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

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Yiamas Greek Taverna, St Peters

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Yiamas Greek Taverna is one of those places you've sped past hundreds of times, a burst of colour and noise that suddenly appears out of nowhere on a busy highway. It's a spot that only locals seem to know about, as drivers whizz past obliviously.

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Mythos Greek beer $7 and Yia Mas Merlot $6

You'll find Yiamas just past St Peters station, where King Street turns into the six-lane Princes Highway opposite the sprawling greenery of Sydney Park. We amble in at 6pm on a Saturday night to find the restaurant fully booked, and gratefully accept the offer to be squeezed onto a side table.

The dining room is a sea of blue tablecloths topped with white butchers paper and no nonsense glasses and cutlery. The crowd is predominantly Greek, the room swelling with laughter and spirited conversation as Greek grandmas cluck over hyperactive grandkids and large groups tuck into huge platters of chargrilled meats.

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Saganaki cheese $14

The modestly-priced wine list offers two whites, two reds and one sparkling by the glass. The house merlot is a generous pour, even at $6 a glass ($22 bottle). I'm straight into the Mythos ($7), a Greek lager that is crisp and light.

It's a good match with the pickled octopus ($16.50), a sprawl of tentacles that are smoky from the grill, but tender to bite. Saganaki cheese is like a mattress of golden-fried dairy, a squeaky slice of kefalogaviera topped with slices of grilled fresh tomato drizzled liberally with olive oil.


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Glykadia sweet breads $15

We move onto glykadia sweet breads, a tumble of delicious thymus glands pan-fried so the outside is slightly crisp. Garnished with parsley and a heavy squeeze of lemon, it's a lesson in simplicity and the joys of offal.

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Ortikia marinated and chargrilled quails $23.90

I'm happy to relinquish cutlery to attack the ortikia quails with my fingers. Marinated and then cooked on the grill, the flesh is tender while the skin has a finger-licking blackened char.

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Spit roast chicken $19.90

Can you really have a Greek feast without a spit roast? We dive into plates of spit roast chicken and spit roast lamb that arrive with a heavy dusting of oregano.

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Spit roast lamb $19.90

The chicken is a little dry in parts but there's plenty of fatty goodness to be found in the plate of lamb, especially the glorious bits with skin.

There's plenty of food and we eat our fill for about $25 per head. Good value in anyone's language.

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Yiamas Greek Taverna on Urbanspoon

Yiamas Greek Taverna
5 Princes Highway, St Peters, Sydney
Tel: +61 (02) 9517 9492


Opening hours:
Lunch Thursday to Friday 11.30am-3pm
Dinner Wednesday to Sunday 6pm-10pm


Related Grab Your Fork posts:
Greek - Diethnes, Sydney
Greek - Xanthi, Sydney

St Peters - Southern Cross Hotel
15 comments - Add some comment love

posted by Helen (Grab Your Fork) on 6/28/2012 03:26:00 am


Monday, June 25, 2012

Lantern by Wagaya, Sydney

Touchscreen menu at Lantern by Wagaya Sydney

Deep fried chicken at the press of a button. Have we arrived in some kind of heaven? The beauty of the touchscreen menu at Wagaya is not just the ease of ordering (no need to flag down disinterested waitstaff) but the lightning speed at which it arrives.

Lantern by Wagaya is the newest offering by Wagaya, the touchscreen izakaya-style restaurant opposite the Entertainment Centre. Lantern by Wagaya is not the easiest place to find -- hidden on the second floor of the Sun Tower complex on George St -- but regulars of the former Greenbox Karaoke will know the drill. It sits across the road from World Square - keep an eye out for the signboard on the footpath and take the lift to level two.

Booths and lantern decor inside Lantern by Wagaya Sydney
Booths and lanterns

The interior has been given a fancy facelift, the elevator doors opening to a dramatic wooden archway. There's a view of the kitchen before you're led past the corridor of intergalactic neon-lit karaoke rooms and then a dedicated dining room at the back. Dark timber booths, hanging lanterns and a pebbled pathway create an oasis of calm, contrasting with the spectacle of George Street traffic below.

Tranquility depends on silence. Ours happened to be broken by the plaintive screeching known in some circles as singing. While the bar area separates the dining booths and the karaoke rooms at Mizuya, here they're located right to each other.

