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Little Hats Market is the kind of neighborhood lunch spot that a neighborhood builds its daily life around — a market-deli hybrid where the sandwiches are made with care, the sourcing gets real attention, and the whole operation runs with the efficiency of people who know their regulars by order. It's not a destination restaurant, and it doesn't need to be.
The sandwich program is the core and it holds up. The bread choices are good, the proteins are sourced from somewhere worth caring about, and the builds are composed rather than just assembled — flavors that work together rather than ingredients piled on top of each other because they sounded good on a menu. The daily specials are worth paying attention to; they tend to reflect whatever the kitchen is excited about that week.
The market side gives the place a different dimension — carefully chosen pantry goods, local products, the kind of selection that lets you leave with dinner ingredients alongside your lunch. It's a format that works for the neighborhood, giving people a reason to stop in even when they're not hungry.
Worth Trying as a lunch destination that punches above its category. Little Hats isn't trying to be the most exciting restaurant in Nashville, just the most useful one within walking distance. It largely succeeds at that, which matters more than it sounds.