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SED Dinner at Charcoal Lane

Sometimes I wish I were a DJ so I could say, “No requests!”

But, I’m not.  The reason for this is, sometimes, you meet people in the food industry that say, “Don’t say that, don’t write this, don’t put that picture on your blog,” or, inversely ask you to specifically state (sometimes irrelevant) information.

This post, on the other hand has been taken under consideration, marred (or beneficial to you who will experience the dinners) by conversation.  Of course, one could argue that most of my posts have been marred by conversation, as most of the time, there will be a meeting with someone from the venue, if not an already existing relationship or, god forbid, a PR company behind it (I realise the irony in that statement).

Before the dinner, I had been requested by Ben Edwards and Dan Sims of The Wine Guide (and if I am being completely truthful, work with on Sommeliers Australia) to not take photos during the dinner.  Something, something, something the chef is a little precious.  Of course, the next breath followed with,

“But, he can’t stop you.” (In case you hadn’t noticed, I was on speakerphone)

I have read about people being asked to not take photos, because in certain situations the food ends up looking like something you’d find in a club’s toilet bowl at the end of the night, but of course I turned around and thought, yeah, no one can fucking stop me from doing shit.

That being said, on my way to meet a friend at Taste, I had run into Ryan, who I barely recognised out of his chef whites (damn context dependent memories) and started talking about the dinner.  It was probably a good ten minutes until I realised that I hadn’t stopped raving about it, and had somehow maintained the excitement and giddiness I had on the evening.

I had consumption-swoon, and I wasn’t even drunk.

Not on the night or at the moment where I dribbled gluttony-brain all over the poor chef.

Then, he told me the reason behind not wanting me to take photos or write a blog post.
As humbled as he was to hear a stranger swoon over an experience which took a lot of planning, and at the end of the day: soul, he wanted each diner to come in without preconception and leave with the same feeling I had.

Part of the reason why the evening was so successful is because no one knew anything about it, other than what was written in the Epicure.

Hell, no one even knew what the hell SED stood for until a few days before the event when the boys put “Smile, Eat, Drink…” on their blog.

I don’t want to ruin the experience for anyone, but the excitement makes me want to write about this vaguely and without photos.

To sum up what this was all about for me, I’d say it was energentic, playful, convivial, interactive and probably one of the best dining experiences of my overly long-lived 22 year old life.

The fact that my favourite dish was the “Cauliflower Sausages,” which, well…I won’t ruin the surprise and that I  never thought I would see musk as pure brilliance past a joke from Bernard Black, as well as experience savoury macarons and sweetbreads in the same course, boxes which desserts were served in bought from Zetta Florence only hours before, signed and dated menus (which were going to be hand-written), along with wine I wanted to take home and have sex with, well, I can’t say much more.

I’d like to share with you the quote on the back of the menu, but that would probably ruin the atmosphere of the evening to know in advance.

I have said nothing.

Book here.

Taste of Melbourne- the Liquid Tour

I did dry July.

Actually, it was more of a moist July, but as with deprivation, there comes a time where compensation is inevitable.

Yes, I received a free ticket to Taste as well as 30 crowns, but trust me, I put it to good use.

My slightly bent day began at The Deanery, where I now work nights, but, I dropped in and ended up drinking beers and a glass of wine.

Then…

Huxtable.

I was going to drop into Cutler & Co., but I wanted to check out the new restaurant by Dan Wilson which opened on Wednesday on Smith St.

His kitchen is smaller than the bar at The Deanery and he works with three women.  Even before opening, they were dubbed Charlie’s Angels.

May I suggest a beer and his jalepeno croquettes?

I’m just putting it out there.

Then…Taste.

I won’t lie to you.  I have eating days and drinking days where I exclusively set aside a day to do only one of those activities.  No prizes to guess what type of a day this was.

I ran into Ryan Flaherty from Monday’s SED Dinner at Charcoal Lane out the front and discovered that Melbourne, as always, is smaller than what you think it is.