Karaoke always sounds better when you're the one on the microphone but listening to a stranger wailing Adele as you're trying to eat your dinner is another form of torture entirely.

Fried chicken karaage at Lantern by Wagaya Sydney
Deep fried chicken karaage $7.90

Luckily the delivery of chicken karaage to our table provides momentary distraction. The plate of deep fried chicken pieces is golden in colour with a crunchy batter, but the flesh is a little dry, helped somewhat by the dab of mayonnaise in one corner (is there going to be a national shortage of Kewpie mayonnaise after last night's episode of Masterchef Australia?)

Deep fried camembert cheese at Lantern by Wagaya Sydney
Camembert cheese fry $6.90

Suze had taken charge of ordering as soon as we sat down, tapping in fried cheese, fried salmon skin and fried chicken in rapid succession. "Is that ok?" she asked. "This is why we're friends," I replied.

The camembert cheese fry is a modest portion of four skinny wedges of cheese battered and fried, the batter light and crispy but missing the gooey interior we're after.

Deep fried salmon skin at Lantern by Wagaya Sydney
Salmon skin age $5.50

Deep fried salmon skin is more salmon flesh than skin, not altogether a bad idea unless the strips have been fried for so long that the pieces are more of a dry heavy crunch. We manage to partially revive these in the accompanying bowl of dipping sauce.

Mochi rice cake gratin at Lantern by Wagaya Sydney
Rice cake gratin $7.90

Rice cake gratin is a bubbling mass of melted cheese over four balls of mochi rice cake. The mochi is ideal for glutinous rice lovers, like a rice-version of bubblegum that stretches stubbornly with each chew. A puddle of Japanese sweet curry gives this a sense of wintry comfort, hugged by lashings of cheese and dotted with cherry tomato halves.

Aburi salmon sushi at Lantern by Wagaya Sydney
Lightly grillled salmon sushi $9.90

And look, something that hasn't been deep fried! Four pillows of sushi rice are draped with slices of pink salmon, blowtorched to a satisfying smokiness. Drizzled with Kewpie mayonnaise and topped with spoonfuls of tobiko flying fish roe, we finish eating just as Room Number 3 determinedly starts a Bad Romance with Lady Gaga.

Suggestion? Eat here while you make use of the karaoke rooms. The singing is guaranteed to sound much better.


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Lantern By Wagaya on Urbanspoon

Lantern by Wagaya
Level 2, Sun Tower
591 George Street, Sydney
Tel: +61 (02) 9283 8828

Opening hours:

Monday to Sunday 11.30am-2am


Related Grab Your Fork posts:
Mizuya, Sydney
Wagaya, Sydney
20 comments - Add some comment love

posted by Helen (Grab Your Fork) on 6/25/2012 01:17:00 am


Thursday, June 21, 2012

Hai Au Lang Nuong, Canley Vale

Charcoal barbecue banana leaf fish and chicken at Hai Au Lang Nuong Canley Vale

You can smell it from a block away. It’s the smoky hiss of charcoal and the tantalising aroma of slowly barbecuing fish and chicken wrapped up in banana leaves. Every Aussie loves a barbie, but this is food by fire, Vietnamese-style. It all happens on the weekend, when Hai Au Lang Nuong starts up the massive barbecue that faces onto the street, giving passersby a bird's eye view of all the action.

Inside Hai Au Lang Nuong Canley Vale
Inside Hai Au Lang Nuong, Canley Vale

This corner restaurant is hugely popular with locals, filled with Vietnamese families and big groups of friends. The decor is bright and lurid, a dizzying collection of mirrors, posters and giant TV screens playing Vietnamese pop videos. The shuttered windows are rolled open so you’re exposed to the street, an open-air experience that feels more Saigon than Sydney.

Charcoal chicken at Hai Au Lang Nuong Canley Vale
Oh!! Hot Chick 

Charcoal grilled chicken at Hai Au Lang Nuong Canley Vale
Ga Chay Bo Nuong Than charcoal grilled chicken $40 (Fri, Sat and Sun only)

The ga chay bo nuong than grilled chicken ($40 for a whole) is the big house specialty, an organic free range chook delivered fresh off the barbie. The skin is caramelised and a little charred; the flesh is mouthwateringly succulent and juicy.

