Ca Phe Mai opens in Double Bay with 30 seats

It is a big call to say that something is a first. But we’re confident Sydney hasn’t had a venue like Ca Phe Mai. The 30-seater – from couple Cindy Mai and Ed Loveday – opened on Monday, hitting a back-alley space in Double Bay. The menu is a mash-up of Vietnamese and Australian flavours, taking you from early-morning cafe to low-lit wine bar. “Ca Phe Mai is naturally what we felt we could do and wanted to do,” says Loveday. “It wasn’t like we
set out to cook up a unique concept – it just was what was right for us.” The venue brings together parts of the pair. It’s detail-oriented and elevated, like Loveday’s since-closed ACME and The Passage. The menu is underpinned by Mai’s Vietnamese heritage, her Viet Kieu (a Vietnamese person living overseas) identity, and her and her family’s experience owning and running Vietnamese restaurants (Phuong Nam, VN City). Add in elements referencing the pair’s fondness for a small-plates wine bar, and Ca Phe Mai becomes
a Sydney first. Most of the morning offering could be categorised as “brunch classics with a Vietnamese twist”. Have a bacon-and-egg banh mi with the signature ca phe muoi (a silky riff on a salted Vietnamese coffee), adding the hashbrown with its dippable crème fraiche and house-made chilli oil. A cheesy muffin is stuffed with egg and lemongrass pork sausage, and avo toast is topped with a bright herby salad and lime. You can design your own brekkie plate, or go for the signature CPM
mix. “It’s fresh fruit, cheese, sourdough, egg, Asian herbs,” shares Mai. “That dish itself is an expression of, say, how I as a Viet Kieu would like to eat breakfast. I want that choice – to go to my local all-day joint that I love, and be able to be like, ‘Today I feel like the CPM brekkie plate’ or the next day I really want to hit a chicken pho or a laksa.” The pho ga broth recipe has travelled through Mai’s family, with
her mum and grandma finessing the pot at Ca Phe Mai with head chef Bobby Nguyen. “They are very involved in making sure that the chicken stock is exactly the same,” says Mai. “He really respects my mum and all the restaurants that we’ve had.” Beyond that wonder stock, Mai’s family have been tasting dressings and sauces – so that they’re “Viet-mum approved” – but leaving the rest of the menu to Nguyen (with Ricos Tacos founder Toby Wilson consulting). Lunch means seared-tuna rice paper
rolls, classic banh mis and ultra-fresh vermicelli “canteen bowls” (perhaps topped with Hanoi-style turmeric fish cake). Then, the wine bar vibe sets in. There is a pickle plate and anchovy toast, coconut-water-dressed tuna crudo and glossy, crunchy Hanoi-style spring rolls. A fish cake – spiked with turmeric, dill and house spice mix – is crumbed and deep fried, slotted into a soft roll for the Fillet o’ Cha Ca burger. “Think flavours of cha ca,” says Mai, referencing the Hanoi-style grilled fish dish. “If you
were Vietnamese, you would definitely be able to see where the inspiration comes from.” There’s a sunny, pickle-heavy turmeric tartare sauce and plenty of fresh dill. Loveday’s drinks list sticks to the same brief. The spritzy Suong Mai with jasmine vermouth and melon, and the punchy, chilli-laced Fruit Cart. There’s a soft-green Pandan Colada and a Dragonfruit Margarita, too, while the Espresso Martini – firmly in ca phe muoi territory with condensed milk and salted cream – is “perfect for the eastern suburbs”. The wine
list spans the globe, with special mention to Song Cai’s yellow-rice sparkling wine, a sparkling produced in Hanoi. The Vietnamese-Australian Ca Phe Mai is fresh, energising and new – without being unrecognisable. “We’re elevating [the cuisine] in a way that looks beautiful and still tastes like if my mum was to eat it, she would think it’s Vietnamese and that it’s delicious.” Ca Phe MaiShop 1, 377 New South Head Road, Double BayBehind Forum, enter via Kiaora Lane Hours:Mon & Tue 7am–3pmWed to Sat 7am–10pmSun
7am–3pm caphemai.com.au@ca.phe.mai
Ca Phe Mai, Cindy Mai, Ed Loveday, Double Bay, Vietnamese cafe, wine bar, banh mi, pho ga, ca phe muoi, Song Cai yellow-rice sparkling wine
30 seats?? That’s basically nothing, gonna be impossible to get into.
Sounds like some fancy brunch place with a wine bar vibe. I don’t get why they gotta call it a “Sydney first” though… Double Bay is always trendy anyway.
Wait so it’s like Vietnamese food but also bacon and eggs? That sounds kinda wrong to me but I’ll admit the banh mi with salted coffee thing actually intrigues me. Also isn’t “Viet Kieu” just like… Vietnamese Americans? Not sure.
Back alley space in Double Bay is hilarious, like how hidden can you be with 30 seats lol. I’m reading “ca phe muoi” and it sounds like it’s gonna be super salty coffee? But then it says silky riff so maybe it’s good. I just want a normal menu not a “mash-up” of everything, but I might still try the cheesy muffin one because that combo sounds weird enough to work.