Let’s just say we put our crowns to good use and gave them away. I’m looking at you, Goth Cooker.

Mat (who is also very good at the liquid tour), in amongst a few others snuck into the HSBC lounge.  We drank a lot of Trumers.

So, if you were to do my tour, I’d point you to Stokehouse for an espresso martini, Longrain for…well, anything wet and alcoholic and the lounge, which if you don’t have a pass, is still easy to sneak into.

Cap it off with a trip to Der Raum and a few other drinks in town and it will make for a very hung over service at The Deanery the next day.

Thankfully, functions are a piece of piss and pity was taken on me when my usually yellow face became green.

Now, if you excuse me, I’m going to eat a few vitamin B tablets and have some Gastrolyte.

And, even with all my best intentions, fuck you Dry July.

I’m back.

Il Bacaro, I love you, longtime.

You know those places which have been around for years that are still as good as they have ever been, but people have forgotten about?

Il Bacaro is one of them.

I think I first dined there before I even started uni.  I was a little in love, and spent a year doing lunches and dinners there in different guises (read: with hair getting shorter and the discovery of pants) even though, I should have probably been saving money for textbooks.

Then, nothing.

It fell of my radar.

I was working my arse off, studying and spending any free time I had going to new places, which for the majority of the time, underwhelmed me.

The last time I went, I took one of my favourite people there for his birthday.

Uncommonly enough, five years later, the chef is still the same and the space: the same.  One of my good friends worked there for a while, then defected to their sister restaurant, Sarti.

There is a long-standing joke that the boys of both establishments have a bit of yellow fever, but I’ll leave that up to you to imagine the details.  I figure the more obscure, the better.

So, I best tell you why I love this place, even after all these years.

1- They haven’t changed.  They obviously have something that is working for them and don’t feel the need to follow trends.  It was a Monday when I ate here, and they were still booked out.  Enough said.

2- They are so unapologetically Italian.  They greet you in Italian and if you say “Ciao,” back, they will go into auto-pilot and spurt Italian back at you.  Unfortunately, after the four years of Italian in primary school, all I remember is, “Dario, Dario e sempre in retardo.”

3- Their service is perfect and god, you can see their kitchen working hard and fast.  The consistency of this place just astounds me.  It is a very rare experience to go back to a restaurant and be just as impressed of the standard of service and quality of food five years after the original encounter.

So…the food.

They, as they always have, pour their olive oil from small glass bottles at the table when they bring you warm, crusty bread.  I can only imagine how annoying it is to refill the bottles before each service and to have enough for each table.  I suspect they turn over at least twice a night.

My dining companion and I share an entree and instead of it being divided before it hits the table, like most restaurants now days,

the salmon carpaccio and fried baccala fritters were silver-serviced at the table.  It’s been a long time since I last had that happen when I shared a dish.  If not already divided, we’re usually left to our own devices.  As you can see, texturally, this was like a crazy fish party.  The beautifully fresh, soft, sweet and oily salmon against the hot, non-greasy and still-crisp, salty baccala.  Let’s just say there was a collective silence followed by a “mmmmmm” when we ate this.

Unpictured is my dining companion’s braised elk, broad bean oricchiette with burrata.  A very generous serve for what you’re paying and beautiful.  I haven’t seen any places in Melbourne serve elk before, and we didn’t know what to expect.  Of course as my dining companion was eating, I kept on saying elk in Swedish because the word is just so cute.

Here, let me Google that for you: elk.

And for me, the carne special of the evening: rolled rabbit loin, stuffed with chestnuts. It actually came as an assiette, with the different parts of the rabbit stuffed, roasted and braised on a piece of pan-fried polenta and perfectly roasted root vegetables.  With the simple verbal description of the dish and what actually came out, this exceeded my expectations, and for the thirty-something dollars I paid for it, was great value, especially with all the elements on the dish.

And somehow, it wasn’t wanky, or seemingly overworked.

