Google: 4.8 · 233 reviews
Proper Sausages & Meat Market

Proper Sausages & Meat Market operates out of Miami Shores at 9722 NE 2nd Ave, placing serious charcuterie and sandwich craft in a neighbourhood far removed from South Beach spectacle. Ranked #364 on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in North America list in 2024 and climbing to #440 in 2025, it holds a 4.8 Google rating across 213 reviews — numbers that speak to a loyal, returning audience rather than tourist traffic.

Miami Shores and the Case for Eating Away from the Waterfront
The most interesting food in Miami has steadily migrated away from the postcard addresses. While the Brickell corridor fills with expense-account steakhouses and South Beach cycles through celebrity-chef outposts, a quieter and often more exacting scene has taken hold in the neighbourhoods north of downtown. Miami Shores, a residential strip along NE 2nd Avenue, is not a dining district in any conventional sense. There are no valet queues, no reservation apps, no tasting menus with interstitial palate cleansers. What there is, increasingly, is the kind of focused, single-category cooking that accumulates real critical attention over time.
Proper Sausages & Meat Market fits that pattern precisely. Operating at 9722 NE 2nd Ave, it has drawn successive recognition from Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in North America list — Recommended in 2023, ranked #364 in 2024, and ranked #440 in 2025. That trajectory, across three consecutive years of OAD assessment, positions it inside a peer set that includes some of the most seriously considered counter-service and sandwich operations on the continent. A 4.8 Google rating drawn from 213 reviews reinforces what the OAD data implies: this is not a place that trades on novelty.
The Logic of the Meat Market Format
Across American cities, the sandwich-and-charcuterie format occupies a specific and increasingly respected tier. It sits below the tasting-menu circuit populated by venues like Alinea in Chicago, The French Laundry in Napa, or Le Bernardin in New York City, but it is not a lesser category — it is a different one, with its own exacting standards around sourcing, cut selection, curing, and assembly. The meat market model, in particular, demands that the operation justify itself twice: first as a retail provider of raw and cured product, and second as a prepared-food counter where that same product is transformed into something you eat on the premises or take away.
Operations that do both well , think Alidoro in New York City or Pane Bianco in Phoenix , tend to develop reputations that outlast trends. The product has to be good enough to sell raw and cooked, and that dual accountability creates a discipline that pure sandwich shops can sometimes bypass. Proper Sausages & Meat Market operates within that same dual-accountability structure, with the charcuterie and sausage program providing the backbone for what arrives on the plate.
Reading the Meal as a Sequence
The OAD Cheap Eats framework does not rank venues on atmosphere or service choreography. It ranks on what the food actually does , and in the sandwich and charcuterie category, that question resolves into a progression: how the components build from first bite to last, whether fat and acid are in productive tension, whether the bread holds its structure through to the finish, and whether the cured element (sausage, in this case) carries enough complexity to function as the anchor of the sandwich rather than a filler between the other components.
At Proper Sausages, the sausage program is the starting point of that sequence, not an afterthought. In a Miami dining scene where the sandwich conversation has historically been dominated by the Cuban (pressed, pork-centric, built on the tension between pickled and roasted) and the Italian-American deli tradition represented by spots like La Sandwicherie, a focused sausage-and-charcuterie counter occupies distinct ground. The point of difference is not the bread or the condiment , it is what has been done to the meat before it reaches the assembly stage.
That orientation toward the cured and the processed , in the technical rather than pejorative sense , places Proper Sausages closer to a European charcuterie tradition than to the pressed-sandwich model that Miami is leading known for. The meat is the argument. Everything else builds the case.
Where It Sits in the Miami Food Picture
Miami's restaurant culture in 2024 and 2025 has continued to bifurcate. At one end, there is a cluster of destination-level restaurants drawing national critical attention: Boia De in Little Haiti, Ariete in Coconut Grove, ITAMAE representing the city's Peruvian-Japanese counter-service tier at a premium level, and L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon Miami anchoring the formal French end of the spectrum. At the other end, the cheap-eats tier has its own critical ecosystem, and OAD's Cheap Eats list is one of its most credible scorecards.
Proper Sausages sits firmly in that second tier by price, but the OAD recognition aligns it with a peer set that takes the work seriously. The venues that appear on the OAD Cheap Eats North America list alongside it are not casual inclusions. The list is assembled by a network of frequent, opinionated eaters with documented track records, and ranking in the top 440 nationally in 2025 , alongside three consecutive years of recognition , signals a level of consistency that most restaurants at any price point do not achieve.
For broader context on where to eat and stay across the city, 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.
The comparison to places like Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Emeril's in New Orleans, or Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg is not one of format or price , it is one of critical seriousness. The OAD framework applies the same evaluative rigour across price points, which means a ranked cheap-eats entry is not a consolation prize. It is an assessment of whether a place does what it sets out to do at a level that compels a return visit.
Know Before You Go
| Address | 9722 NE 2nd Ave, Miami Shores, FL 33138 |
|---|---|
| Chef | Freddy Kaufman |
| Category | Sandwiches / Meat Market |
| Awards | Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats North America: Recommended (2023), #364 (2024), #440 (2025) |
| Google Rating | 4.8 from 213 reviews |
| Hours | Not listed , confirm directly before visiting |
| Booking | No booking details on record , walk-in counter service format; arrival timing matters more than reservations |
| Price | Cheap Eats tier per OAD classification |
Awards and Standing
A quick context table based on similar venues in our dataset.
| Venue | Awards | Cuisine | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Proper Sausages & Meat Market | Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America Ranked #440 (2025); Opinion… | Sandwiches | This venue |
| Ariete | Michelin 1 Star | Modern American, Contemporary | Modern American, Contemporary, $$$$ |
| Boia De | Michelin 1 Star | Italian, Contemporary | Italian, Contemporary, $$$ |
| Cote Miami | Michelin 1 Star | Korean Steakhouse, Korean | Korean Steakhouse, Korean, $$$ |
| Stubborn Seed | Michelin 1 Star | Progressive American, Contemporary | Progressive American, Contemporary, $$$$ |
| Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann | Argentinian | Argentinian, $$$$ |
At a Glance
- Rustic
- Cozy
- Casual Hangout
- Standalone
- Local Sourcing
Casual neighborhood butcher shop atmosphere with no indoor seating, focused on quality meats and grab-and-go service.














