Asheville’s best breakfasts: The Ashvegas roundup

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Jason Sandford

Jason Sandford is a reporter, writer, blogger and photographer interested in all things Asheville.

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breakfastMoosecafe

Breakfast at the Moose Cafe.

From the RAD to the North Side, from Haywood Road to Hendersonville Road, here’s the Ashvegas picks from a native who knows. Hipster joints, diners, and Greek restaurants alike, we visited them all to make our picks and share them with you.

What do you think? What did we miss?

ASHVEGAS TOP PICKS: The best of the best

* Early Girl. Downtown. Egg breakfasts, quiche, French toast. There’s always a wait during peak times, but there’s coffee in the waiting area. Homey, bright, welcoming, casual and delicious. Farm-to-table approach with organic ingredients. Menu.

* Over Easy Cafe. Downtown. No longer quite a best-kept secret, but still too far under the radar for breakfasts this good. The lavender French toast is a city standout, as are the omelets. Cozy, small, casual and many locally sourced foods on the menu. Link to PDF menu.  Website.

breakfastpancakeovereasy

Hotcakes at Over Easy.

* Sunny Point. West. Regarded as the best breakfast joint in town if not the best in the observable universe, the Point delivers with southern comfort breakfasts including huevos rancheros, an ingenious “breakfast salad” (eggs and bacon on a salad), and nearly perfect biscuits sprinkled with sugar that beg to be smeared with butter and local blackberry jam. Vegetarian options, too. Menu.

DOWNTOWN

The Green Sage: Perhaps better known as a coffeeshop serving lunch, the Green Sage also serves up a very tasty breakfast including omelets, oatmeal, granola…and carrot-cake pancakes. Breakfast all day. Menu.

Posana Cafe: Everything is gluten-free here: Toast, pancakes, and even desserts. Creative breakfasts change seasonally, and can include pecan toffee pancakes with blackberry maple syrup and hazelnut puree. Casual but with elegant food that’s a notch above–and a nice side patio, too. Menu.

Mayfel’s: A little taste of New Orleans in Asheville, Mayfel’s serves beignets as well as benedicts, shrimp & grits, a tofu scramble and more. Casual with a wait on weekends, and some of the best courtyard seating in Asheville. Check it out on a sunny day. Menu.

MONTFORD/FIVE POINTS

Tod’s Tasties: On Wednesdays, the heavens open, the angels sing, and still-warm fresh-baked doughnuts from Vortex Doughnuts Table baker Laura Goetz appear. Every day, there’s delicious breakfast bowls (eggs, greens, kimchi, tempeh), and the occasional breakfast special is always worth checking out. Great coffee and baked goods, too.  Menu. (Scroll down to see more breakfast options.)

Five Points Restaurant: A diner and Greek restaurant near downtown with a local clientele and an affordable breakfast in oversized portions. Just the classics here: eggs, bacon, biscuits & gravy, real hash browns, no-frills service, and good prices. Hot, fast, filling, and so unhip we can’t link to a menu.

NORTH

HomeGrown: Fresh, local ingredients and a changing seasonal menu that can include corned beef hash, a veggie frittata, and absolutely killer fried chicken biscuits. Busy and noisy at peak times, but the line moves fast and the wait is worth it. Menu.

breakfastburritoras

Breakfast burrito at Rise ‘n’ Shine

Rise ‘n’ Shine: Casual and hip, with wake-you-up yellow walls, Rise ‘n’ Shine’s got great selections of pancakes and omelets, including the Funky Monkey (banana-walnut pancakes) and a Greek omelet with spinach, tomatoes, black olives, onions and feta. Menu.

SOUTH

The Green Sage (South): The same as above in the Downtown listing, just South instead of downtown.

EAST

The Corner Stone: Another family-friendly Greek restaurant to make the list, the Corner Stone serves a traditional, affordable menu of country egg breakfasts, Belgian waffles, steak & eggs, pancakes and more. Menu.

WEST

Moose Cafe: Eggs, grits, sawmill gravy, liver mush biscuits and the Blue Ridge Breakfast (two eggs, a pancake, country ham and grits or home fries). You get the idea. Nothing over eight bucks on the menu. Enjoy. Menu.

Got a favorite we missed? Comment and let us know!

Last updated February 25, 2013

 

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Jason Sandford

Jason Sandford is a reporter, writer, blogger and photographer interested in all things Asheville.