At risk of sounding like an old fucker, it was perfect.  I would eat it again and again if it were not for my size, the fact that it was a special and my inability to find time.

And of course, my dining companion’s meals are never complete without dessert, especially chocolate.  In this case, a chocolate fondant, aerated chocolate and icecream. That sauce on the plate, mandarin.  The fondant was hot and molten, as it should be, but my dining companion wolfed it so quickly I couldn’t get a photo.  And that aerated chocolate, just like an Aero, only better, apparently.

And so I hope, with consideration of me working nights again (as well), that I will somehow find the time to come back here before another five years goes by.

Sigh.

Please, do visit them, and possibly with someone named Dario who is always late.  You can use the only piece of Italian that I know, but in context…

Il Bacaro

168-170 Little Collins St,
Melbourne, VIC

(03) 9654 6778

Johnston St Food Store, the impromptu brunch.

With my explicit admittance of defeat, slump into sadness and inability to reach out to those around me, I have also pulled back from discovering new things.

After a 4 moth hiatus from the Slow Food Market and the confirmation of having torn the ligaments in my foot, I am convinced through a series of tweets to hop a bus go to the convent.  There, I am greeted by Essjayeff, highly efficient and equally caffeinated, having completed her market shop by half nine.

She also made it to the front of the coffee line where I am told that my Tweet-order of an espresso was almost declined.  Of course, we run into Jeroxie ordering a pig’s head for the Chang torchon recipe (which is actually the best thing I could ever imagine doing to it) and her parner determined to eat through his cold pastries.

All these people and the Pandora I picked up from the Holy Goat ladies (who just racked up a handful of cheese making awards, and once jokingly offered to supply my wedding with the cheese if my friend proposed to me in front of their stand) seemed to make getting out of bed a little less shit.

Of course with the dual cynicism of EssJay and myself, we begin our hyperactive rants in a car towards La Latteria.

Big fucking cheese love.

I won’t tell you exactly how much cheese I bought this Saturday, but if I put it in a dress, you would be able to mistaken it for a small child.  That, and I wanted to kiss all the women there when they went out back and made the burrata from scratch.  When high on coffee, I can only compare the cheese-buying to the eating of crap when drunk.

More ranting ensues and we end up at the newly opened Johnston St Food Store.  The place wouldn’t seat any more than 20 people, with less than 10 items on their menu (mostly sweets), a selection of hard-to-perish fruits along with frou-frou dry goods, a liquor license, a rockin’ barista, and a fit-out which looks like a combination of Industria and Ikea,  EssJay and I decide to play a game of discovery.

This first visit had me hooked, but that may have just been the curried egg sandwich, $5.80.

I love curried egg sandwiches, especially when they’re inappropriately slathered in salted butter.  What I didn’t understand is why they would charge an extra 20c for getting it toasted, especially when their bite-sized financiers are $3.50 a pop.

Somewhat outrageous.

I also don’t understand why they are calling themselves a providore and serving tomatoes in Winter.  Furthermore, upon my second visit, they had a caprese salad as one of their salads of the day.

*shakes head*

But of course, with two overly cynical women driven purely by frustration and spite, the vanilla poached pears with yogurt and honey managed to soothe EssJay.

What am I kidding, we still ranted, but at least we enjoyed our food.

EssJay’s serve of brioche.  I didn’t try any, but I guess brioche is one of those things which are hard to fuck up, especially when you’re buying it from a supplier and you only need to slice and toast it.

So where am I going with this?

This place is good and has the potential to be awesome, but it has to find its personality first.  It seems they need to be doing more of what they want, rather than what they think the customers in the area want.  They sell dry goods, they sell fruit, they sell oils, they sell smoked trout, they sell cheese, they sell wine, they have ice buckets labelled with Bollinger and Veuve Clicquot, but don’t serve it and their opening hours can be somewhat confusing.  The kitchen obviously knows what they’re doing in terms of flavour, with limited and constantly changing menus, but probably need to stick to the seasons more.

