
Grove Grocer, a family-run boutique market tucked into a narrow Fuller Street storefront in Coconut Grove, has quietly flipped on the griddles. The tiny shop rolled out a new breakfast menu this week and is already pulling in early birds. The service is dine-in only, running 7 a.m. to 11 a.m. on weekdays and stretching to 2 p.m. on weekends, with a lineup built around local producers and simple, farm-forward dishes.
What's On The Menu
The shop announced on Instagram that breakfast is dine-in only and offered from 7 a.m. to 11 a.m. on weekdays and until 2 p.m. on weekends. Headliners include the Playhouse Toast, which stacks almond butter from California’s Yemetz Family Farms with house-made guava jam and Florida bee pollen on True Loaf sourdough. There is also a yogurt bowl built with Cocojune cultured coconut yogurt and Chantelle’s granola.
Egg lovers get a French omelette made with Tiny Farm eggs and Paradise Farms butter, plated with a radicchio side salad. A breakfast sandwich layers a Tiny Farm fried egg and La Salumina rigatino on Pannom milk bread, with tempeh bacon available as a swap. A vegan buckwheat porridge rounds out the tight morning menu, according to Miami New Times.
From Market To Morning Service
Grove Grocer first opened as a compact specialty market, stocking curated pantry goods alongside matcha and small-batch coffee. It later added a lunch program that helped cement a steady neighborhood following, per The Infatuation.
Travel and mapping guides, including Condé Nast Traveler, list the shop at 3098 Fuller St., Suite 11, underscoring both its neighborhood roots and its small footprint. The move into breakfast fits a broader trend of boutique grocers and sandwich shops turning the morning rush into another chance to feed regulars and nearby office workers.
Small Shop, Big Local Sourcing
The Instagram rollout has already stirred local buzz, helped by the shop’s commitment to Tiny Farm, Paradise Farms and other regional producers. That kind of neighborhood-first sourcing has been part of the ongoing shift along the Fuller Street corridor.
Miami New Times recently documented wider changes on Fuller Street as new concepts and renovations continue to reshape the strip. For locals who already stop by Grove Grocer for matcha and pantry staples, the breakfast menu is simply the latest excuse to swing through in the morning.
Seating is limited inside the tiny market, so expect a compact, counter-style setup rather than a sprawling café scene. For now, Grove Grocer’s breakfast experiment is a reminder that small-format neighborhood shops can still find fresh ways to feed a community’s appetite.