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41 Comments

  1. Scott Crosby June 3, 2014

    Biscuit Head! just fantastic. Kinda meat-centric, but that’s my only complaint. get there early or wait in line. It’s on our shortlist every visit to Asheville now (along with the Wedge, of course x1000).

    Reply
  2. BrentN March 3, 2013

    Can’t believe no one has mentioned West End Bakery. Challah french toast is amazing, as is their vegetarian sausage biscuit.

    Reply
  3. J February 26, 2013

    What about Limone’s and the Junction?

    Reply
    1. Jennifer Saylor February 26, 2013

      They serve brunch, not breakfast (or they would be on this list!). Check the brunch list! http://ashvegas.com/demosite/ashevilles-best-brunches-the-ashvegas-roundup

      Reply
  4. A-M February 26, 2013

    Morning Glory in Black Mountain and Stoney Knob Cafe in Weaverville.

    Reply
    1. Jennifer Saylor February 26, 2013

      Stoney Knob does not serve breakfast (brunch only). I may never get over this.

      Reply
      1. Jennifer Saylor February 26, 2013

        I still remember the day I went there for breakfast and learned they don’t serve breakfast. I’m serious. Had a whole Facebook convo about it with my friend Sean.

        Reply
  5. Jason February 26, 2013

    Kosta’s in Fletcher is top notch…

    Reply
    1. Jennifer Saylor February 26, 2013

      Jason, I’m leaving off restaurants outside of Asheville proper, but I will check this out!

      Reply
      1. Jennifer Saylor February 26, 2013

        Future list, FYI, will likely include surrounding areas, or at least Blk Mountain/Swannanoa and Arden/Skyland/Fletcher…

        Reply
  6. daPups February 26, 2013

    Morning Glory in Black Mountain… worth the trip.

    Reply
    1. Jennifer Saylor February 26, 2013

      So I hear! Gotta check it out. Black Mountain is my hometown, but MG is after my time.

      Reply
  7. Big Al February 25, 2013

    Moose Cafe is my #1 pick, BUT I am trying to lose weight and portion control is difficult when their best value is the all-you-can-eat special. Plus you have to drive there, which from where I live east of AVL is inconvenient. But their biscuits are like crack cocaine.

    My new gf just introduced me to Over easy, which was facinating, if crowded. Our next brunch will be at Early Girl, so I guess her recommendations would be these two. I like them cuz we can walk off the calories between downtown and her place in Montford.

    Reply
  8. trulylocal February 25, 2013

    come on man were is the med in all this breakfast talk!

    Reply
    1. ashevillain February 26, 2013

      Yeah. This is an invalid list if The Med is not included!

      Which begs the question, how does Ashevegas come up with these lists in the first place?

      Reply
      1. Jeremy February 26, 2013

        The Med is great for inexpensive (but good) diner food and good service. I hear brunch at Jerusalem Garden on Saturday and Sunday is quite spectacular as well.

        Reply
      2. Jennifer Saylor February 26, 2013

        Guys, I like the Med, and I’d include it in a list of best cheap breakfasts. And best cheap lunch. And classic Asheville eateries. But the food is just not quite good enough to get it into a best breakfasts list. I come up with the lists by making my own shortlist, researching online (Yelp, UrbanSpoon, etc.), asking for additions to the list on Facebook, and then personally checking out any venue I haven’t been to. While the list IS subjective, it represents 30 years of living in Asheville, plus research, work, and a spirit of inquiry.

        I always listen when I’m asked to make additions, and several are on my list to check out.

        – Jennifer

        Reply
        1. ashevillain February 26, 2013

          So basically it boils down to whether or not you personally like/approve the restaurant. Gotcha.

          Reply
          1. Eric February 26, 2013

            Wanna rate your best breakfasts? Start your own blog. It’s not a list of “favorites”.

            Reply
          2. Jennifer Saylor February 26, 2013

            Ashevillain, yes. It’s subjective and personal, though I can be swayed by reader suppport, and I try hard to be fair to all parts of town, and what I think of as the creative and independent spirit of Asheville. Which is to say, creative indie restaurants have an advantage.

            Reply
        2. Spell Check February 27, 2013

          The Med is way better than the Moose.

          Reply
        3. BrentN March 3, 2013

          I’ve never been to the Med so I can’t comment there, but any list that includes Moose Cafe and “good food” is highly suspect. Moose Cafe has always served greasy, lackadaisical food with no real character other than the cachet of being at the farmer’s market.