If you close your eyes you get a faint hint of sweetness from the banana leaf wrapping. Dunk the chicken into the saucer of sweet chilli sauce and follow up with mouthfuls of the accompanying glutinous sticky rice.

Banana leaf chicken at Hai Au Lang Nuong Canley Vale
Wrapping chicken with banana leaves

Banana leaf charcoal fish and chicken at Hai Au Lang Nuong Canley Vale
Banana leaf fish and chicken over charcoal

It’s not often you find bo la lop nuong than ($25) in Sydney restaurants: little cigars of lemongrass and black pepper beef wrapped up in glossy betel leaves and then speared onto a skewer.

Bo La Lot betel leaf grilled beef at Hai Au Lang Nuong Canley Vale
Bo La Lop Nuong Than grilled beef with betel leaf $25 

The real magic happens when you cook these on the charcoal grill at your table, charring the leaves so they release their spicy fragrance.

Bo La Lot betel leaf grilled beef at Hai Au Lang Nuong Canley Vale
 Cooking the beef skewers over charcoal

Bo La Lot betel leaf grilled beef at Hai Au Lang Nuong Canley Vale
Barbecued beef skewers in betel leaves

Marinated deer at Hai Au Lang Nuong Canley Vale
Marinated deer $25 


Marinated deer, crocodile, beef or ox tongue ($25 each) are just some of the DIY grill options on offer. Sear them well then make your own rice paper rolls, bundling them up with a bounty of vermicelli noodles, pickled vegetables and mint and perilla leaves.

Barbecue deer at Hai Au Lang Nuong Canley Vale
Cooking the deer on the grill

Vermicelli and salad at Hai Au Lang Nuong Canley Vale
Vermicelli and salad 

Lotus stem salad at Hai Au Lang Nuong Canley Vale
Goi Ngo Sen lotus stem salad $15 

Hai Au has all the Vietnamese classics like canh chua hot and sour soup ($15-$25) and bo tai chanh ($15) raw beef salad with lemon. But there are plenty of more interesting dishes, like a zingy lotus stem salad ($15) and clay pot stewed scampi ($18 for two) smothered in a heady seafood sauce.

Stewed scampi at Hai Au Lang Nuong Canley Vale
Tom Kho Tau stewed scampi with Hai Au secret signature sauce $18 

Bun Rieu crab and tomato noodle soup at Hai Au Lang Nuong Canley Vale
Bun Rieu crab and tomato noodle soup $10 

The bun rieu ($10) is on the lunch menu but they’ll serve it at dinner if you ask nicely. It’s a heart-warming tomato and crab soup with vermicelli noodles, bobbing with crab roe, cubes of pig's blood and curls of squid.

Crispy pork offal at Hai Au Lang Nuong Canley Vale
Doi Truong Chien Don crisp pork offal $15 

The adventurous should seek out the crispy duck tongues ($18) or the crisp pork offal ($15), fatty tubes of large intestine served with a spicy tomato sauce.

Extra crispy clay pot rice at Hai Au Lang Nuong Canley Vale
Extra crispy rice

The rice gets special treatment here too. Order the extra crispy version if you're happy to wait a little longer. You'll receive a crusty layer of rice, scooped from the bottom of a clay pot that is perfect for mopping up sauces.

Durian shakes and Vietnamese salads at Hai Au Lang Nuong Canley Vale
Durian shakes and Vietnamese salads 

Grilled purple sweet potato dessert at Hai Au Lang Nuong Canley Vale
Kem Khoai Lan Nuong grilled purple sweet potato $8 (Fri, Sat and Sun only)

If you still have room, you can keep on carbing with grilled sweet potatoes, cooked on the barbecue. It's a starch-fest that's best shared, garnished with condensed milk and peanuts and served with ice cream on the side.

