I rarely make a trip to the burbs to have a meal.
No.
I lie.
I just don’t.
However, Ocha is different. It isn’t because they’re only a tram line away and remind me of my high-school years when I ran around Hawthorn like a teenage shit-bag with my Balwyn High School friends, it is because my sister is currently working there.
That’s right, I have a sister and she does stuff.
Anyways, Ocha just reopened and I had originally planned to go there with a few friends. After a whole lot of fucking around, canceling, helping out and all that jazz, it seemed my services weren’t needed, my night was open and I ended up going there at a much later time than originally planned. The fact that my name was written in the booking sheet as “Jess, CINDY’S SISTER,” probably helped somewhat, but hey, I went to the burbs and I am proud of it.
Seriouisly.
Not inner city.
My sister of course thinks it is an amusing that I think of Hawthorn as “the burbs.” Her interpretation (I argue because she lives in the burbs) is Glen Waverly or some shit, Rowville, Diggers Rest.
You see, to me, they’re not burbs, it is just plain bumb-fuck nowhere. I mean, if I have to get on a train line which only has 10 stops (I may be exaggerating), but the whole train ride is over an hour, it is bumb-fuck nowhere and possibly ends at a station called Rape.
Sorry, what was I saying?
Oh yes.
Hawthorn.
It isn’t a station called rape. In fact, it is probably most like travelling on the blue-line in HK. Full of rich, white people who are actually all of my friend’s parents. (I don’t mean to be offensive, but seriously, look at this photo.)
That table without the guy in the stripey top in the centre of the photo, they ordered three serves of gyoza. Not a serve of gyoza three times because it was that good, but in one go- three serves.
I shit you not.
I may have dined with a white man, but he certainly does not eat like one.
If I shopped in a supermarket, you bet I’d judge you for the contents of your shopping trolley.
What I do have to say is that the decor is a far cry from the Beehive (yes, I remember it). Of course, what memory I do have of the Beehive has to do with drunken friends, pot-smoking siblings (not mine) and the service station across the street being my friend’s place of employment and a thieving of a work-shirt that used to belong to a man named Phil. My friend Alex stole the shirt, but we still call him Phil because of it…seven years later.
What is it then? Well; open, white, modern…all those things that seem to go with the catch-phrase, “Modern Japanese Cuisine,” but I’ll get back to that later.
Now that I have stopped judging people on what they have eaten, I’ll show you mine.
Ahead of time, I’ll apologise for not knowing prices. My sister put in the order for me and the dishes just came out. I’ll tell you the grand total later and you can all be surprised and go oooooooooh!
Green tea soba noodles, which everyone gets before their meal. Small, light, savoury without being too salty.
Bring it on!
Part of this “Modern Japanese Cusine,” was born out of being a Japanese restaurant open in the burbs (yes, it is the burbs), 15 years ago. Back then, people were still questioning raw fish, let alone everything else. So, after looking at the menu and realising this is listed as “Anti-pasto,” itemising as, “Japanese style hors d’oeuvre,” they seem a bit confused. I think back then, they had to accommodate a more Western palate, as people were only just starting to appreciate Japanese cuisine, but they haven’t shaken the descriptions or some of the dishes. Traditional Japanese is what they do best here as you will see.
From the top and clockwise, we have grilled chicken, spicy cooked tuna, freshly shucked oysters in a ponzu dressing, quails eggs encased in a seafood paste and deep fried (think, Japanese Scotch egg), grilled scallop with Ocha’s version of a Hollandaise (which tastes more like kewpie mayo) and tobbiko, octopus, seared kingfish, and in the middle, grilled quail.
And, grissini sticks with what I believe had seaweed and cheese.
A pretty fucking impressive start to the meal. Everything was obviously fresh, the flavours were strong, but didn’t clash with one another and all the textures of each element on the dish were carefully considered.
Now, this looks pretty unimpressive, doesn’t it?
Well, I have to say it is the best fucking chawanmushi I have ever had in my life. Apparently they just got their combi oven put in, so Paula Lawdorn was playing with it all day, adjusting the temperatures until he got it right. The texture of it was perfect. Usually, chawanmushi is one of those things that I could take or leave, but I would travel back to Hawthorn just for this dish.