I’d happily go here on a regular basis for a coffee and a sandwich, poached fruits, pannacottas and a drink, but for the moment, they seem a little confused.  Hopefully in a couple of months, they will be settled and sorted, but that is not to say they are not worth a visit.

Johnston St Foodstore

256 Johnston St,
Fitzroy, 3065


(03) 9416 1118

Provenance, still the underdog.

“Where are you right now?”

“Provenance”

“Of course you are…”

“Yeah, where else would I be?”

Guess which one I am?

Usually if I am not at the Enoteca, The Gem or at the bar at Cutler, I’m here.  I’m either drinking some of the Crafty Sunday beers (when it isn’t a Sunday), or having a shot of something something with the owner, Dave.

I have to admit, this may not be the BEST place in Collingwood or Fitzroy, but it is pretty damn good.  They consistently try to offer the best quality food for the lowest prices and the crew are all easily excitable, if  not welcoming.  It is why people line up for breakfast on the weekends or are able to bring in fruits and vegetables that they grow in abundance and have the team do something creative with them.

It’s where all the regulars get to know each other and share beers at the bar when it is meant to be closed.

In fact, it’s the place where everybody knows your name and Ted Danson isn’t balding all over your drink.

The funny thing is, on this particular night, I was at a loose end.  I didn’t intend on eating here, but I ended up at the end of the bar with one of the ex-staff, drinking a bottle of wine, trying the first of the Crafty Beers (Beechworth Chestnut Larger) and convinced into a bouillabaisse.  I’m pretty sure this baby was only $13.50, on the soupy side, but generously served with perfectly cooked seafood, fragranced with fennel and lended itself to the garlicky squidges of aioli on the crusty ciabatta.

You can’t really ask for more.  This dish, like the food, like the company and the staff, is unpretentious, unable to hide behind anything and straight forward.

But you know, I may be biased.

And why is this place an underdog?

Well, for one, it still has the appearance of the ghastly cafe which used to occupy the space.  It has no PR (which isn’t necessarily a bad thing, but I am referring to the place close by who shall not be named) and is left in the hands of an overworked twenty-something year old who dreams of bigger things and can reel of countless places in a three block radius who are just as good.

First world problems…

And hey, Michael Ryan, if you’re reading this…on Dave’s list of things to do before he dies is to meet you, the man behind the awesome Provenance.  You should go and make him gush next time you’re around.

Provenance

288 Smith St,
Collingwood, 3065

(03) 8415 0700

A little sentiment and oyster omlettes

I haven’t been blogging much lately.

To me, I blog because I want to tell a story or share a part of my life and what I experience.  I get excited and want to get other people excited.

I haven’t felt much lately.

There hasn’t been much excitement in my life and there hasn’t been much of me that I have felt necessary to share.

The past me would probably spit at the current me for writing this post; being both empty and sentimental.

I rationalise this with the inevitable growing up, self-awareness and realisation that my soul actually needs nurturing from people (mainly those who will never give it to me).

Being able to identify this specific discontentment came in the (poetic) HK Winter.

My sister doesn’t say much, but she can be quite poignant when not nonsensical.  I guess we are related.

She said to me, “Jess, I don’t know why you’re not angry at Dad.  Mum obviously did the wrong thing, but dad never did the right thing.”

And that was it.

It made sense.

As a Daddy’s girl, I had to admit that my father is a real person, not always the good guy, and at the end of the day, is a bit of a pussy.

Well, that and deal with the rest of my life (yep, still angsty).

Being stuck in a foreign country with the people I spent the last seven years running away from, swallowing emotions I have towards them and burying conflict with, was a little too much to handle.

My head exploded and hikes were very much welcome.

In fact, after a one day hike, where I strayed from the group and spent it listening to music from a recent funeral, I got out on the other end a little more than exhausted and a very much in need of a drink.  The hike was with a close family friend, one who has seen both my sister and I into awareness, growth, education and, in my sister’s case, marriage.