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Dining room at Hai Au Lang Nuong, Canley Vale

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Hai Au Lang Nuong on Urbanspoon

Hai Au Lang Nuong
2/48 Canley Vale Road, Canley Vale, Sydney
Tel: +61 (02) 9724 9156


Opening hours:
Monday to Sunday 10am-10pm

This article appears in the June 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)
Bamiyan, Five Dock (Afghani cuisine)
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)
Rhinedorf German Restaurant, Beverly Hills (German pork knuckle)
Sea Sweet, Parramatta (Lebanese sweet kashta cheese burger)

Sizzling Fillo, Lidcombe (Filipino pork hock crackling)
Taipei Chef, Artarmon (Taiwanese smoked chicken)
Tehran, Granville (Persian cuisine)
Tuong Lai, Cabramatta (Vietnamese sugar cane prawns)
20 comments - Add some comment love

posted by Helen (Grab Your Fork) on 6/21/2012 01:05:00 am


Monday, June 18, 2012

Sixpenny, Stanmore

James Parry and Daniel Puskas at Sixpenny Stanmore

Are restaurant gardens the new must-have feature for 2012? As diners start to pay more attention to locally sourced and sustainable produce, the restaurant garden provides instant kudos, creating a tangible connection between the food from the soil and the food on your plate.

At Sixpenny in Stanmore, head chefs James Parry and Daniel Puskas have transformed the backyard of their restaurant into a productive herb garden, complete with greenhouse and working beehive. As we make our way through the degustation-only menu, many of the vegetables, we learn, have been sourced from James' family farm in Bowral, a 90-minute drive away in the Southern Highlands.

Sixpenny Stanmore dining room
The main dining room at Sixpenny

There's been nothing but glowing praise in reviews of Sixpenny, which opened up in Stanmore in March this year. It sits on the former Codfather site, run by Ross Godfrey who also owned Oscillate Wildly, the restaurant where Parry and Puskas first met.

Parry (Noma, Mugaritz, Blue Hill at Stone Barns, Manly Pavilion and Rockpool) and Puskas (Tetsuya's, Marque, WD-50 and Sepia) have an impressive CV between them. Both are former winners of the Josephone Pignolet Young Chef of the Year Award.

The Sixpenny name comes from the 1850s era, when sixpence restaurants would provide the working class with a set meal.

Housemade sourdough at Sixpenny Stanmore
House-made sourdough with mascarpone butter

It's a dismal wet weekend when we arrive for lunch which makes the sunny charm of our waitstaff even more appealing. The table isn't booked under my name but a colleague's, and our waiter admits that he'd recognised their name and cross-referenced it with their bookings to confirm that they had indeed dined several weeks earlier. It's a level of attentiveness that impresses.

There are eight of us dining today which qualifies us for the private dining room. It's a relief to escape the main dining room which feels more geared toward couples, an elegant but quiet sanctitude of hush-hush tones and muted conversations.

Chefs table private dining room with kitchen view at Sixpenny Stanmore
Chefs table private dining room with view into the kitchen 

We tumble chaotically into the private dining room, a chef's table arrangement that affords us a coveted view into the kitchen. A huge glass window is like a giant live tv screen into all the action and we can't help but periodically press our noses up against the glass like starstruck kids outside a candy store.

James Parry working with sourdough
James Parry working with sourdough

The kitchen is clean, well-organised and devoid of any Gordon Ramsay-style drama. Here is James Parry genially working with a colleague on the sourdough, there is Daniel Puskas, calmly halving macadamia nuts one by one.

Turning out the proofed sourdough for the oven
Turning out the proofed sourdough for baking

There's an easy sense of camaraderie that seems to exist in the kitchen. Everyone knows what to do and when to step in or step aside. The kitchen works on plating one dish at a time - occasionally dessert is plated off to the side.

Garden pickles and rye bread at Sixpenny Stanmore
Garden pickles and rye bread with virgin butter

The menu is degustation only. Six courses will cost you $115 ($170 with wine); eight courses costs $135 ($210 with wine). It's the same price at lunch or dinner. Ninety per cent of the wine list is from New South Wales.

We opt for the full eight courses, preceded by a generous series of snacks that number five in total. The first two are presented on one plate, a trail of garden pickles and squares of rye bread smeared with rye-infused virgin butter. Virgin butter is the stage just before freshly churned butter splits and leaches out buttermilk. It's a grainy but creamy spread, famously served at Noma, a restaurant listed on Parry's CV.

The garden pickles are a whimsical exploration of colour, texture and flavour. We're transfixed by the day lily buds, mouse melons (tiny watermelon-lookalikes that taste like cucumber), crunchy radish quarters and heirloom carrots, which we dip into the quenelle of radish yoghurt speckled with tarragon.

