Restaurant in Miami, United States
Enriqueta's Sandwich Shop
425Pearl PointsCheap eats that earn their reputation.

About Enriqueta's Sandwich Shop
Enriqueta's Sandwich Shop is a Pearl Recommended, OAD-ranked counter-service Cuban diner in Miami's Edgewater neighborhood, open for breakfast and lunch only. With a 4.5 Google rating across 2,100+ reviews and no reservation required, it is the most practical Cuban breakfast stop in the area for food travelers who want substance over setting.
The Verdict
If you're choosing between Enriqueta's Sandwich Shop and a full-service Cuban restaurant in Miami, understand what you're actually deciding: Enriqueta's is a counter-service breakfast and lunch spot that earns its reputation through consistency and economy, not atmosphere or ambition. Compared to Cafe La Trova, which delivers cocktails and Cuban standards in a polished Calle Ocho setting, Enriqueta's is faster, cheaper, and entirely unpretentious. If you want table service and a full menu, go elsewhere. If you want a Cuban sandwich or a plate of eggs before noon in Edgewater, Enriqueta's is the correct call.
What Enriqueta's Delivers
The energy inside Enriqueta's on a weekday morning is efficient and loud in the way that working-class diners tend to be: short-order kitchen sounds, Spanish spoken behind the counter, and a queue that moves because the staff know what they're doing. This is not a quiet spot for a slow breakfast. Tables turn quickly, conversations compete with the kitchen, and the mood is shaped by regulars who have been coming here for years. For a food traveler looking for a read on how Miami actually eats before noon, this is more instructive than any hotel brunch.
The address puts Enriqueta's at 186 NE 29th St in the Edgewater neighborhood, north of Downtown and south of Wynwood. It is a neighborhood fixture rather than a destination engineered for visitors, which is part of what makes it worth seeking out. The crowd on a given morning will include construction workers, design district creatives, and curious out-of-towners — a cross-section that tells you something about the pricing and the pull.
Enriqueta's holds a Pearl Recommended Restaurant designation for 2025, and it appeared on the Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America list in both 2023 (Recommended) and 2024 (ranked #337). These are not fine-dining credentials — they are cheap-eats credentials, which means the bar is consistency, value, and authenticity rather than technique or innovation. On those terms, the recognition is meaningful. OAD's cheap eats rankings draw on a community of serious eaters, so placement there is a signal worth noting. For Cuban-American breakfast and lunch in Miami, you will not do better at this price point through walk-in service.
The format is strictly morning and midday. Enriqueta's runs Monday through Friday, 7 am to 3 pm, and Saturday 7 am to 2 pm. It is closed Sundays. There is no dinner service, no evening option, and no late-night window. Plan accordingly , if you're in Miami for a weekend, Saturday is your only weekend opportunity, and the earlier you arrive the less likely you are to queue. The Google rating of 4.5 across more than 2,100 reviews is a reliable signal for a spot at this price level: that volume of positive feedback on a counter-service diner reflects genuine repeat patronage rather than occasion dining.
For context on the broader Cuban food scene in Miami, Versailles on Calle Ocho is the well-known benchmark for Cuban comfort food and a useful comparison for tourists. El Mago de las Fritas occupies a similar register for frituras. Latin Cafe is another counter-service option worth knowing. Enriqueta's sits comfortably in this group but draws a more neighborhood-specific crowd given its Edgewater location rather than the tourist corridor of Little Havana. If you are comparing Cuban spots outside of Miami, Café Habana in New York City and Colada Shop in Washington, D.C. offer useful reference points for what Cuban-inspired counter dining looks like in other cities, though neither matches Enriqueta's depth of local context.
If your Miami trip extends beyond Cuban food, Chug's Diner is worth knowing as another daytime-focused option in the same accessible price tier. For a full picture of where to eat, drink, and stay, 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.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 186 NE 29th St, Miami, FL 33137 (Edgewater neighborhood)
- Hours: Mon–Fri 7 am–3 pm | Sat 7 am–2 pm | Closed Sundays
- Format: Counter service, breakfast and lunch only
- Booking: Walk-in only , no reservation required or available
- Booking difficulty: Easy; arrive early on Saturday to avoid a wait
- Dress code: None , come as you are
- Awards: Pearl Recommended 2025 | OAD Cheap Eats North America #337 (2024) | OAD Recommended (2023)
- Google rating: 4.5 (2,105 reviews)
- Chef: Eric Brenner
- Leading for: Solo diners, food travelers, quick weekday breakfast or lunch
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Enriqueta's Sandwich Shop?
