EDIT: Berta has now closed
Phew! I'm back. So after a whirlwind month that included trips to Dubai, Melbourne and Hong Kong, I'm home again in Sydney. I've missed you. There was a sigh of happiness at Sydney's blue skies, waking up to birds chirping and there may have even been a tear or two when I was reunited with my bed. It's the simple things.
And despite the jet leg and impending sickness, nothing could hold me back from dinner with friends at Berta. Each Tuesday, Berta holds a sagra night. Sagra means festival in Italian and it's usually linked to a food festival of some kind. At Berta they use their sagra nights to showcase a seasonal ingredient, creating a one-night-only four-course menu. It's just like Iron Chef but without the dubbing!
Past ingredients have included watermelon, olives, figs, cherries, olive oil and honey - the honey was sourced from their own rooftop beehive. Tonight's ingredient will be mushrooms. Four courses will set you back a very modest $55. An optional accompanying wine flight costs an extra $40.
Starter 1: Lombardo peppers with porcini butter
The restaurant is full for the 8.30pm sitting, filled with a happy mix of hipsters and older couples. There's a cheerful vibe to the evening - as though we're all part of an intimate wedding reception - and it's clear that many diners are regulars.
Lombardo peppers kick off our evening, a long and skinny Italian chilli pepper sauteed in porcini butter. It's a particularly explosive start for M who cops the only super hot chilli pepper on the plate - only one in seven peppers are hot, the rest are mild. It wasn't the red one either.
Starter 2: Button mushrooms with garlic chive crochetta
The starters at the Berta sagra dinners usually include a mix of small canape-style dishes. Our second starter is a crochetta stuffed with button mushrooms and garlic chives, deliciously gooey with cheese in the middle.
Starter 3: Swiss brown mushrooms with preserved lemon ricotta cream
I'm a huge fan of head chef O Tama's take on the traditional bruschetta, slabs of toasted crostini slathered generously with preserved lemon ricotta cream and then scattered with Swiss brown mushrooms. The ricotta cream is lush and smooth, lightened with preserved lemon that adds a gentle zing.
Starter 4: Pickled pine mushrooms with cucumber, black fungus, dandelion and chilli
Pickled pine mushrooms give the acidic tang that kickstarts our appetite for more. The mushrooms have a vinegary oomph but still retain their chewiness, tossed through with fat wedges of cucumber, crunchy slivers of black fungus and fresh dandelion leaves.
Head chef O Tama Carey in the kitchen
Diners can sneak glimpses into the tiny kitchen from their seats, but there's no need to spy on the chef. After starters are served, head chef O Tama Carey comes out into the dining room to explain the entire menu. She takes us through the experimental dishes that were tried before tonight's menu was finalised. Saffron milk cap mushrooms, she soon discovered, do not taste appealing if you soak them in saffron milk - a idea she thought was genius at the time!
Lauren Norman, sommelier at Berta, then follows, explaining why she matched each wine to each dish for those partaking in the optional wine flight.
Entree: Risotto with oyster mushrooms, parmesan and horseradish mascarpone
Entrees take some time to hit the table but cooking each table's risotto to order pays off handsomely - the risotto is perfectly al dente, the plump and creamy grains cooked with texturally meaty oyster mushrooms. We're instructed to mix the parmesan and horseradish mascarpone through the dish, adding a lovely and light creaminess to every mouthful.
Main: Braised brisket with bone marrow, pancetta, button mushrooms and chestnut mushrooms
Mains of braised brisket are enticing enough, but it's the presence of bone marrow that gets us most excited. We ignore the advice to mix the bone marrow through this one, and instead scoop into directly into our mouths for maximum concentrated bliss.
The brisket is luscious anyway, tender and falling apart with a gentle nudge of a fork, amped up with salty strips of pancetta, button mushrooms and chestnut mushrooms.
Main side: Soft polenta
On the side we delve into a salad of crisp iceberg lettuce and a bowl of soft polenta that is magical in its velvety smoothness. It's rich and creamy with a distinct underlying taste of corn. I wanted to curl up in a corner and savour this slowly.
Main side: Iceberg lettuce
Dessert: Candied pine mushrooms with celery, Italian meringue and vanilla porcini dust
Mushrooms for dessert? Of course we did! Candied pine mushrooms are an ambitious undertaking and although we applaud the effort, they do feel a little out of place on the plate, with a squeaky savoury chewiness that can't be ignored. We love everything else on the plate though: the Italian meringues are blowtorched just so, and we can't get enough of the creme anglaise covered in vanilla porcini dust.