Salt and vinegar kipfler potato chips at Sixpenny Stanmore
Salt and vinegar kipfler potato chips

Salt and vinegar kifpler potato chips look more like pressed dried flowers, parchment-thin slices so sheer you could read a newspaper through them.

Salt and vinegar kipfler potato chips at Sixpenny Stanmore
Salt and vinegar kipfler potato chips

It almost reminds me of the high school science experiment where you'd look at cellulose layers of an onion through a microscope. The chips are astoundingly crunchy and liberally daubed with salt and vinegar.

Duck tongue and knuckle sandwich at Sixpenny Stanmore
Duck tongue and knuckle sandwich
Wine match: NV Centennial Blanc De Blanc, Southern Highlands

Snacks three and four are their increasingly infamous duck tongue and knuckle sandwich. We're no strangers to duck tongue and they're prepared deftly here, cooked to a melting softness that contrasts with the crisp cup of lettuce.

The playful but elegant knuckle sandwich utilises braised pork knuckle, slipped between Lilliputian slices of toasted brioche spread with sweet dandelion and apple jelly.

Cheddar cheese and onions at Sixpenny Stanmore
Cheddar cheese and onions
Wine match: 2011 Andrew Thomas Six Degrees Semillon, Hunter Valley

It's at least half an hour before our first official course hits the table, a dish simply titled 'Cheddar cheese and onions'. Sheaths of baby onion act as vessels for the cheese water, an intricate process of boiling cheese to extract the cheese oils which are then concentrated into a cheese essence. The curls of onion are also poached in the cheese broth.

It seems like an inordinately complex method to create a cheese-flavoured water that is frustratingly subtle, but the dish is undeniably beautiful to look at, garnished with carefully arranged chickpea shoots.

Crab with macadamia at Sixpenny Stanmore
Crab, silky macadamia and camomile
Wine match: 2010 Mount Majura Chardonnay, Canberra District

The crab course is a cloud of hand-picked mud crab doused in a silky macadamia milk spiked with toasted macadamias and carefully placed chamomile flowers. It's a revelation for the tastebuds.


Macadamia and crab? 'Why didn't anyone think of this sooner?' we collectively cry. It's a glorious match, the buttery macadamia nut enhancing the sweet notes of crab in a way that is unaffected yet exquisitely beautiful. It's my highlight dish of my day.

Roast sweet potato with fish roe at Sixpenny Stanmore
Roast sweet potato, fish roe and whey sauce
Wine match: 2007 Patina Fume Sauvignon Blanc, Orange

Two wilted sweet potato leaves appear to act as modesty fans for a plank of sweet potato poached in buttermilk and then roasted. It hides a skerrick of salted mullet roe, blanketed by a foam of light but creamy whey sauce.

Snapper with pumpkin cream cream at Sixpenny Stanmore
Snapper, pumpkin seed cream and soft leeks
Wine match: 2011 BK Wines Pinot Rose, Adelaide Hills, South Australia

Delicately cooked fillets of snapper hide in a puddle of pumpkin seed cream, and although the components are dissimilar it seems to echo the crab dish earlier on. The snapper has been poached in pumpkin seed milk, offset with miniature mounds of pumpkin seed crumbs and sauteed leeks.

Pork jowl with crackling at Sixpenny Stanmore
Slow roasted pork jowl (bonus course)

A bonus course at any restaurant feels like Christmas, but when it's a bonus dish of slow-roasted pork jowl it feels like all our Christmases have come at once. The crown of golden crackling is enough to make us weak at the knees, but we're also mesmerised by the thick layers of cheek fat wrapped around a thin layer of meat.

If there's a dish you'd knowingly make your last it's this. The milky fat is a guilt-ridden decadence, capped off with the noisy crunch of brittle blistered sticky crackling.

Daniel Puskas at Sixpenny Stanmore
Daniel Puskas overseeing the plating of the hanger steak 

Service operates in a similar vein to Noma with chefs accompanying or sometimes replacing waitstaff when delivering dishes to the table. And so we find Parry and Puskas entering the dining room on more than one occasion, dutifully dispensing dishes with quiet humility.

