Grab Your Fork: A Sydney food blog: March 2010 Archive #navbar-iframe { display: none; }

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

MoVida Aqui, Melbourne



A creeping grin.

It's one that doesn't leave me as soon as I found out Billy and I have been booked in for a dinner at MoVida Aqui for our recent weekend trip to Melbourne. It's hard not be to excited - the buzz around MoVida is palpable with the success of its two cookbooks compounded by the recent opening of MoVida Aqui, its third instalment after Movida and Movida Next Door.



MoVida Aqui is not easy to find for the casual blow-in, hidden down an alleyway - like most of the good things in Melbourne, I suppose. When we finally spot the trademark red and white sign off Little Bourke Street, (me trailing behind Billy who is navigating via Google Maps on his iPhone), there's a moment of theatre as we admire the spectacular backdrop of the Melbourne Supreme Court and then a tingle of anticipation as we make our way with bated breath down the alley and then up the staircase toward the tinkling chatter of unseen diners.


MoVida Aqui

Upstairs, we find MoVida Terazza buzzing with local office workers, unwinding with drinks and snacks at this outdoor bar on the terrace. We turn right instead and walk past the outdoor tables and into MoVida Aqui.


MoVida Aqui bar counter

The bar counter catches your attention first, a flurry of colour and activity with bar staff, wine glasses, patrons on bar stools and a funky installation of illuminated milk crates overhead.


Complimentary bread with olive oil

We score probably the best seating areas in the house - me on the leather banquette that runs parallel to the bar, whilst Billy gallantly takes the wooden chair on the other side of our table (thanks Billy!). The menu, printed on an A3 sheet of paper and broken up into distinct sections--starters, tapas, the grill, rice, vegetables and portions or raciones--reminds me of the menu design at North Bondi Italian Food.

Billy and I spend ages dissecting the menu. We want one of everything. Please. Commonsense forces us to eventually narrow down our options, but even then we know we have ordered far too much food for two. Our waiter raises an eyebrow. "That's a lot of food for two people," he warns. "We know," we laugh merrily, "but trust us, we'll get through it all."

What's that? Oh yes, famous last words.


Anchoa $4.50 each
Hand-filleted Cantabrian Artisan anchovy
on crouton with smoked tomato sorbet

We start with the anchoa, a beautifully plated dish that arrives on a rustic round wooden plaque. It's hard not to get carried away by continually taking photos. It looks so beautiful.

"Hurry up, Helen. It's melting!" Billy eventually pleads.

I relent guiltily.

It's hard to know where to begin so I start with a little bite on the end, a little scoop of the sorbet. The flavours are incredible. The anchovy is a smooth sliver of fillet that's almost toffee-like in sweetness. The elegance of the wafer-thin crouton has a pleasing snap, and the tomato sorbet - it explodes in the mouth with such intensity of flavour I'm rendered speechless. Smoky and salty, the crystals are amazingly smooth, melting quickly on the tongue until I look down and realise wtih sadness that every morsel is gone.


Sardina $4 each
Imported Spanish Artisan 'Cuca' sardine with tomato on toast

Sardina are another revelation. Plump and firm, these sardines have a freshness that transport you straight to the sea, its strong flavour tempered by the plank of toast crunchy and a thin slice of sweet tomato.


Bocadillo de Calamares $6.50 each
Calamari sandwich with Basque guindilla and mayonnaise

The bocadillo is a sandwich most commonly filled with a tortilla potato omelette or perhaps a few slices of jamon with cheese that you'll encounter at lunch counters around Spain. The Bocadillo de Calamares is a much more sophisticated affair. Thin strips of deep-fried calamari are both crunchy and tender, drizzled with mayonnaise and spiced up with Basque guindilla chillies that pack more punch than you'd expect. We relish the contrast between the delicate calamari and the comforting chewiness of fresh crusty bread.


Bomba $4 each
Catalan potato bomb filled with chorizo

Bomba are jazzed-up version of potato croquettes filled with a disappointingly miniscule amount of chorizo. We do like the crunch of these and the two-tone drizzle of tomato and chilli sauce is an artistic feat.


