Grab Your Fork: A Sydney food blog: March 2012 Archive #navbar-iframe { display: none; }

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Taipei Chef, Artarmon

 taiwanese smoked chicken at taipei chef, artarmon

If crisp skin, succulent flesh and the lingering trail of smokiness in every mouthful is your idea of bliss, then Taiwanese-style smoked chicken ($10) is the flavour bomb your tastebuds have been waiting for. The chicken is cooked twice - first steamed and then smoked over a mixture of tea leaves and sugar until the skin takes on a golden glaze and becomes deliciously brittle. Trust us: this stuff is so addictive you’ll be reaching for your next piece before you’ve even finished the first.

taiwanese cuisine at taipei chef, artarmon

Taipei Chef has all your Taiwanese favourites covered. You can’t miss the fluoro yellow signage out the front. There’s nothing fancy in the décor but the food is presented cleanly with the occasional considered garnish. Despite the modest size of the kitchen – which you can spy from the dining room – the menu has an impressive list of 56 dishes. Most selections come with photo clues but if you still need help, staff are patient and will happily provide recommendations.

The crowd is mostly a mix of chatty Taiwanese families and curious local passers-by. Kids are readily accommodated, provided with special melamine tableware (blue for boys and pink for girls) with character prints. You can linger over your meal, but be prepared to be kicked out at closing time. Loiterers are politely reminded to leave once service has ended.

prawn dumplings at taipei chef, artarmon
Prawn dumplings $12 for 6

Kick things off with an order of prawn dumplings ($12 for six) - plump parcels of prawn wrapped in translucent dumpling skins. They’re sweet and fragrant, packed with slivers of water chestnut, Chinese celery and finely chopped shallots.

fried sweet potato chips at taipei chef, artarmon
Deep-fried sweet potato $4

Keep the snacks going with deep-fried sweet potato ($4), dusted with a salty and sweet plum powder that is wickedly addictive.


slow-cooked pork belly at taipei chef, artarmon
Slow-cooked pork belly $15

Slow-cooked pork belly ($15) is meltingly soft, simmered in a heady stock of star anise, garlic, chilli and soy. Drizzle the sauce over plain white rice and you’ve got a bowl of comfort food that hugs you right back.

Taipei-style long beans at taipei chef, artarmon
Taipei-style long beans $12

Garlic lovers should get into the Taipei-style long beans ($12) – a jumble of squeaky fresh beans stir-fried with chicken mince, chilli, vinegar and a generous amount of garlic.

Taiwanese-style pork mince on rice at taipei chef, artarmon
Taiwanese-style pork mince on rice $6

Taiwanese-style pork mince on rice ($6) is saucy but disappointingly leaner than the traditional fatty version. There’s far greater satisfaction in the sticky rice ($6) – chewy grains of glutinous rice studded with curls of dried shrimp and fine slices of rehydrated shiitake mushroom.

sticky rice at taipei chef, artarmon
Sticky rice $6

tofu stuffed with pork mince at taipei chef, artarmon
Tofu stuffed with minced pork and prawns on hot plate $15

taipei chef, artarmon


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Taipei Chef Restaurant on Urbanspoon


Taipei Chef 
1A Broughton Road, Artarmon, Sydney 
Tel: +61 (02) 9419 7119 


Opening hours: 
Lunch Tuesday to Sunday 12pm-3pm 
Dinner Tuesday to Sunday 6pm-10pm

This article appears in the March 2012 issue of Time Out Sydney in my monthly Food & Drink column Eat This! [read online]

More Time Out Sydney reviews:
Akash Pacific Cuisine, Liverpool (Fiji Indian cuisine) 
ATL Marantha, Kensington (Indonesian fried chicken with edible bones)
Balkan Oven, Rockdale (Macedonian burek)
Battambang, Cabramatta (Deep fried pork intestines)
Cyprus Community Club Aphrodite Restaurant (Roast baby goat) 
Dos Senoritas, Gladesville (Mexican street-style tacos) 
Durban Dish, Baulkham Hills (South African cuisine)
Everest Kitchen, Marrickville (Nepali cuisine)
Good Kitchen, Hurstville (Hong Kong cafe)
Hijazi's Falafel, Arncliffe (Lebanese breakfast)
Island Dreams Cafe, Lakemba (Christmas Islands cuisine)
Kambozza, Parramatta (Burmese cuisine)
La Paula, Fairfield (Chilean empanadas, lomitos and sweets)
Mario Tokyo Pizza, Strathfield  (Bulgogi Korean pizza)
Misky Cravings, Fairfield  (Peruvian cuisine)
Olka Polka Bakery & Deli, Campbelltown (Polish cheesecake and rye bread)
Sea Sweet, Parramatta (Lebanese sweet kashta cheese burger)