Overall a fun night out at a very wallet-friendly price. $55 for four courses is a bargain for this level of creativity and love on a plate.
The upcoming sagra theme nights are:
1 April - Apples with Phil the farmer
8 April - Celery and celeriac
15 April - Lamb
The sagra night costs $55 for four courses with an optional matched wine flight for $40. For more details or latest information, check the Berta events site or contact them directly by phone.
Berta CLOSED
Tel: +61 (02) 9264 6133
Opening hours:
Lunch Friday 12pm-3pm
Dinner Tuesday to Saturday 6pm til late
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Dear Helen,
ReplyDeleteI concur about the bone marrow. I wouldn't muck about either when something shexy and enticing is right in front of me.
Ooo mushrooms menu. I would have loved this being a mushroom fanatic. I'm with you, not sure about mushrooms in dessert though. Mushrooms should stay in savoury dishes.
ReplyDeleteSuch a delicious offering of one of my favourite ingredients. Now a Sagra with Bone Marrow would certainly have them lining up for sure!
ReplyDeleteThank you for your first paragraph. For the first time, I'm starting to feel excited about returning home later this year. Your first paragraph helped.
ReplyDeleteAnd, of course, the risotto and dessert. That too.
I have Berta's events page bookmarked. What a shame I missed out on the mushroom showcase, I'm a big mushroom fan girl.
ReplyDeleteoooooh dat bone marrow
ReplyDeleteOh man. a. all that sounds amazing. b. bone marrow. c. I've not been there yet! Will have to try it out sometime in the near future....
ReplyDeleteLooks like some pretty good value there! Bone marrow that gets you excited? You and me both!
ReplyDeleteHi Helen
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for this nice post. I've just found it. I think I definitely need to try this restaurant.
Welcome Home!
ReplyDeleteI am always so humbled and impressed by O Tama's effort to turn on a dime and cooked a new menu for a day is a living proof of the strength of the kitchen team and imagination....not to mention that the little risk in dishes they take makes this place one of the most interesting to visit in Sydney.
I think they have passed their 150th Sagra earlier this year!
So glad you made it there finally!
beautifully captured.
ReplyDeleteI love mushrooms too bits. Love the look and sound of that soft polenta. :D
ReplyDeleteI was going to go to this!
ReplyDeleteI have been wanting to try the sagra for ages, looks awesome.
What a fantastic concept to mix it up a bit with seasonal produce. Sounds like an awesome dinner!
ReplyDeleteArgh, sad I missed this... love mushrooms! And dessert sounds interesting...
ReplyDeleteMushrooms are something I can eat every day for the rest of my life. Shame I can't make it on tuesdays, they should so do weekend seatings.
ReplyDeleteused to go here fairly often when i was working close by a few years ago. the bone marrow looks mouth watering! always loved their sagra nights!
ReplyDeleteI'm not a big fan of mushrooms in general, but I must say that risotto looks delectable!
ReplyDeleteGreat to hear that Berta is also so affordable - 4 courses for $55 is a fair price!
Welcome home world traveller! I've ALWAYS wanted to go to Berta and also to one of their dinners. $55 is a bargain price!
ReplyDeleteMushroom nights would probably be my dream dinner... love mushrooms so much!!
ReplyDeleteso much mushrooms~ im definitely making my way there!
ReplyDeleteWelcome back to Sydney!
ReplyDeleteIt's such a love/hate moment to come home after a "holiday". But yes, that feeling of being reunited with your bed is probably the best feeling!!
I've never been much of a fan with mushrooms... but can't deny some bone marrow!! XD
- Cassie
Welcome back to Sydney!
ReplyDeleteIt's such a love/hate moment to come home after a "holiday". But yes, that feeling of being reunited with your bed is probably the best feeling!!
I've never been much of a fan with mushrooms... but can't deny some bone marrow!! XD
- Cassie
What did the dandelions taste like? I absolutely love what the Italians do with mushrooms!!! Sounds like an epic night.
ReplyDeleteGreat menu! I love Berta, we go quite often. I read about this dinner but couldn't get there. I know it would be excellent!
ReplyDelete