Higado $17.50
Chicken liver parfait with Pedro Ximenez with frutos secos

I'd had my eye on the chicken liver parfait from the start and am pleased that Billy agrees we order it. It's a thick satisfying wedge protected by a pale white fortress of butter. Drizzled with olive oil and splayed with a swooping trail of dried nuts and fruits--raisins, figs, capers, a fine dice of red onion and the biggest toasted pinenuts I've ever seen--we spread the parfait generously on the thin slices of fruit toast supplied.


Fruit toast

This is my second highlight of the evening, the parfait deliriously smooth and silky with the sweetness of Pedro Ximenez sherry. The interplay of the dried fruits works marvellously too.


Choco $15.50
Cuttlefish on the plancha with onion and squid ink sauce

Choco is a visual striking dish with squares of seared cuttlefish, just-cooked to a mouth-sighing tenderness, garnished with crinkly wisps of what we presume are sheets of deep-fried seaweed.

A trail of onion and squid ink sauce is ebony black in colour but tastes more of tomato than the buttery richness of squid ink.




Consome $8.50 (daily special)
Iberico jamon, consomme with cicharrones

We make enquiries about our missing consome only to be told by our waiter that he hadn't heard us order it the first time. Pork crackling? It was the first thing we saw on the menu!

After our reassurances that yes, we still would like this dish, a thick wooden board is brought out bearing two glasses of steaming hot consomme with curls of cicharrones.

The cicharrones are an earth-shattering crunch of deep-fried pork skin, dusted lightly with smoky paprika and salt. We find the consome overpoweringly salty, particularly alongside the salty pork crackling, but as Billy points out, perhaps we would have appreciated this more had we supped on this at the start of the meal rather than halfway through.


Lengua $17.50
Twice-cooked ox tongue in fino, carrot and peppercorn sauce

I'm a big fan of ox tongue but usually enjoy it sliced thinly and cooked quickly over a charcoal grill, Japanese-style. Intrigued by the twice-cooked lengua, we order this and are surprised by its meaty appearance.

As our forks sink into the flesh, we realise this is no ordinary ox tongue. The flesh falls away like a fatty beef brisket. It's rich and unctious, more like a hearty winter stew with carrots and celery cooked in dry sherry.


Arroz al horno $38 granda (2-4 people)
Bomba rice baked with duck, Catalan butiffara sausage and chickpeas

We'd heard good things about the arroz al horno, a paella made not with seafood but duck, Catalan butiffara sausages and chickpeas. We know we're in trouble when this dish arrives, a huge paella pan that would probably feed three to four people as a main.

We find two generous portions of duck, the duck leg is still soft and succulent, and plenty of Catalan butiffara sausage scattered throughout - a housemade sausage made with pork and baby leeks that is fiery with black pepper and piquillo chilli.

Chickpeas are all-too-often dismissed as a cheap filler, but the consistency of chickpeas resconstituted from dried peas is altogether different, with a satisfying density and chewiness. Our only disappointment is that there's no soccarat or thick crust on the bottom, my favourite part of any paella.


Salami advertisement on the wall


Wine glasses at the bar


The open kitchen

A visit to the bathroom takes me past the kitchen, an open set-up that allows everyone to see all the action behind-the-scenes. The mood is calm and efficient and the entire team seems to operate as a well-oiled machine.


Chocolate $13
Valrhona rich chocolate mousse
with cherries, salted caramel and olive oil jam

We face a quandary when it's time to order dessert, torn between the chocolate mousse, the Pedro Ximenez trifle and the creme caramel. It's a dilemma we discuss with our waiter and I'm pleased that my craving for flan gets the go-ahead.

The Valrhona rich chocolate mousse arrives first, a squat tower capped with a shortbread biscuit. We're more fascinated by the swirl of olive oil jam, an almost neon green in colour, that's covered with a trail of sugared pistachios.