Sizzling Fillo, Lidcombe (Filipino pork hock crackling)
Tehran, Granville (Persian cuisine)
Tuong Lai, Cabramatta (Vietnamese sugar cane prawns)
18 comments - Add some comment love

posted by Helen (Grab Your Fork) on 3/29/2012 12:24:00 am


Monday, March 26, 2012

Freda's, Chippendale

lamb on the spit at freda's chippendale

If Sydneysiders are ready to embrace new neighbourhoods, then Chippendale is ripe for a giant bear hug. The object of affection? Freda's Bar & Canteen, set up in a formerly abandoned warehouse in the inner city.

Sure we're all used to hidden bars and secret entrances, but you know things are serious when even the bar's blog has a photo essay published with directions on how to find it.

freda's chippendale
Alleyway to Freda's

Freda's sits at the end of an alleyway off Regent Street, far enough down to get away from the noise of industrial traffic. The easiest landmark to look for is the giant red fibreglass tongue of the PR agency next door. The alleyway is just to the right, now helpfully plastered with Freda's bill posters.

freda's chippendale
Inside Freda's with Marty Campaign, General Manager, behind the bar

The bar is much bigger than you'd expect, a heavy steel-grey door leading you into a cavernous room that is one part industrial to two parts shabby chic. On the left is a mix of benches, stools and old-style school chairs. On the right is the bar, well-stocked and gleaming, fronted by a stainless steel counter.

cointreau water bottles freda's chippendale
Cointreau bottles reused as water bottles 

The three men behind Freda's have some serious pedigree. Operating Partner Simon Cancio is a qualified chef who did his apprenticeship at Sean's Panoroma and Onde before moving into breads at Bourke St Bakery and Brasserie Bread. Simon set up Luxe Bakery in Newtown, working as head baker, General Manager and Partner before eventually selling the business.

Freda's is the realisation of his vision to be part of an evolving Sydney. "I've always wanted someone to create a place when I can go for a drink with my mates and be part of a community; where I can have good food and not have to pay a fortune for it," Simon says. He's so sincere and compelling that if Simon said to put my hands on my head, I would have.

tapestry and chairs at freda's chippendale
Tapestry and mismatched chairs 

While overseas in China, Simon managed to rope in his friend Marty Campaign to join him as Operations Manager, a bar specialist who helped propel The Glamour bar and el Coctel in Shanghai to become hip and happening hotspots.

Rounding out the trio is Head Chef, Ibrahim Kasif, ex-Fish Face with an apprenticeship completed at Bistro Moncur.

lunchtime sandwiches at freda's chippendale
Lunchtime sandwiches with Head Chef Ibrahim Kasif in the background

blackboard lunch menu at freda's chippendale
Lunchtime blackboard menu

The bar is open every weekday for lunch, offering a mix of sandwiches and salads. It's not until later that I realise there's no kitchen on the premises. "We cook everything off-site at a property about 150 metres away. Then we move everything here." The whole menu has been designed to eat at room temperature or prepared with the only heat source available - a salamander.

chicken corn and iceberg sandwich at freda's chippendale
Chicken, corn and iceberg sandwich $11

There are four of us dining today and we order a sandwich each and then split them up for sharing. The chicken, corn and iceberg sandwich is generously packed with poached chicken strips smothered in a light mayonnaise. Sweet corn kernels and crisp shards of iceberg lettuce add freshness.

pork and pickle sandwich at freda's chippendale
Pork, pickle and salsa verde sandwich $12

There's a pleasant tang from the pickles in the pork sandwich. The pickles are all housemade. Jars of pickles and olives lined the top shelves behind the counter, another passion of Simon's.

