the quality-to-price ratio meaningful enough to certify twice, which in this format is a stronger signal than it might appear. Inspectors eating anonymously at a counter-service stall are not grading on atmosphere or service choreography. They are grading on what comes off the line.
For comparison in the broader American casual-dining category, operations like Hilda and Jesse in San Francisco and Selby's in Atherton show how American food at different price points handles the sourcing and execution question. Fred's sits at the accessible end of that spectrum and is recognised accordingly.
Krog Street Market as Context
The Inman Park location matters beyond logistics. Krog Street Market draws from one of Atlanta's denser residential neighbourhoods and functions as a daily-use food destination rather than a destination built primarily around tourism. That means Fred's operates in front of a repeat-customer base, a harder audience to sustain than a one-time visitor crowd, because they return often enough to notice drift. Venues that earn Bib Gourmand recognition inside food hall formats and hold it year-on-year are typically those that have solved the consistency problem across high-volume service, not just on good days.
The communal seating arrangement inside Krog Street means the dining experience is genuinely shared space. Tables are not assigned to vendors; a group eating Fred's sandwiches may be seated next to someone from a different stall. That format demands food that holds its character in a non-controlled environment, which is a specific discipline. Other Atlanta operators worth considering for a broader Inman Park and Eastside visit include Home Grown and Banshee.
Planning a Visit
Fred's Meat & Bread sits inside Krog Street Market at 99 Krog St NE, Atlanta, GA 30307, accessible from Inman Park or the BeltLine, which runs nearby. The $ price tier means a full meal falls well below the cost of most Atlanta lunch options with any comparable level of recognition behind them.
For readers comparing Fred's to the full-service Michelin tier in the same city, the reference points are useful but not direct: The Optimist operates on an entirely different occasion type.
What It’s Closest To
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fred's Meat & BreadThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Classic American Sandwiches | $$ | Bib Gourmand | |
| The Busy Bee | Traditional Southern Soul Food | $$ | Bib Gourmand | Martin Luther King Jr Drive SW |
| Home Grown | Southern Diner | $ | Michelin Plate | Reynoldstown |
| Poor Hendrix | Contemporary American Gastropub with Southern & Asian Elements | $$ | Michelin Plate | East Lake |
| Whoopsie's | Southern Comfort with Craft Cocktails | $$ | Bib Gourmand | Reynoldstown |
| Buttermilk Kitchen | Southern Farm-to-Table Brunch | $$ | Sandy Springs |
At a Glance
- Trendy
- Lively
- Industrial
- Casual Hangout
- Open Kitchen
Contemporary counter-service spot in a bustling food hall with charm despite limited space, featuring an efficient line and friendly staff amid high-traffic energy.














