The cafe serving up sustainable ideas with their Japanese breakfasts

At Ima Project Cafe, there’s more than meets the eye when you order the avo on toast, the onigiri or the prawn katsu burger.

Ima Project Cafe breakfast

The Japanese breakfast comes with grilled miso-glazed trout, pickles, miso soup, rice and optional onsen egg Source: Albert Chandra

When you enter in Carlton, there’s no doubt you’re in Melbourne. The fit-out is beautiful: there’s a counter made from local pine, big windows letting the sunlight in and ceramics by local artists. But if you look a bit more carefully, you’ll see that this is not just your usual cafe.
It’s an Aussie cafe with a Japanese twist. We also wanted to touch on sustainability, ethical produce and waste management.
Owners Asako Miura and James Spinks have been together for about 15 years. She has a background in interior design, while he’s a chef (Quay, Supernormal, Sake). “We’d been talking about this business for six years or so before we finally opened six months ago. We talked about it for so long that I think people didn’t think it would happen,” Miura tells SBS Food. “It’s an Aussie cafe with a Japanese twist. We also wanted to touch on sustainability, ethical produce and waste management.”
Ima Project Cafe owners
Ima Project Cafe owners Asako Miura, who has a background in interior design, and chef James Spinks. Source: Albert Chandra
On the menu, you’ll find dishes like baked eggs with red miso sugo and a rice bowl with onsen egg and pickles, to which you can add fish, or grilled eggplant.

“As a Japanese person, I always love the Japanese breakfast: rice, a beautiful miso soup, fish, pickles and side dishes. Because it’s simple, we have to get everything right,” says Miura. They chose trout instead of the usual salmon because it’s more sustainable. The and bonito flakes used to make the in the miso soup are recycled into other dishes. The kombu goes into the filling for the and the bonito flakes, once rehydrated, end up in for the avo on toast.
“The avocado toast, it’s a very typical Melbourne cafe food, but ours is different. We use nori paste, a seaweed paste that we make that looks like Vegemite. We spread it on the toast, then we put avocado and furikake on top,” says Miura.
Ima Project Cafe avo toast
The very Aussie avo on toast gets a Japanese twist at Ima Project Cafe, with nori paste and furikake. Source: Albert Chandra
The prawn katsu burger is one of their most popular specials. “We serve it with the crispy prawn heads on the side to show that they’re also edible and that they are the tastiest part of the prawn. We want to show there’s no waste and you can use all the parts,” she says.
A great side-dish menu means that for a few extra dollars, you can add things like green beans with sesame dressing, grilled trout, miso soup or to your meal.

An ongoing process

If they didn’t mention it, you would never know that Miura and Spinks get their lemons, apples, and carrots from an “” supplier, saving them from landfill. They also blend fruit and vegetable offcuts into their juices and use vinegar instead of harsh cleaning products.
Miura and Spinks get their lemons, apples and carrots from an “ugly produce” supplier, saving them from landfill.
When it comes to waste management, Ima Project Cafe has a system in place so that their soft plastics can be collected for recycling and their .

There’s more they want to do, like composting and using line-caught fish, but it’s too costly for now. “It’s an ongoing process. We’re not happy with where we are yet, but at least it’s a start,” says Miura. “Opening a restaurant, you’re always going to create waste, but I wanted to make people aware that you can actually do something about the waste and try to minimise it.”


169 Elgin Street, Carlton
Mon 7 am – 4 pm
Wed – Fri 7 am – 4 pm
Sat – Sun 8 am – 3:30 pm

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4 min read
Published 6 March 2019 1:42pm
Updated 6 March 2019 3:18pm
By Audrey Bourget


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