I am going to be racist again and tell you that this was a special on the board. Apparently when it is served to a table of “white people”, they will more likely than not proclaim it as “weird” and all share one bowl, whereas you’re meant to have the whole bowl to yourself. They just can’t afford to have it permanently on the menu, which I think is sad. Also, the staff are trained to serve it to you, calling it a “savoury, steamed Japanese custard,” in case people get confused with the traditional name.
Nevertheless, you can see lemon, sharks fin (I know, I know), and in the custard, prawns, dried scallop, fish, eel and chicken.
My friend and I took turns scooping in the perfectly set egg mixture and bringing out small sweet bites of seafood, flavoured by the dashi on top.
This has got to be the best (Shoya and Tempura Hajime come a close second and third) sushi and sashimi combo I have had. Everything was so fresh, sweet, melt in the mouth and I’m pretty sure all the fish had sex in there while I was chewing. Yasu is an amazing sushi chef, and whenever he has new chefs, orders a set of knives forged from the tears of volcanoes to be sent to Australia which are worth a couple of grand.
From the top left, going clockwise, down and across: arc shell nigiri (which is what I thought it was as the waitress couldn’t tell us), octopus nigiri, tuna nigiri, grilled salmon belly nigiri, salmon and apple mayonnaise nigiri, kingfish belly nigiri, eel nigiri, kingfish, tuna on shiso, a fish our waitress couldn’t tell us and I’m not that good to be able to tell, snapper and salmon.
And yes, that is real wasabi.
This was the bomb! My favourites were the abalone nigiri and the sashimi. I had never had snapper sashimi, but I was so surprised. I have been dreaming about the sushi and sashimi since I went and I am trying to convince someone to go there with me, otherwise I’m sitting at the bar and having this for dinner all by myself.
Yes, I know…another dish I would travel to Hawthorn for.
This is when we were going to give up eating, but the waitress came back and said, “Cindy said you can’t stop now, you have to eat the next dishes…you HAVE TO!”
Yep, sounds like my sister.
And how can we deny her?
Unfortunately, the most disappointing dish of the night. Tempura with nori salt, the things inside the tempura batter were perfectly cooked, but unfortunately their oil wasn’t hot enough and some of the items were soggy and greasy. Those black things are wood-ear fungus with fish paste, which were my favourites on the plate, along with prawns, broccoli, zucchini, carrot and corn.
And another special, which was the spicy flathead with chili. One of those dishes which I think was there for the sake of being “Modern Japanese cuisine,” as the fish was well seasoned and cooked perfectly and those crispy things are actually shredded won ton wrappers sitting on lettuce with lemon, hiding a ponzu sauce. I am guessing they just put the ponzu on the bottom because they didn’t want the fish to get soggy, but we didn’t get to it till we made a bit of a dint in the dish and the dressing is what made all the flavours come together and gave it a sense of cohesion. Maybe they should have served the ponzu on the side or poured it on upon serving, who knows? There was also a strong potatoey element to the dish and when I asked my sister if the cripsy things were won ton skins or finely shaved potato which they fried, she said, “No, they’re won ton skins, it’s just that we coat everything in potato flour when we fry it unless it is tempura.”
Ah, thank god, I’m not going crazy, just crazy-full.
So, how much was all of this, you ask?
Well, along with the bottle of wine we ordered, $140.
And there was no discount.
And that is in total, not each.
You travel for twenty minutes on a tram and all of a sudden you’re paying half the price for fucking impressive Japanese. Also, the staff here are so relaxed that when one of the staff were unable to pull a beer(or maybe it is first-beer syndrome), my sister invited me behind the bar to pour the staff drinks.
Yep, the one valuable lesson I learned from the Lincoln (more specifically, Jon) is how to pull a beer. Well, many beers, as all beers are different.
There’s a beautiful art to it and I will never forget it. There is something satisfying about filling a glass with cold beer, with the perfect amount of head and handing it to someone who will piss on the footpath a couple of hours later.
So, without the whole, “THAT IS CINDY’S SISTER,” business, new staff who are obviously getting used to the menu but can do their job properly, and watching orange people with face-lifts and chinos ordering three serves of gyoza, Ocha is incredibly good value and yes, I would travel to the burbs again for it. Soon.
I may have to call ahead to see if they’re doing chawanmushi, but I may just have to suck it and see. I have also heard about Yasu’s famous lobster sashimi, where he kills a live lobster and serves it to you…definitely an order for my next trip with a much better camera.
Any takers?
Ocha
3 Church St,
Hawthorn, 3122
(03) 9853 6002