Taste of Ethiopia
Authentic Ethiopian cuisine · Family-owned in Metro Detroit since 2005

Breakfast

Ethiopian breakfast is a serious affair — savory, deeply spiced, often made from leftover injera given a second life. It's not common in U.S. Ethiopian restaurants, which makes it one of our quieter specialties. We serve breakfast Friday and Saturday mornings only.

Fir-Fir

The classic. Pieces of injera torn by hand and tossed in spicy wat — usually with onion, berbere, and niter kibbeh (clarified spiced butter). Eaten with a spoon or, more often, additional injera. There's a meat version (key wat fir-fir) and a vegan version (shiro fir-fir).

Ful

Slow-cooked fava beans, mashed with onion, jalapeño, tomato, and a little oil. Topped with feta or kept dairy-free. Served with bread or injera. A traditional shared breakfast across the Horn of Africa.

Chechebsa

Pan-fried flatbread torn into pieces and coated in niter kibbeh and berbere. Sometimes served with honey on the side. Eaten by hand, no utensils. Rich, warming, exactly what a winter Saturday morning calls for.

Kinche

Cracked-wheat porridge cooked with milk or water and finished with niter kibbeh. Mild, comforting, eaten when you're easing into the day.

Egg Dishes

DishNotes
Enkulal TibsScrambled eggs with onion, tomato, jalapeño, and berbere. Eaten with injera or bread.
Enkulal FirfirThe breakfast hybrid: scrambled eggs and torn injera, tossed together with spiced butter.

To Drink

Coffee, freshly brewed. We don't perform the full coffee ceremony at breakfast — that's an afternoon and evening tradition — but you can order the buna any morning. More about coffee

Hours

Breakfast is served Friday and Saturday from noon (when we open) through 2:00 PM. Reservations not required, but a phone call ahead is appreciated if you're a group of six or more. Reservations