Restaurant in Atlanta, United States
Michelin-recognized. Casual format. Easy call.

Fred's Meat & Bread at Krog Street Market holds back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition (2024 and 2025) and a 4.4 Google rating across nearly 1,400 reviews. At a $ price point with walk-in access, it's the easiest high-confidence meal in Atlanta for casual lunch or a quick dinner. Not the right call for a formal special occasion, but for value-to-quality ratio, nothing in this tier comes close.
If you're weighing a casual lunch in Atlanta's Krog Street Market, Fred's Meat & Bread is the easy answer. It holds back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition (2024 and 2025), meaning independent inspectors have confirmed the value proposition two years running: serious cooking at a price point that won't register on your credit card statement. For a special occasion that calls for white tablecloths and a tasting menu, look elsewhere. For a meal worth remembering at a $ price range, Fred's earns its reputation without qualification.
Fred's lives inside Krog Street Market, Atlanta's covered food hall on the BeltLine corridor at 99 Krog St NE. Food hall seating means communal tables, counter stools, and a room that functions as shared space rather than a private dining room. There's no hushed atmosphere here, no tableside ceremony, no intimate corner booth designed for a proposal. The room is open, moderately loud during peak hours, and entirely informal. If spatial intimacy matters to your occasion, that's a meaningful constraint to weigh before you book. For a birthday lunch, a casual date, or a weekday meal with a colleague, the setting works well. For an anniversary dinner where the room itself needs to signal occasion, it doesn't.
What the space does deliver: the energy of a busy, well-run market counter. You're watching the operation, the ordering is direct, and the whole experience moves at a pace that suits people who want to eat well without committing a full evening. Compare this to the quieter, more composed room at Miller Union, where the dining room is purpose-built for a longer, more considered meal.
Chef Todd Ginsberg runs the kitchen, and his approach at Fred's is focused rather than sprawling. The Michelin Bib Gourmand designation specifically recognizes restaurants offering good cooking at moderate prices, and Fred's has earned that designation in consecutive years. That's not a one-cycle anomaly — it suggests consistency, which at a food hall counter is harder to maintain than it looks.
The format here is not a tasting menu in any conventional sense. This is counter-service American food: sandwiches, burgers, and market-driven components executed with more precision than the format suggests. There's no progression of courses, no amuse-bouche, no narrative arc built across six or eight plates. If you arrive expecting the kind of meal you'd find at Lazy Bear in San Francisco or Alinea in Chicago, you'll have misjudged the venue entirely. What Fred's offers is something different and arguably harder to pull off: everyday food made at a level that draws recurring Michelin attention.
For context on how that fits into Atlanta's broader dining scene, Five & Ten and Banshee represent the mid-range sit-down alternative if you want table service and a fuller evening at a comparable price tier. Home Grown is the more casual all-day option nearby if breakfast or brunch is the goal.
The clearest use case is a lunch or quick dinner where quality matters but ceremony doesn't. Two people who want to eat something genuinely good without coordinating a reservation weeks in advance, a small group meeting at the market, or visitors who want a reliable meal near the BeltLine without committing to a full-service dinner. Google reviews back this up at 4.4 across nearly 1,400 ratings, which for a fast-casual counter in a competitive food city is a signal worth taking seriously.
For a special occasion dinner where the experience itself carries weight, Fred's is not the right answer. The room, the format, and the price point are all calibrated for casual quality, not celebration. Look instead at The Optimist for a full-service dinner with occasion-appropriate atmosphere, or consider the tasting menu options in Atlanta's $$$$ tier if a milestone meal is the brief.
International travelers who have experienced the Bib Gourmand tier at Le Bernardin in New York City or The French Laundry in Napa should calibrate expectations accordingly: the Bib recognition here signals value-to-quality ratio, not fine dining scale. Closer format comparisons would be something like Hilda and Jesse in San Francisco or Selby's in Atherton in terms of casual-serious positioning, though the price point at Fred's is considerably more accessible.
Booking difficulty is rated Easy. As a food hall counter, Fred's does not operate a traditional reservation system the way full-service restaurants do. Walk-in access is part of the format. Peak lunch hours on weekends will see a queue, so arriving slightly before or after the midday rush is the practical move. Address: Krog Street Market, 99 Krog St NE, Atlanta, GA 30307.
| Venue | Price | Booking | Format | Leading For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fred's Meat & Bread | $ | Easy / walk-in | Counter service, food hall | Casual quality lunch, value meal |
| Miller Union | $$$ | Moderate | Full-service, sit-down | Mid-occasion dinner, seasonal menu |
| Staplehouse | $$$$ | Plan ahead | Full-service, tasting-adjacent | Special occasion, serious dinner |
| Lazy Betty | $$$$ | Book 2-3 weeks out | Tasting menu | Formal occasion, progression dining |
If Fred's has you planning a wider Atlanta trip, Pearl has full guides for Atlanta restaurants, Atlanta hotels, Atlanta bars, Atlanta wineries, and Atlanta experiences. For a longer regional comparison, Emeril's in New Orleans and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg show how the Bib Gourmand and broader American dining recognition plays out at different price tiers and formats.
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Fred's Meat & Bread | $ | — |
| Bacchanalia | $$$$ | — |
| Atlas | $$$$ | — |
| Lazy Betty | $$$$ | — |
| Staplehouse | $$$$ | — |
| Gunshow | $$$$ | — |
How Fred's Meat & Bread stacks up against the competition.
As a food hall counter inside Krog Street Market, Fred's runs on communal seating rather than reserved tables, so large groups should expect to self-organize around shared seating. It works for groups of four to six who don't mind the informal setup. For a group that needs a private room or a structured booking, look at Lazy Betty or Staplehouse instead. The $ price point does make it a low-risk choice for a crowd.
Come expecting a focused, counter-style operation — not a full-service restaurant. Chef Todd Ginsberg keeps the format tight, which is exactly why it has earned back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in 2024 and 2025. It's inside Krog Street Market at 99 Krog St NE, so parking and foot traffic follow food hall patterns. Arrive early at peak lunch hours if you want a comfortable seat.
Fred's does not operate a tasting menu format — the Michelin Bib Gourmand designation it holds is specifically awarded for exceptional food at accessible prices, not for multi-course tasting experiences. If a structured tasting menu is what you're after, Lazy Betty or Atlas are the right Atlanta options. Fred's is the call when quality matters and you want to spend well under what a tasting menu costs.
Only if the occasion is informal. The food hall setting at Krog Street Market means communal tables and no ceremony, which is a poor fit for an anniversary dinner or a client meal. For a celebratory Atlanta meal with proper service and setting, Bacchanalia or Atlas will serve the occasion better. Fred's earns its Bib Gourmand on food quality, not atmosphere.
At the $ price tier with back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in 2024 and 2025, it's one of the clearest value cases in Atlanta dining. The Bib Gourmand exists precisely to flag this: food quality that punches above its cost. For the money, nothing in the food hall category in Atlanta has the same credential behind it.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.