duck and beetroot sandwich at freda's chippendale
Duck, arugula and beetroot relish sandwich $12

There's no stinginess in the duck sandwich either. Fatty chunks of duck are soft and tender, paired brilliantly with fresh shredded beetroot and bitter rocket leaves.

meatballs and reggiano sandwich at freda's chippendale
Meatballs and reggiano sandwich $12

My choice is the meatball sandwich, a precarious construction with four rustic meatballs nestled beneath a blanket of shaved reggiano. The meatballs are just like nonna would have made them, browned on the outside but juicy in the middle, and swathed in a thick chunky tomato sauce.

A bottle of Spanish cider (Escanciador Extra Sider, $7) is light and sweet and the perfect accompaniment to lunch. On tap there are three different draught beers from 4 Pines ($7-$8) with bottled beers including Franziskaner Wiessbier (Germany, $9 for 500ml), Stiegl premium lager (Austria, $7.50), Monteith's black beer (New Zealand, $7.50), Dalgety Red ale (Australia, $9) and Dalgety smoked porter (Australia, $9.50).

housemade breads at freda's chippendale
Housemade breads and Turkish sujuk sausages 

Even with interesting fillings, it's hard not to notice the bread. Filled with plenty of air bubbles, the bread is so pillowy soft you want to nestle your head against it. The bread is baked in-house, used for sandwiches at lunch, and served as a side at dinner to mop up sauces.

carrot cake at freda's chippendale
Carrot cake $7

As a sweet tooth, it's frustrating to have no offer of dessert at a bar, but to have homemade sweets on the menu is an incredulous offer too good to refuse. Freda's has a pastry chef on board, with different cakes baked each day. The carrot cake is heavily spiced, a dark moist cake studded with walnuts.

chocolate whisky cake freda's chippendale
Chocolate, raisin and whisky cake $7

And the chocolate, raisin and whisky cake is a pearler too, light in texture but laced liberally with whisky.

hair ads at freda's chippendale
Stylin'

As we leave, Simon tells us about the first spit roast barbecue they're hosting on the following Monday. Lamb. On. A. Spit? Say no more.

lamb on a spit at freda's chippendale
Ibrahim Kasif, Head Chef, basting the lamb

We return on Monday after work, turning around the corner to be greeted by a lamb slowly rotating on a spit amidst plumes of tantalising charcoal smoke.

salting the lamb on the spit at freda's chippendale
Simon Cancio, Operating Partner, sprinkling salt onto the lamb 

The lamb has been on the barbecue since about 1pm, Simon tells us. It smells amazing, especially when Ibrahim bastes the skin with marinade using a brush made from sprigs of thyme and rosemary.

basting the lamb on the spit at freda's chippendale
Oh yeah, do you like that

The lamb weighs about 13 kilograms with Simon guessing its age at just under two years old. It's come from Cowra, sourced from Breakout River Meats with animals grazing along the banks of the Lachlan River.

stoking coals at freda's chippendale
Stoking the coals

The spit roast concept is one that both Simon and Marty hope will continue on a fortnightly basis. They are thinking of featuring a different animal on the spit and then eventually convincing chefs from other restaurants to participate. "I'd love to get someone with experience in Chinese cuisine to come down and do a roast duck in a drum, for example," says Simon. "We could do all kinds of things."

The idea is to create a community event, especially one for fellow chefs who often have Monday nights off. "There's never anything happening on Monday night."

crispy lamb skin at freda's chippendale
Glorious crispy lamb skin

After several hours on the spit, the lamb is hauled off and allowed to rest before Ibrahim breaks it down into individual portions.

carving the spit roasted lamb at freda's chippendale
Ibrahim carving the lamb

raw lamb on a spit at freda's chippendale
Simon putting the second lamb onto the spit roast

A second lamb is mounted on the spit, and even when rain starts to spit from the skies, a couple of umbrellas are whipped out to save the day.

protecting the lamb from rain at freda's chippendale
Gallant chivalry will save you from the rain

bloody mary cocktail at freda's chippendale
Freda's Bloody Mary $17 and Strawberry Mezcal ($17, blackboard special)

