Cà Phê Mai has opened in Double Bay, serving breakfast bánh mì and family-recipe pho by day before switching into a Vietnamese wine bar from at night. The new venue inside Forum Double Bay comes from hospitality duo Cindy Mai and Ed Loveday, combining four generations of family hospitality with the way a new generation of Vietnamese Australians eat, drink and entertain. Consultant chef Toby Wilson, founder of Ricos Tacos, has worked closely with the team to help shape the daytime menu. By day, the venue serves Vietnamese coffee, breakfast bánh mì, and pho seven days a week, while at night, the menu shifts towards contemporary Vietnamese dishes, backed by a wine list focused on lighter, fresher, and low-intervention styles. The birth of Cà Phê Mai The story starts with Mai’s great-grandmother, who ran a restaurant outside Ho Chi Minh City after the war. Mai’s grandmother later arrived in Australia as a refugee and helped build the family’s hospitality presence through a series of bakeries and restaurants across Sydney and Melbourne. Her parents later opened their own restaurant in Canley Heights, continuing the family tradition. Mai opened her own restaurant in Strathfield at 24 and ran it for five years before stepping away to figure out what she wanted to do next. That’s how Cà Phê Mai was born. “Growing up, Vietnamese food was comfort and identity; it was home. But like a lot of us raised here, I was also shaped by everything around me,” says Mai. “There’s a whole generation of Việt Kiều reinterpreting traditional food through the places and cultures they’ve grown up in, and Cà Phê Mai is for them, the Vietnamese kids, the multicultural kids, who love bún bò huế just as much as an anchovy toast or a good glass of wine. “It’s deeply respectful of where we come from, but an honest reflection of who we are and how we actually eat.” Four generations of recipes The venue’s signature pho gà is based on a family chicken broth recipe passed down through generations. The broth is prepared daily and the recipe is still shared between Mai, her mother and grandmother. Alongside the pho, the menu includes fresh vermicelli canteen bowls, Hanoi-style spring rolls and bánh mì. Breakfast sees Vietnamese and Australian classics collide, with bánh mì loaded with hash browns, eggs and Vietnamese pickles, plus a Bò Lá Lốt sausage and egg muffin. The venue is the first business Mai and Loveday have built together, combining her experience in Vietnamese food and hospitality with his two decades working across bars, restaurants and wine venues, including The Passage, ACME and Bar Brosé. Loveday is also the founder of creative consultancy Studio AM:PM, which specialises in hospitality concepts and brand development. Coffee in the morning, wine at night Loveday has put together a wine list featuring small independent growers from France, Italy, Australia and Germany. A rotating by-the-glass selection sits alongside bottles spanning grower Champagne, Burgundy, Barolo and a Vietnamese sparkling rice wine from Sông Cái. Cocktails include the Suong Mai (Jasmine Vermouth, Honeydew Melon, Cucumber, Prosecco, Soda), Fruit Cart (Vodka, Watermelon, Green Chilli, Lime, Soda, Tangy Chilli Salt) and a Passionfruit & Dragonfruit Margarita. Mai and Loveday have also created their own version of Cà Phê Muối, a salted Vietnamese coffee inspired by one of their favourite discoveries in Vietnam and adapted into a recipe of their own. “This project means so much to me because it’s something Ed and I are doing together,” says Mai. “We were probably a little hesitant at first because you always hear about the challenges of working with your partner, but honestly, the more we spoke about it, the more natural it felt. “We’re best friends, we’ve always bounced ideas off each other, and what we landed on really marries our passions perfectly – a café and restaurant by day, and a contemporary Vietnamese wine bar by night.” Street meets chic The venue was designed to capture the pace of Vietnamese street dining and the atmosphere of a contemporary wine bar, which it will operate as from Wednesday to Saturday night. An open kitchen sits behind a honed Rosso Levanto marble counter, with bar seating looking directly onto the cooking. A garnet leather banquette runs along the back of the room, while a takeaway window onto Kiaora Lane serves coffee and bánh mì. “I’ve always loved venues that work at any hour. You come in for a coffee and a bánh mì in the morning, then come back that night for a glass of wine and a few plates, and it still feels like the same room looking after you. That’s what Cindy and I set out to build, whether it’s 7 am on a Tuesday or late on a Friday,” says Loveday. Cà Phê Mai is part of Forum Double Bay, a project delivered by Fortis and operated by The Commons. The precinct includes hospitality venues, private offices, communal spaces, a communal kitchen, meeting facilities and a curated art collection designed for both work and connection. Blending family history with contemporary hospitality, Cà Phê Mai brings four generations of food, service and storytelling to Double Bay. Source: Electric Collective Find more dining out updates on Crumb Wire.