Having to explain to her why I couldn’t be happy with my upbringing, or listen to my sister tell her made me feel small again.  She spoke about her changes and relationships with me and we both realised that we were able to share.  She was no longer making sure I didn’t pull a pot of boiling water over myself, but started seeing me with a life and a personality.

Most of the day was silent, but when we reached the city again, we took a train to Yau Ma Tai and lined up for the best oyster omlettes in HK.  It was only 6:30, but all the seats had been taken inside and lines curled around the back streets.

When I saw my father again, I raved to him about the omlettes.

He is a big oyster fan, as well as omlettes, and really just wanted to go back to HK for all the hawker food.

My mother, on the other hand preferred to stay in, sit in front of a computer and assume her usual role.  After disappearing with the only other buffer in his life, my sister, he seemed a little defeated.

The next day, while my sister performed a signal which marked a change in her life (and cut off all her hair), I dragged my father a few train stations away and got him to Four Seasons Hot Pot (their other specialty is clay pot rice) and bought him some grease and quiet.

We were the first people to arrive, and they make you pay for the bill as they take your order.

We, as always, sat in silence together as I ordered morning glory with shrimp paste and a small serve of oyster omlettes.  The thing about my father is, since I can remember, he has always wanted to spend time with me to see (literally, physically see) if I was ok.  He would have nothing to say to me, but being able to be silent together and know that there is an overall sense of okay-ness would be enough to make him happy.

Being able to drag him across his city in a railway system he is no longer familiar with and take him to a hidden place he wishes he could have shown me, while sipping freshly brewed tea out of primary-coloured, translucent plastic cups and order in a language he thinks I have forgotten is enough to make him crack a smile.

Watching him smirk in cheeky silence and mix the plate of greens into the pale paste of ground shrimp, sesame paste and oil was enough to make me happy.

And in the end, when the shallow-fried batter of duck eggs, just-cooked briney oysters and spring onions hit the table with a generous spoonful of chili vinegar, he started to speak.

My father told me he never knew I enjoyed food this much and that he never thought I could like traditional Chinese cuisine.  My father told me that he thought I was all “Aussie” (whatever that means) and that he didn’t even know I ate oysters.

It all came out like brain-vomit and I remember him communicating to me with food when I was younger.

Being acknowledged at home meant a dish with seafood, a labour-intensive braise or a lot of knife-work.  They were stories about stinky tofu, pancakes and encouragement into killing my first chicken.

It hurts not being able to talk about the past, what we’re really thinking about or what we really want from our lives, but it is definitely the Asian way to just shut up and eat.

When you’re eating, you don’t have to talk.  And if you do, you can just talk about the food.  It’s the appropriate distraction and most relevant topic of the time.

In my family, it is very hard for a person to talk about their emotions, let alone show them.

But, appreciation is always in an empty plate.

Too cold to leave, too lazy to move- porridge.

When the sun is lying and the wind is blowing, it’s Melbourne.

When you’re wearing your blanket around the house like a cape and your electricity bills are kicking your arse into poverty, it’s Winter.

No, it’s Winter in Melbourne.

Aside from all the body-suit wearing (which results in cursing the gods in having to get naked to pee), it seems as though I am never full.  And yes, I know these two thoughts are completely unrelated, but they just like coming out as one.

I can never drink enough tea or eat enough cheese…but the bodysuit is just a mention in case someone can point me to a more efficient technique.  And no, pulling it to the side is not an option.

And of course, it’s Winter, so everyone under the age of 30 has somehow managed to reach poverty (mainly because of the summer of drinking and travel) and it’s all just so fitting, isn’t it?

Weekend brunches are no longer, not only because we’re destitute from the previous night’s debauchery, but because it’s too fucking cold to leave the house.  And I don’t know about you, but when I am sufficiently over-hung, eggs are not my best friend.

