Tuesday, June 09, 2026

Tokyo Maki

April 2, 2026 
 
   
 
We had a decent shot at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival this year - seven shows across four nights - with only the last one located at the flagship Melbourne Town Hall. Our first night out had us seeking an early dinner near the Speakeasy Theatre. While the theatre itself proved cute as a button, we weren't inspired by its location in the south-western corner of the CBD. Happy Cow once again came to our rescue, noting that Japanese-Korean fusion restaurant Tokyo Maki has a dedicated vegan menu.
 
   
 
Tokyo Maki was casual and welcoming, a little more than half full when we arrived. We noticed hotplates in the centre of many tables, and space-saving slide-out drawers in the tables for cutlery and napkins. The vegan menu runs to a full A4 page of several dozen items, proudly headed I am a Vegan. Flip it over and you'll find the equally confident alternative, Hate Gluten. Aside from being funny, it's unusual and welcome for Japanese food!
 
   
 
I was in the mood for several snack plates. First to arrive was the agadashi tofu ($9.90) in fine form. Michael and I also split the vegetable croquettes ($7.50), which had a unique savoury flavour that pleasantly surprised us. I spaced my food out with a house-made honey ginger tea ($5.80), served with a kawaii relaxed dog spoon (see second photo above).

   
 
When Michael sees the words 'mapo tofu', he's hooked. This Japanese Mapo Tofu Don ($18.50) didn't have the Sichuan pepper bite he's accustomed to, but he loved the rich and still-spicy douban sauce. It was packed with tofu cubes, veges and rice.

   

My last snack of the night was lotus root chips ($11). They were plentiful and came with nice condiments, but unfortunately they weren't crispy all the way through, the only flaw in our meal. 

Tokyo Maki was a nice little surprise in what we consider to be an unattractive corner of the city. The staff were lovely; the vegan food was plentiful, arrived on time, was mostly terrific, and on reflection very good value for money. We won't hesitate to return and sample more if back in the neighbourhood. 
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Tokyo Maki
547 Flinders St, Melbourne CBD 
9620 0375 
 
Accessibility: Tokyo Maki has a flat, reasonably wide entry. Regular-height tables and backed chairs are arranged at medium density. We ordered at our table and paid at a regular-height counter. We didn't visit the toilets.

Saturday, June 06, 2026

Vegiera

Happy Cow already reports that Vegiera has closed
 
March 28, 2026
 
   
 
We were ready for lunch after visiting a friend in Beaumaris; Happy Cow turned up Vegiera as the nearest vegetarian spot and we figured we'd give it a go. Sadly, Happy Cow now reports that Vegiera is closed so this is probably just a document of a nice meal had rather than a usable recommendation for readers. 

Vegiera is nestled within a commercial/light industrial strip of Warrigal Road (and we made sure to stop by the neighbouring Savers for a browse before departure). While Vegiera is clean and naturally lit, it's difficult to shake off a certain food court vibe. They've got an appealing, all-vegetarian a la carte menu that spans the cooking traditions of Asia, with soups, appetisers, abundant rice and noodle-based dishes, curries and stir-fries, and a couple of desserts. Gluten-free options are well-marked.

   
 
Michael made the most of our visit, ordering a tempeh rendang ($19), served with five-grain rice. Look at those generous tempeh chunks, tender potatoes and luminous broccoli florets photographed up top! I was after something simpler and tried the omelette ($22), which was dense with veges and very well seasoned. I regret that I didn't have the appetite for Kado-kado, house-made sweet and sour balls, or Thai style fried rice - the Vegiera team seemed to be producing really nice vegetarian dishes with care.

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Vegiera
Shop 7a, 442-444 Warrigal Road, Heatherton
9558 2163
menu: one, two, three
 
Accessibility: Vegiera has a flat entry and a clear corridor through its length. Regular-height tables and backed chairs are arranged at medium-to-high density. We ordered and paid at a regular-height counter. There was a large, unisex toilet cubicle with accessibility features.

Wednesday, June 03, 2026

Tom Phat IV

March 21, 2026 
 
   
 
When we first arrived in Melbourne, I thought Tom Phat looked so cool. It maintains the same vibe 20 years later, and I still think it looks pretty cool. That said, we've had some really mixed experiences, both within and between meals, and it has never really earned our loyalty. We've popped in for the odd late-night espresso martini or dietary-friendly friend date since our 2016 anniversary post and not been moved to document them. But we can't resist a longitudinal analysis, so here we are, back blogging Tom Phat in 2026.
 
   
 
Tom Phat continues to cover the larger floor space it had expanded to by 2016, and it is filled pretty effectively on a Saturday night. Tom Phat used to be an all-hours venue, from brunch to late-night cocktails, but now it's strictly a dinner-and-drinks affair. The drinks are good fun! A dozen cocktails and four mocktails focus on south-east Asian flavours, with numerous tropical fruits, lemongrass, and ginger. 
 
   
 
It was harder than we expected to order dishes we'd had before; tempeh, in particular, seemed to be off the menu. The hoisin tofu baos ($14) were a fun and tasty DIY experience, with more pickley bits than we could fit into the buns. The grilled roti with satay sauce ($12) is one of the few menu fixtures and sadly one of the least inspiring, with little flakiness or toastiness.
 
