A meat and three meal is one where the customer picks one meat and three side dishes as a fixed-price offering. Meats commonly include fried chicken, country ham, beef, country-fried steak, meatloaf, or pork chop;[1][2] and sides span from vegetables such as potatoes, corn, and green beans, to macaroni and cheese, hush puppies, and spaghetti. A dessert, such as gelatin, is often offered.[2] Typical accompaniments include cornbread and sweet tea.[3]
“Meat-and-three” is a regional term popular in the cuisine of the Southern United States for both the meal and restaurants offering such a menu. Variants of meat and three can be found throughout the United States, but its roots can be traced to Tennessee and its capital of Nashville.[2][4] It is also associated with soul food.
Similar concepts include the Hawaiian plate lunch, which features a variety of entrée choices with fixed side items of white rice and macaroni salad, and the southern Louisiana plate lunch, which features menu options that change daily. It is somewhat similar to a blue-plate special but with a more fixed menu.[5] Boston Market and Cracker Barrel chains of restaurants offer a similar style of food selection. Another similar dish is the Japanese bento box.[6]
See also
- List of restaurant terminology
References
- Jackie Sheckler Finch. Insiders' Guide to Nashfix refville Globe Pequot, 2009^
- Sally Walker Davies. Explorer's Guide Tennessee Countryman, 2011^
- Jane Stern. 500 Things to Eat Before It's Too Late Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2009^
- Bob Schatz. Nashville Impressions Farcountry, 2006^
- John Ferrell. Mary Mac's Tea Room Andrews McMeel, 2010^
- What Is Bento? Breaking Down the Bento Box Allrecipes, retrieved 2024-10-06^
- Tricia Childress. Hawaiian Plate Lunch spot opens Creative Loafing Charlotte, October 19, 2010, retrieved December 9, 2012^
- Lyle Galdiera. Origins of Plate Lunch Hawaii News Now, November 27, 2002, retrieved December 9, 2012^
- Staff. Culinary Trail Signature Dish: Plate Lunch LouisianaTravel.com, retrieved December 9, 2012^
- Kay West. Marketing Concept Nashville Scene, December 7, 1995, retrieved November 5, 2014^