The Cuban sandwich is the anchor order here — it's what earned Enriqueta's its Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats ranking (#337 in North America, 2024) and Pearl Recommended status. If you're going for breakfast, the pressed sandwiches and egg-based options are the move. Keep it simple and stick to the core Cuban-format items; this is not a menu for experimenting.
Can I eat at the bar at Enriqueta's Sandwich Shop?
Enriqueta's operates as a short-order counter, not a sit-down bar setup. Seating is basic and turns over fast — expect to share space and eat quickly. This is a working diner, not a leisurely lunch spot.
What should I wear to Enriqueta's Sandwich Shop?
Come as you are. Enriqueta's is a no-frills Miami counter spot at 186 NE 29th St — T-shirt and shorts are the norm. Anything smarter than casual would be out of place.
Is lunch or dinner better at Enriqueta's Sandwich Shop?
Lunch is your only option on weekdays; dinner is not served. Enriqueta's closes at 3pm Monday through Friday and 2pm Saturday, and is closed entirely on Sunday. If you're planning a Saturday visit, arrive early — service ends at 2pm and the kitchen doesn't wait.
Is Enriqueta's Sandwich Shop good for solo dining?
Yes, and it may be the format best suited to solo diners. Counter ordering, fast turnover, and a no-fuss atmosphere make it easy to walk in alone, order, and eat without any awkwardness. The OAD Cheap Eats recognition signals this is a place regulars return to, not a one-time group excursion.
How far ahead should I book Enriqueta's Sandwich Shop?
No booking required — Enriqueta's does not take reservations. Walk in, order at the counter, and eat. The practical constraint is timing: arrive before 3pm on weekdays or 2pm on Saturday, and expect a line during the peak late-morning window when the Wynwood crowd hits.
Location
186 NE 29th St, Miami, FL 33137
Miami, United States
Compare Enriqueta's Sandwich Shop
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Enriqueta's Sandwich Shop | Cuban | Easy | |
| Ariete | Modern American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Boia De | Italian, Contemporary | $$$ | Unknown |
| Cote Miami | Korean Steakhouse, Korean | $$$ | Unknown |
| Stubborn Seed | Progressive American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann | Argentinian | $$$$ | Unknown |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Also Consider
- Ariete, Modern American, Contemporary, $$$$
- Boia De, Italian, Contemporary, $$$
- Cote Miami, Korean Steakhouse, Korean, $$$
- Stubborn Seed, Progressive American, Contemporary, $$$$
- Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann, Argentinian, $$$$
Comparing Enriqueta's to the rest of Miami's most-discussed dining options requires calibrating your expectations first. Ariete and Stubborn Seed are both $$$$ modern American restaurants where you are paying for technique, ambition, and a full evening format. Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann adds a marquee chef name to that price bracket. None of those venues compete with Enriqueta's on value or accessibility, they occupy an entirely different category. If your Miami trip has room for one serious dinner, any of those three will deliver more than Enriqueta's can by format alone.
Boia De and Cote Miami at $$$ sit closer to the middle of the market. Both require advance booking and are dinner-only in practice. If your priority is a sit-down meal with a wine list and a menu that rewards attention, Boia De is the right pick for two. For a group that wants a shared-format meal with a clear focal point, Cote Miami's Korean steakhouse model works well. Enriqueta's does not compete on any of these dimensions.
Where Enriqueta's wins is on category terms: it is the most credentialed quick-service Cuban breakfast and lunch option in Miami, confirmed by OAD cheap eats rankings and a Pearl Recommended status. No booking, no dress code, no minimum spend. For a food traveler building a Miami itinerary that covers multiple meals and formats in a day, Enriqueta's is the correct morning anchor before a dinner at Boia De or Ariete. Use both, they are not in competition.
Hours
- Monday
- 7 am–3 pm
- Tuesday
- 7 am–3 pm
- Wednesday
- 7 am–3 pm
- Thursday
- 7 am–3 pm
- Friday
- 7 am–3 pm
- Saturday
- 7 am–2 pm
- Sunday
- Closed
Recognized By
Explore Miami
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