   
 
The choo chee curry with rice ($24) has a tofu option for the veg*ns, and it's an enjoyable if not memorable coconut milk-based curry with a good variety of vegetables.
 
   
 
Kung pao cauliflower ($24) was another new-to-us menu item, a bit spicy and plenty sweet, with lovely roasted cashews. The cauliflower florets were thickly battered, the effect was too heavy, and we didn't make it through the whole plate.
 
I had vowed to order the banana roti pancake for dessert if it was still around, but it was blessedly absent. While the menu has technically changed, this version of Tom Phat didn't really offer us anything new. 
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 You can read about one, two, three of our past visits to Tom Phat.
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Tom Phat
184 Sydney Rd, Brunswick  
9121 3377 
 
Accessibility: Tom Phat has a small ramp on entry. Tables are aligned through the length of the building with a corridor through that starts off wide but gets a little more crowded towards the end. Furniture is a densely-arranged array of regular-height tables with backed chairs and bench seats. There is a disability-marked toilet out back. We ordered at our table and paid afterwards at the low-ish counter. 

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Andrew's Hamburgers IV

March 14, 2026
 

We're revisiting lots of places from the first couple of years of the blog to celebrate twenty years of posting about Melbourne's food and to check back on the Cheap Eats 2006 places we got excited about when we first moved here. Andrew's Hamburgers has been going a lot longer than twenty years, churning out famous burgers with the lot and laying claim to being Australia's first dedicated burger shop. There are conflicting accounts of its history, but it seems to have been run by the same family since at least 1957.
 

Its last two decades we can account for, with the shop basically unchanged since we first visited - a narrow, busy space pumping out burgers and chips well beyond the capacity of the few tables out the front. The menu itself has expanded since we last visited, with Mexican, Hawaiian and American themed burger options alongside the classics (plus the souvlaki that turned up on the menu around 2010).
 

Most people are here for the classics though I think. The burger with the lot is the mainstay, and I suspect the veggie burger ($16) recipe hasn't been messed with since whenever it first appeared. There are no concessions to vegans here, with feta in the veggie patty (based on a family recipe). It's gooey and dotted with veggies, layered up with cheese and just soggy enough - a far cry from the Impossible patties that now dominate the veggie burger world. We added in a potato cake ($2.50) and small chips ($6.50) and had a delightful dinner in the sunshine. 
    

Veggie burger prices at Andrew's have gradually increased, from $7 in 2007 to $7.50 in 2010 to $10 in 2016 to $16 on our 2026 visit. It's not outrageous, but it's not quite the bargain that it felt like back in 2007. Still, there's something wholesome about a business that knows what it does well and just keeps doing it.
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You can read about our earlier visits to Andrew's here, here and here. Since our 2016 visit there have been a few blog posts about the meaty options - see Team Cheeseburger and Food Trip (reviewing the short-lived CBD outpost). There is a lovely obituary for Andrew Georghiou here, as well as the interesting but inconsistent articles in The Age and Broadsheet.
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Andrew's Hamburgers
114 Bridport Street, Albert Park
9690 2126
 
Accessibiltity: The entry is flat, but the interior is quite crowded and you order and pay at a high counter. The outside tables are reasonably well spaced, with bench seating. We didn't visit the toilets.

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Gopal's IV

March 3, 2026 
 
   
 
We probably haven't been to Gopal's since our 2016 decade retrospective of the 2006 Cheap Eats Guide. What once suited our student budget and tastes and our newly vegetarian ways brought less excitement as the years went on. But what's boring to one can be comforting and even nostalgic to another.
 
   
 
Gopal's specialises in vegetarian and vegan food, prepared in bulk and served at affordable prices. The mainstay is the feast plate ($12 in 2006, $12.95 in 2016, $13.50 in 2026); they were out of soup on our visit so Michael dropped back to the otherwise-same vegan platter ($12.50). It's a plate piled with rice, two curries and salad, plus a dessert (apple crumble with custard) and drink (lemonade). The foods and their dietary features are well marked at the counter bain marie, but it all kinda melds on the plate.

   
 
I knew I couldn't handle the full shebang, so focused on kofta and rice, drink and dessert. It was simple, salty and filling, no more and no less than I expected. It's food that won't make new memories but might trigger old ones. It's remarkable that Gopal's have kept the prices so low for so many years, and maintained a space in the city that remains so accessible and accepting to anyone who can make it up the stairs. We might not be excited by Gopal's but we're lucky to have them.
 
    
 
On this night, we paired our meal with a Pulp show under a blood moon. Gopal's went on to rescue us from hunger between Melbourne Comedy Festival shows in April when the crepe cart was overrun and time was tight. 
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You can read about one, two, three of our previous visits to Gopal's.
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Gopal's Pure Vegetarian
139 Swanston St, Melbourne CBD 
9650 1578 
 
Accessibility: We entered via a narrow staircase with a handrail and did not notice an alternative access point. We ordered and paid at the counter. Tables are quite well spaced. Toilets are gendered and narrow.