I know it sounds so unexciting, but porridge does seem to be the best option.  At 99c for a kilo of rolled oats (not the quick-cook bullshit kind), I’m pretty much stocked up for a month.
And, if you’re anything like me (I bet you’re not, because you probably have too much of a life to spend a weekend jamming and pickling- yes, I’m a pickler) you’ve probably got enough add-ins to create something that is healthy and full of variety.

God forbid I start talking healthy diets to you lot, especially when I could probably get drunk of my own sweat.
Nevertheless, here is your low-GI, dairy-free, healthy, several-food group fulfilling breakfast.

Porridge
serves 1 (sorry, but you might have to do some maths if you’re making it for more)

1/2 cup rolled oats
1 1/2 cups of cold water
1 pinch of salt
1 tablespoon of linseed
1 tablespoon of honey
1 tablespoon of apple jam (recipe to follow)
3 pickled plums (do you really need a recipe for this?  If you’re not a freak pickler, just stew some fruit)
1 handful of roasted almonds, roughly chopped

Add the oats and the water in a small pot and bring to the boil with a pinch of salt.  Lower the heat till it is on the lowest flame and cook, stirring continuously for 5 minutes.  Add the linseed and the honey, stir through and turn the heat off.

Place in a bowl topped with the apple jam, plums and almonds.

Eat the shit out of it.

Apple jam
Makes 1 litre
1 kilo of granny smith apples (mine came from a friend’s tree)
3 cups of water
2 cups of sugar
2 cinnamon quills
4 cloves
juice of 1 lemon
1 stubby of cider

Peel, core and chop the apples and place in a large pot with the rest of the ingredients.
Bring to the boil and then take down to a low heat and cook for 30-40 minutes or till everything has broken down and there is no visible liquid left.
Place in sterilized jars and store in the fridge.

Taco Brothers at the Tote.

That’s right, bitches.  The Tote had reopened and I managed to get free tickets to the re-opening.

It was worth it, though it wasn’t as sticky as it was in January and they’re missing a pool table.

Everything else is pretty much the same, but I think they’ve cleaned their lines and installed a cider tap.

Oh yes, and there is a taco van in the courtyard.

How did I miss that?  Well, it is the creation of the man in sandwiched between the two hot chicks (they may or may not be my friends, with the blonde one being dubbed, “The Taco Chick”) and serve tacos all night.

Beef, chicken and vegetarian.

Actually, their vegetarian is also vegan and doesn’t taste it at all, if you know what I mean.

The deal is pretty simple, $5 gets you 1, $9 gets you two.  They have an array of hot sauces, everything is from Casa Iberica and their tortillas are from the same guys who supply Mamasita.  They cook everything on the day and there you are, the perfect drunk-rocker’s food.

You get it on the soft tortilla with the protein you choose, freshly shredded lettuce, salsa, guacamole, a wedge of lime on the side and hot sauce if you want.  Oh, and though I am not a really big fan of beef, it was my preferred taco of the eve.

I’ve never had so much flavour in such a small package.  Well worth your money, and they’re known to hand out a few freebies just because you’re nice…in which case, they did with me.

Taco Brothers

(the back of the Tote)
71 Johnston St,
Collingwood VIC 3066

(03) 9419 5320


Fuck me gently.

Or not.

Anything.

I need a distraction.

I’m giving up my oldest friend, my most reliable friend and my most faithful friend.

And why is that?

My wife and my man-wife have left the country so I might as well abandon my vice.

Silly logic, no?

Dry July.  I have decided to shake this puppy and not for health reasons.  I usually rationalise my health by exercising more and cutting out meat until I feel less like death, but this one is for cancer.

At risk of sounding like I have a heart, I’m giving up booze to raise money for the Royal Melbourne Hospital.

You can read about where the hell my donations are going here.

It’s day three (or, two, technically) and I’m ready to start licking toads, but to keep track of how I’m going or make a donation, go here.

This has got to be one of the stupidest things I have ever done to myself.

Ocha

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