As the lamb is being prepped, we prop up the bar and settle into a couple of cocktails. I'm all over the Freda's Bloody Mary which has a sucker punch of chilli and pepper with every mouthful. The boys behind the bar take their cocktails seriously here, mixing up pepper and celery seed infused vodka with worchester sauce, lemon juice, pink salt, tomato juice, tabasco, green olive and pickled chilli. The green olive and cherry tomato speared on a skewer makes a pleasant change from the usual celery stalk.

freda's chippendale
Dinner blackboard menu

The dinner menu has a stronger Mediterranean leaning, a natural influence from Simon's own cultural heritage - his father is Spanish and his mother is half-Lebanese. These are the dishes he grew up with, he says. The food is simple and speaks for itself.

oysters at freda's chippendale
Oysters (from Forster) $12 for four

By this stage, Simon is treating us like old friends, just like he seems to have-a-chat with so many other patrons in the place. There's an obvious camaraderie between everyone on staff, who all look genuinely happy to be there. Even on a Monday night, Freda's is eventually packed out, filled with a mix of uni students or local residents.

Business has been steadily growing, Simon tells us. On Friday and Saturday nights they have about 300 people come through even though the venue can only seat about 95. The increase has been organic, with most people finding out about the place through word-of-mouth. "But we still get locals who stumble upon us and can't believe they didn't know about us earlier."

He hopes to eventually build a kitchen downstairs in the basement when they make enough money.

spit roasted lamb at freda's chippendale
Spit roasted lamb with yoghurt and village salad $22

After a plate of freshly shucked oysters, we move onto the spit roasted lamb. At $22 it seems quite a lot until you realise it comprises a three-plate affair: lamb; yoghurt and village salad; and a pile of fresh bread.

yoghurt and village salad at freda's chippendale
Yoghurt and village salad

The village salad and yoghurt have a Greek feel, perfect as a side to the spit-roasted lamb. Slivers of radish, rounds of sweet cucumber, wedges of tomato and curls of onion have been tossed lightly with dressing. The tzatziki yoghurt is thick and creamy, swollen with tiny diced cucumber.

spit roasted lamb at freda's chippendale
Spit roasted lamb

And then the lamb. Oh where does one begin? Hunks of fatty lamb so soft and plump, that the flesh melts in the mouth as you sigh with happiness. There are bits of caramelised fat, made sweet by the marinade, and a final reward of lamb skin, glazed to a toffee-tinted sheen.

capsicum cooler cocktail freda's chippendale
Capsicum Cooler $16
Sagatiba pura cachaca, Massenez ginger liqueur, red capsicum, lemon juice and tonic water

Who cares if it's Monday? On our second round of cocktails, I opt for the Capsicum Cooler, lured by the promise of cachaca--a Portuguese liqueur made from fermented sugarcane--and Massenez ginger liqueur. It's not as spicy as the Bloody Mary but still has a gentle heat from the ginger liqueur.

pickled octopus at freda's chippendale
Pickled octopus $17

The pickled octopus is deliriously tender, sharpened by the tang of vinegar. To make the octopus tender, Ibrahim explains, the octopus is blanched three times and then cooked in a water bath for about twenty minutes. It's a dish that would go great with beer, pecked at slowly throughout the evening.

escabeche of mussels at freda's chippendale
Escabeche of mussels $17

"You have to try the mussels. They're one of the house specialities," Simon insists. The mussels have only recently reinstated to the menu after a brief hiatus. "Everyone kept asking for them," says Ibrahim.

It's a recipe he's worked on steadily, tweaking things here and there. The secret is in the chilli oil, slowly infused with bay leaves, onions and spices. The mussels are a revelation too, radiant with natural flavour and still soft and supple in the mouth.

flourless chocolate cake at freda's chippendale
Flourless chocolate cake $7
with Pedro Ximenez sherry

We finish with the flourless chocolate cake, ethereally light and fluffy, and a nightcap of Pedro Ximenez sherry.

It feels like a small bar here, with the warmth and genuine hospitality of people emotionally invested in their business, but in the spacious surrounds of a large warehouse where you do have room to move, and there isn't a massive queue at the bar. The best of both worlds. And housemade goods to boot.


