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Australian Inspired Cafe & Coffee

Google: 4.5 · 1,159 reviews

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CuisineCafé
Executive ChefNolan & Shari Hirte
Price≈$20
Dress CodeCasual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacitySmall
Opinionated About Dining

On NE Alberta Street, Proud Mary holds a consistent position in Opinionated About Dining's North American Cheap Eats rankings — #417 in 2024, #424 in 2025 — placing it among the continent's most closely watched café counters. The Australian-influenced format brought by Nolan and Shari Hirte sits at the intersection of serious coffee culture and daytime dining, in a Portland neighbourhood that rewards both.

Proud Mary restaurant in Portland, United States
About

Alberta Street and the Café as a Serious Destination

NE Alberta Street operates as one of Portland's more self-assured dining corridors, the kind of block where a daytime café can carry as much editorial weight as a tasting-menu restaurant a few postcodes south. The street's character is informal but opinionated: independent operators, tight menus, and a customer base that tracks provenance more closely than price. Proud Mary at 2012 NE Alberta St sits inside that logic. It opens at 8am and closes at 4pm, seven days a week, which is not an accident. That format — morning through midday, no dinner service — is a deliberate commitment to the hours when coffee and food are most culturally loaded.

Portland has a well-documented café culture, shaped in part by the roasting infrastructure that operators like Stumptown Roasters established over two decades. What Proud Mary adds to that context is an Australian perspective. The Hirtes brought a template from Melbourne, a city whose café culture developed its own formal grammar around the flat white, the all-day breakfast plate, and the expectation that a café should be as technically considered as any other category of serious restaurant. That transatlantic transfer is not decorative; it shapes the standard against which the kitchen and bar are held.

What OAD Rankings Signal About This Category

Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in North America list is a useful frame for understanding where Proud Mary sits competitively. The list, compiled from critic and industry surveys, ranks informal venues against each other across the continent , a bracket that includes everything from taco counters to ramen shops to neighbourhood cafés. Proud Mary appeared as Recommended in 2023, rose to #417 in 2024, and placed at #424 in 2025. Sustained presence on that list, across three consecutive years, is more meaningful than a single-year entry. It places Proud Mary in a peer group defined by consistency and culinary seriousness rather than by price or format spectacle.

For reference, the venues that OAD ranks in this tier are typically drawing from a community of food-focused travellers who treat informal dining as a genre worth tracking with the same rigour applied to fine dining. The 4.6 rating across 1,104 Google reviews confirms that Proud Mary's standing is not a critic bubble; it reflects a broad-based, repeated customer response.

The Australian Café Format and What It Means in Portland

The Melbourne café model that Proud Mary draws from is worth understanding on its own terms. In Australia, the café developed as a genuinely competitive restaurant category from the 1990s onward, partly because a strong espresso culture preceded mainstream adoption of specialty coffee, and partly because the country's food culture absorbed influences from Southern Europe, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East in ways that produced a distinctive brunch and all-day menu vocabulary. The result is a format where the coffee program and the food menu carry equal weight, where a single-origin pour-over is as considered as a poached egg dish, and where the room is designed for lingering rather than throughput.

That format travels well to Portland, a city whose dining culture shares several structural features with Melbourne: a strong independent operator base, high consumer literacy around sourcing and technique, and a deep attachment to daytime eating as a social ritual rather than a functional refuelling stop. Proud Mary's position on Alberta Street makes geographic sense. The neighbourhood's density of independent businesses creates a context in which a café operating at this standard is legible to its immediate audience without needing to explain itself.

Within Portland's broader food scene, this approach to daytime dining sits alongside venues working in very different registers. Dinner-focused operators like Berlu in the Vietnamese fine-dining space, Kann with its Haitian-inflected cooking, and the technically serious pizza at Ken's Artisan Pizza all point to a city with genuine range across formats and price points. Langbaan's private-dining Thai format represents another register entirely. Proud Mary sits at the opposite end of the formality spectrum from all of them, but occupies the same broader argument: that Portland produces food worth tracking at an editorial level.

Compared to the café category internationally, Proud Mary's trajectory maps onto a pattern visible in other cities where Australian-influenced operators have taken root. In Berlin, Annelies operates in a similar zone, as does Apotek 57 in Copenhagen , cafés where the daytime format carries genuine culinary ambition. The comparison is not about shared menus but about a shared approach to the category: the café as a serious venue rather than a default fallback.

Hours, Access, and Planning

Proud Mary operates 8am to 4pm daily. That consistency across the full week removes the weekend-only limitation that affects some Alberta Street operators. The address at 2012 NE Alberta St places it in a walkable stretch of the neighbourhood, accessible from Northeast Portland without a car. There is no booking method listed, which suggests counter or walk-in service in line with the café format. Arriving early in the morning window is the standard approach for this category; midday on weekends will draw the longest waits.

For visitors building a broader Portland itinerary, the EP Club guides cover the full range of the city's dining, drinking, and accommodation options: restaurants, bars, hotels, wineries, and experiences. Proud Mary occupies a different tier from the fine-dining rooms that anchor some of those lists , venues like Le Bernardin, Alinea, The French Laundry, or Lazy Bear , but its OAD recognition places it in the same broader conversation about which North American venues are worth going out of your way for, regardless of price bracket. The same argument that drives a trip to Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg or Emeril's in New Orleans applies here at a different scale: sustained critical recognition across multiple years is a more reliable signal than a single peak-year appearance.

Know Before You Go

  • Address: 2012 NE Alberta St, Portland, OR 97211
  • Hours: Monday to Sunday, 8am – 4pm
  • Booking: Walk-in; no reservation method listed
  • Recognition: Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats North America: Recommended (2023), #417 (2024), #424 (2025)
  • Google Rating: 4.6 from 1,104 reviews
  • Operators: Nolan and Shari Hirte
Signature Dishes
ricotta hotcakeavocado toastpotato hash
Frequently asked questions

How It Stacks Up

A compact peer snapshot based on similar venues we track.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Trendy
  • Cozy
  • Modern
  • Industrial
Best For
  • Brunch
  • Casual Hangout
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
Drink Program
  • Craft Cocktails
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
Dress CodeCasual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacitySmall
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Airy, light-filled industrial space with warm touches, open kitchen, and welcoming, sunny staff hospitality.

Signature Dishes
ricotta hotcakeavocado toastpotato hash