Valrhona chocolate mousse with cherries and salted caramel

The Valrhona chocolate mousse is ethereally light and fluffy in texture, ocasionally interrupted by bursts of sour cherry and pockets of gooey sweet and salted caramel. Eating the chocolate mousse with the olive oil jam and pistachios adds a new slant to dessert. It's a puzzling combination that is irresistibly addictive, the grassy stickiness of the olive oil both confusing and alluring at the same time.


Flan $11
Creme caramel served with pestinos

Flan is a much simpler affair and it's the third highlight of my MoVida Aqui evening. I'm not so keen on the pestinos--traditionally honey-coated fried pastries--but the creme caramel itself is a whole other story.



Eggy, sweet and a slippery smooth as a new set of silk bed sheets, the creme caramel doesn't get any sexier. It's the kind of dessert you take small spoonfuls of, and then cautiously, delicately, sip through your teeth. The caramel sauce has just enough bitterness to keep it from being sickly sweet.

It's a dessert I savour quietly as I feel another creeping grin.


View MoVida locations in a larger map
MoVida Aqui and Terraza on Urbanspoon

MoVida Aqui
Level 1, 500 Bourke St, Melbourne, Victoria
(enter via Little Bourke St)
Tel: +61 (03) 9663 3038

Opening hours:
Monday to Friday 12pm until late (lunch and dinner)
Saturday 5pm until late (dinner only)

Grab Your Fork dined at MoVida Aqui as a guest of Tourism Victoria and Movida. Grab Your Fork visited Melbourne as a guest of Tourism Victoria for the Melbourne Food & Wine Festival.


> Read the next Melbourne post (Claypot King)
< Go back to the first Melbourne Food & Wine Festival 2010 post


Related Grab Your Fork posts:
Melbourne - Lord of the Fries
Melbourne - Madame Brussels
Melbourne - Red Spice Road
22 comments - Add some comment love

posted by Helen (Grab Your Fork) on 3/30/2010 03:40:00 am


Monday, March 29, 2010

King crab, Hokkaido milk and strawberries



Love is a 50cm long chocolate eclair.

At least that is what my eyes tell my stomach when we spy this beauty at the Daimaru department store food hall in Sapporo. At 1785 yen, or AU$22.30 (Feb 2010), it's presumably one to share, and beause I know you're wondering, alas no, I didn't indulge.

But I digress. In the previous Japan post, I'd left you at the Sapporo Beer Museum. We'd continued next door to the behemoth Ario Sapporo shopping mall, built on the former Sapporo Breweries site.


Character carts for kids

The shopping mall is a temperature-controlled and carpetted temple of muzak. We pass young mothers who could pass themselves off as svelte sisters to their designer-clothed kin. The character carts, usually locked together and obtainable only by deposit in Australia, are available freely and unguarded throughout the centre - another example of the rarity of vandalism and stealing in Japan.


School uniforms

School uniforms in Japan, as I understand, tend to be the same everywhere. Designed to be conservative, I can't help feeling these look rather saucy!


Trust me, I'm Dr Hattori

We spot endorsements by Dr Yukio Hattori from Iron Chef as well as desserts by Hiroyuki Sakai in the supermarket.


Rare cheese tart 108yen
by Hiroyuki Sakai, La Rochelle

We're keen to try out the sashimi and sushi on offer in the supermarket and cheekily eat them in the food court next door.


Sashimi 780yen (about AU$9.75 in Feb10)


Crab chirashi sushi and nigiri sushi 480yen (about $AU6.00 in Feb10)

The sashimi is fresh and firm, with the scallops and ebi prawn particularly sweet. Unfortunately the crab is disappointingly bland.


Rare cheese tart by Hiroyuki Sakai

Dessert is a share of the rare cheese tart by Hiroyuki Sakai, the base crisp and buttery with a tangy cheese filling, and a bonanza of deliciousness from Mister Donut.


Donuts from Mister Donut


Communal cleaning cloths in the food court

We're impressed, too, by the dispensation of cleaning cloths on every table in the food court, used by everyone to wipe down after they've finished, and replenished by cleaners as soon as customers depart.

Instead of getting the bus back to JR train station, we decide to take the local train, a scenic route which takes us longer than we realise (recommendation: just take the bus), but it does provide a greater appreciation of the rate and level of snowfall.