Daniel Puskas at Sixpenny Stanmore
Daniel Puskas 

We don't keep strict track of it all, but by the end of lunch it seems that every member of the kitchen brigade has taken it in turns to assist in service. Each chef has the chance to explain the components and process of at least one course, a detail that personalises the dining entire experience. It's like the culinary equivalent of visiting a farmers market and meeting the people behind the produce, creating an exchange that is equally rewarding and gratifying.

Coorong hanger steak at Sixpenny Stanmore
Coorong hanger, smoky cabbage and mustard leaves
Wine match: 2010 Grove Estate Nebbiolo/Primitivo, Hilltops

The Coorong hanger steak is our final savoury course, a wondrously flavourful cut of meat found near the diaphragm. It's cooked to a plump and succulent state of rare, served with streaks of mustard leaf puree and a smoky cabbage cream.

Restaurant garden and beehive at Sixpenny Stanmore
[Clockwise from top left]: Backyard beehive; garden herbs, outdoor stove and smoker;
and the restaurant garden with greenhouse 

A brief interlude between savouries and dessert gives us time to explore the back garden, admiring the herb pots, greenhouse, smoker and beehive.

Ginger root at Sixpenny Stanmore
Ginger root

"We'll let you guess this dish", our waiter says mysteriously as he puts down the next course. Mrs Pig Flyin' is onto the surprise immediately, quickly identifying Jerusalem artichoke as the ginger imposter. The Jerusalem artichoke (Americans call them sunchokes) has been cooked in a ginger syrup but the resultant ginger heat is gentle, although diced glace ginger offers a bigger kick. It's a clever play on appearances and the carriage of flavour.

Candied rhubarb and why macarons at Sixpenny Stanmore
Candied rhubarb and whey macarons


Candied rhubarb stalks look more like raspberry twizzlers entwined on the plate. Dried at a low temperature for a long time, the rhubarb has a pleasing tartness and chewiness, like an old-fashioned fruit strap. Whey macarons are airy sugary mouthfuls that disintegrate into smithereens at first bite.

Beetroots with mead and brioche at Sixpenny Stanmore
Beetroots, mead, steamed brioche and honey ice cream
Wine match: 2010 Lerida Botrytis Pinot Gris, Canberra District

A pair of the tiniest beetroot, as small as your pinky fingernail, have been cooked in mead before perching on top of a disc of steamed brioche. It's an odd combination, especially the texture of the brioche which tastes like soggy French toast, but the honey ice cream provides a worthwhile distraction, pronounced in a floral sweetness that awakens the senses.

Plating dessert at Sixpenny Stanmore
Piping our next dish into milk ice cups set in egg cartons 

Our final dessert involves egg cartons, piping and several stays in the blast freezer.

Frozen rye milk dessert at Sixpenny Stanmore
Frozen rye milk
Wine match: Bethany Old Quarry Frontignac, Barosa Valley

Hidden at the bottom of our cavernous bowls are delicate cups of frozen rye milk filled with a rye ganache and then covered in a layer of rye bread crumbs. I'm not won over by this dish which feels more heavily emphasised on presentation than anything else.

Fresh peppermint tea at Sixpenny Stanmore
Fresh peppermint tea

Cookie jar at Sixpenny Stanmore
Cookie jar

And finally, the much-revered cookie jar! It's hard not to get excited by the cookie jar crammed with homemade biscuits and sweets. We exclaim over the pint-sized lamingtons, Monte Carlos, ginger snap, native ginger chocolate and Kingston biscuits. The only minor quibble is the biscuits seem to have softened slightly after being stored in the fridge.

Monte Carlos, Kingstons and petit fours at Sixpenny Stanmore
[Clockwise from top left]: Monte Carlo, Kingston, native ginger chocolate, 
lamington and ginger snap

The food is thoughtful, quirky and creative without feeling overly pretentious or self-indulgent, but if there's one thing you must remember, it's to clear your diary for a long lunch or dinner. Our lunch took 3.5 hours to get through but then we're guessing the ethos here is that good things take time. It's a small price to pay.


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Sixpenny on Urbanspoon

Sixpenny
83 Percival Road, Stanmore, Sydney
Tel: +61 (02) 9576 6666


Opening hours:
Dinner Wednesday to Saturday from 6pm
Lunch Saturday and Sunday from 12pm
23 comments - Add some comment love

posted by Helen (Grab Your Fork) on 6/18/2012 02:58:00 am



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