          Reply
    2. Jan S. August 13, 2013

      The reason The Med doesn’t show up in sites like Urban Spoon is because it truly is a LOCALLY known place. It’s been there when there wasn’t much else downtown after the AVL mall opened in the early 70s through the early 90s. They’ve been there and been the favorite when it was pretty much the only restaurant in downtown serving everyone from judges and lawyers to the homeless.

      In addition, The Med 1) is NOT chi-chi trendy food, 2) Southern Living doesn’t feature it every other issue like it does Early Girl (worthy of the coverage) and Tupelo Honey (questionable in my humble opinion), 3) in fact, Southern Living has never featured The Med (why my focus on that magazine–it brings tons of people and money to the businesses it features in Asheville and across the south), 4) it actively serves some of the less beautiful people in town so it likely scares off a percentage of eaters.

      The fact is that Pete makes amazing!!! biscuits every day, serves turkey sausage, makes the best French toast ever, is very entertaining whether he’s in a great mood or he’s shouting all over the place. It’s a scene, man, and if you’re not into it, well, you’re losing out.

      Plus he goes to the Fresh Market every morning, buys fresh sirloin steaks there and has them grind the steaks into hamburger that he takes back to the restaurant and forms into the burgers and hamburger steaks he sells. Very fresh, hand patted, very good.

      Go figure.

      Reply
  9. Kady February 25, 2013

    Nothing beats a simple, diner-style breakfast. I loved Five Points until I moved to Leicester. In my opinion, Mountain Diner, on New Leicester Hwy, is less greasy and more tasty. Super sweet wait-staff, as well.

    Reply
  10. craggybender February 25, 2013

    Mama’s

    Reply
  11. Jana Kellam February 25, 2013

    Tupelo Honey is conspicuously absent from this list. We love both the downtown and South Asheville locations.

    Reply
    1. FDR February 25, 2013

      I thought this was strange as well. Tupelo Honey does a great job as does Corn Bread Skillet on Airport Road and J K’s Kitchen Long Shoals Rd. All winners with great food. It seems the writers need to get out of downtown. South Asheville is Asheville without the hipsters and their attitude.

      Reply
    2. J February 26, 2013

      I have never had an above average meal at Tupelo Honey. I don’t mean this snidely, but what is good there? (other than the biscuits, which are amazing!)

      Reply
      1. FDR February 27, 2013

        Fired Chicken BLT is awesome. The only thing I honestly dislike is the waiters rushing you off the table as soon as you take your last bite. I will eat there again but if they try to hurry things up I won’t leave a tip.

        Reply
      2. Ian C February 28, 2013

        I’ll speak up for the sweet potato pancakes at Tupelo Honey, topped with spiced pecans. Go great with coffee, which you’ll need to offset food coma after the meal.

        Also, the South location is less pushy about turning over your table.

        Reply
  12. FDR February 25, 2013

    Ok, “Corner Grill” (Diner Style) Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner. I’ve only eaten breakfast & lunch there multiple times and the service is dead on and fast. The wait staff keeps your drink refilled and there is always a daily special. The food is not fancy but your standard breakfast with pancakes or waffles, lunch has a million things on the menu and the onion rings and chicken salad are awesome. This is a great place to catch a quick filling meal whether driving through Asheville or on your way to work. 191-Brevard Road and Long Shoals connected to the right side of the Shell Station, but don’t let that fool you. The Corner Grill can seat 60+ and is always full of folks getting good eats. Not a hipster joint, but a place for everybody.

    Reply
    1. Jennifer Saylor February 25, 2013

      Sounds like a great find, will check it out!

      Reply
  13. Orbit DVD February 25, 2013

    Hank’s.

    Reply
    1. IceNine February 25, 2013

      +1 for Hank’s

      Reply
    2. BrentN March 3, 2013

      Another +1 for Hank’s

      Reply
  14. headhunter February 25, 2013

    Just my opinion but Mayfels has survived on Tupelo Honey’s wait list for years.

    Reply
    1. Kate McDonagh August 27, 2013

      Yes!

      Reply
  15. Burnsey February 25, 2013

    Bagel sandwiches at Tod’s are not to be missed. Bacon, egg and cheese is best.

    Reply
    1. Jennifer Saylor February 25, 2013

      Just in general, Tod’s is not to be missed.

      Reply
      1. J February 26, 2013

        fact.

        Reply

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