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Freda's on Urbanspoon

Freda’s Bar & Canteen
107-109 Cleveland Street, Chippendale, Sydney
Tel: +61 (02) 8971 7336

Freda's Facebook page
Twitter: @fredas_sydney

Opening hours:
Monday to Friday 11.00am-12 midnight
Saturday 4pm-12 midnight
Sunday 4pm-10pm

Related Grab Your Fork posts:
Chippendale - Abercrombie Hotel (deep-fried pizza and Gaytimes)
Chippendale - Cafe Giulia (rosemary and sea salt handcut chips)
Chippendale - Lansdowne Hotel (cheap steaks and nachos)
Newtown - Luxe Bakery Cafe (baguettes, salads and tarts)
23 comments - Add some comment love

posted by Helen (Grab Your Fork) on 3/26/2012 03:01:00 am


Thursday, March 22, 2012

Habib's Charcoal Chicken, Bankstown

hairdryer at habib's charcoal chicken, bankstown

There's a tantalising smell of charcoal as you approach Habib's Chicken in Bankstown. It's the heady scent of meat slowly caramelising, the hiss of chicken fat hitting the coals, and then the loud whoosh of a hairdryer used to fan the glowing embers.

A hairdryer? In a chicken shop? It takes pride of place by the barbecue at Habib's, mounted on its own little stand before being removed, flicked on and brandished bravely in the direction of the red hot charcoal. The rush of air sends burning embers flying everywhichway while the cage of flattened chickens continues turning, like a medieval torture device.

habib's charcoal chicken, bankstown
Inside Habib's

Habib's isn't fancy. It's more of a takeaway chicken shop with extended seating. The tables are lined with two layers of heavy plastic sheeting, and dotted with tissue boxes for help-yourself serviettes.

garlic sauce, lebanese bread and salad at habib's charcoal chicken, bankstown
Garlic sauce, salad, Lebanese bread, chips and pickles

The decor is minimal but who has time to look at furnishings when the food arrives this quickly. Orders are taken at the counter but delivered to your table. It's cheaper to get your charcoal chicken takeaway ($14.50 whole) but eating in ($20 whole) gets you a basket stacked with soft rounds of Lebanese bread, a plate of pickles and a saucer of creamy toum, or garlic sauce, that's made for dipping.

habib's charcoal chicken, bankstown
Whole charcoal chicken $20 ($14.50 takeaway)

The chicken is the star of the show, snipped with poultry shears into quarters. The chicken is so blistering hot from the grill you'll burn your fingers, but it's hard not to forge through the pain, tearing off strips of tender chicken straight from the bone.

And the skin. Oh the skin. It's black and charred and crisp and caramelised, imparted with a smokiness that lingers on your palate and your fingers. Cutlery? Who needs a fork when you're ripping into this stuff caveman style.

hot chips at habib's charcoal chicken, bankstown
Medium hot chips $5

Can you have chicken without chips? I think not. The shoestring fries are blessed with one of Australia's finest seasonings - chicken salt, in a delicious shade of fluorescent yellow. Both the chicken and chips are even better when dipped in garlic sauce.

tabouli at habib's charcoal chicken, bankstown
Tabouli and deep fried cauliflower $6.50

Choose from the bain-marie of salads to balance out your meal. The tabouli has enough greenery to offset any calorific guilt which paves the way for deep-fried cauliflower, baptised in hot oil until the florets become nutty and brown.

fried cauliflower at habib's charcoal chicken, bankstown
Deep-fried cauliflower

habib's charcoal chicken, bankstown
Charcoal chicken

Family-friendly, easy on the wallet and guaranteed to have you looking at your hairdryer in a whole new light when you get home.

habib's charcoal chicken, bankstown


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Habib's Charcoal Chicken on Urbanspoon
Habib's Charcoal Chicken 
24 Restwell Street, Bankstown, Sydney
Tel: +61 (02) 9708 2219


Opening hours: 
Monday to Saturday 10am–midnight, Sunday 10am–10.30pm


Related Grab Your Fork posts:
Bankstown - Pho An
Charcoal chicken - El Jannah, Granville
20 comments - Add some comment love

posted by Helen (Grab Your Fork) on 3/22/2012 12:26:00 am



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