Bike buried by snow


Snow-covered train tracks

Back in downtown Sapporo we hit the 100 yen shop which is our guilty pleasure of bargain kitchenware and every gadget and knick-knack you never realised you needed.


The 100 yen shop above Sapporo Daimaru


Crockery, all 100yen


Elmo and Hello Kitty confectionary

We also spend a good time loitering the food halls of Daimaru...


Did someone have a craving for onigiri?


Watching the pastry chefs at work


Japanese toilet

Is it possible to talk about Japan without mentioning their toilets? There are few words to describe the joy of a warm toilet when it's -4C outside. Our hotel room (Chisun Hotel) boasted a particularly impressive version which not only included a bidet and shower function, but spray strength as well. Only the Japanese could make going to the bathroom so much fun!


Boiled king crab 7,350yen (about AU$92 in Feb10)

For dinner we head to Kanihonke to treat ourselves to the must-eat of Hokkaido - king crab.

We can tell Kanihonke is serious about its crab, from the giant crab above the entrance to the crab pond just inside the entrance. Inside, the restaurant has an intimidating hush especially when we realise the ground floor is merely the reception area, and shuffling staff in kimonos immediately enquire whether we have a reservation.

The wait isn't long and we're ushered toward the lift area where we swap our shoes for slippers before ascending to the fifth floor. Upstairs, we find bubbling fountains, stone walkways, deorative shoji screens and private rooms lined with tatami mats.


Crab meat gratin bowl

There's a crab theme to all our crockery, from our individual patterned plates to our chopstick rests.


Crab meat gratin 840yen

Crab meat gratin arrives hidden beneath a crab cover but is disappointingly more generous with runny white sauce than crab. We're also non-plussed by the king crab, which, whilst impressive in size, is a little watery and bland in flavour, tasting as though it has been pre-cooked rather than to-order.


Boiled hairy crab 8,880yen (about AU$110 in Feb10)

We do, however, find redemption in the boiled hairy crab, named for its clearly visible bristles that are actually quite soft to the touch.


Crab organs

The highlight of the hairy crab, our host tell us, is its generous portion of crab organs, the mustard innards often referred to as crab brains but more accurately an all-encompassing collection of liver, pancras, intestines and brain. Buttery, sweet, briney and musty, this is a delicacy worth savouring slowly.


Hairy crab flesh

Each crab leg has been thoughtfully snipped open on one side so all we have to do is use our chopsticks to gently tease out the flesh. The crab is just cooked, with a shimmering pearl-like quality. The flesh is super sweet and almost melts in the mouth.


Kanihonke Restaurant


Dessert party

Tonight's dessert party? An orgy of treats. We have mochi filled with lemon paste, a cream-filled crepe, strawberry and vanilla baumkuchen (a German multi-layered sponge known as the King of Cakes) and two types of creme caramel. There's a melon bun - named not because melon is an ingredient but because the cross-hatch of sugary cookie dough on top resembles a rockmelon, mochi-wrapped ice cream, ice cream in wafers that look a block of white chocolate, and a tub of Royce vanilla ice cream speckled with chunks of milk chocolate.

The highlight amidst all the sugar overload is the tray of strawberries, plump and unbelievably sweet - not a trace of tartness about them. We've also developed an obsession with Hokkaido milk, which has a supreme creaminess that almost coats the tongue. Milk and strawberries never tasted so good.


View Larger Map

Kanihonke Sapporo
1-18 2-Chome Kitasanjyo-Nishi
Chuouku Sapporo Hokkaido
060-0002 Japan
Tel: +81 (011) 222 0018

5min walk from the south exit of JR Sapporo station
Open 7 days 11.30am - 10pm


> Read the next Japan post (Nijo Fish Market)
< Go back to the first Japan 2010 post

Related Grab Your Fork posts:


Read about my trip to Japan in 2007Read about my trip to Japan in 2004

29 comments - Add some comment love

posted by Helen (Grab Your Fork) on 3/29/2010 01:58:00 am



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