Suck My Radish http://www.suckmyradish.com Laying it all out on the table. Reviews of restaurants, cafes and bars, food and cocktail recipes for all levels, cooking tips, where to shop and everything else for anyone who loves food and cooking. Come and join our cooking community! Tue 07 Feb 2012 20 46 43 +0000 http://wordpress.org/?v=2.8 en hourly 1 Master Radish seeks forgiveness... http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=438 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=438#comments 2010-11-02 11:59:17 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=438 So I've been totally crap. And I wouldn't blame any of you for wanting to chop me up into itty bitty radish slices. But I have a good excuse. I got a new job. Working at a newspaper. There's a lot to learn and the hours have been long. But I'm back, bitches. I've put up around 10 new reviews with another 15 to come this week. I've also got three new recipes coming up this week, as well as some great shopping tips for Sydney and Melbourne. So keep checking back and tell your friends - we're back in business! Master Radish]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=438 1 When molecular cooking goes wrong... http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=428 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=428#comments 2010-05-31 04:59:41 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=428 Suck My Radish is back online after a four-week, much needed gastronomic break for Master Radish in the US. And while we have so many stories to post it's a bit daunting. We just HAD to reactivate the site with this. Master Radish's parents live in Hong Kong and recently had the pleasure of their first visit to the special economic zone's foremost culinary destination and molecular gastronomy temple; Bo Innovation. They had the degustation menu, which included a special dish to raise awareness of HIV/Aids. But this is the point: we don't care what the cause, this is a hot mess on a plate. Sorry Alvin Leung (chef) this is an epic fail. Doh. Love, Master Radish. PS News of our US adventures will start being posted this weekend, with recipes, pictures, travel advice and much much more!]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=428 0 Back in Radish Business, Baby http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=425 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=425#comments 2010-04-18 04:43:08 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=425 Well we're back in business! We've got reviews, news, shopping updates...everything. And because we've been traveling a lot, over the next few weeks you can expect a glimpse into the food of Hong Kong and Sydney, for a change of scenery. And with a four-week trip to the US coming up, get ready to radish it stateside too!]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=425 0 Emotional rollercoaster for radishes everywhere http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=422 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=422#comments 2010-04-12 00:41:11 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=422 Recently I wrote about how Suck My Radish had been brought down by a phishing scam, but that we were up and running again. No sooner had I published the note than we were brought down a second time. I considered giving up the site. Or moving to a more simple, template-based option via Bloglines or something. But then I realised I'd done FAR too much work to abandon my baby this far in. So the site is BACK UP and I've got a security expert on standby if anything else goes wrong. I've spent hours and hours re-uploading photos that were destroyed and we're back in business. I've already put up our first new post (http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/maha-restaurant-bar/) and the good news is that we've got a RAFT of content to come, with recipes, general news and reviews, with top restaurants from Melbourne, Sydney and even Hong Kong! Thanks for all your support. Please continue to support the site by telling your friends, family, coworkers, neighbours and anyone else you can think of how much you love The Radish. I love what I do and I do it for nothing - the only thing I want in return is to know people are reading the site and enjoying reading it as much as I enjoy writing it. Love you all, Master Radish]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=422 0 Transmission pending... http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=419 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=419#comments 2010-03-17 00:34:59 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=419 In the words of a famous chef, hello children. A lot of you have been writing in wondering what happened to the Radish. Well let me tell you - it's been quite the trauma. The site was hacked. Badly. And then turned into a phishing scam. To say it was devastating isn't even close to being accurate. It was absolutely heart-wrenchingly, life alteringly scary. But our wonderful IT team has resurrected the beast and now we're back! So from this weekend we will again be radishing ourselves silly. Thanks for all your support and watch this space!]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=419 1 This little piggy http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=414 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=414#comments 2010-01-17 22:00:34 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=414 I have an admission to make. I don't go to the farmer's market every weekend. I wish I did, but I don't.  But in summer, when the produce is at its most exciting and vibrant, my excuses just don't cut it. The reason for this sad state of affairs is partly one of finances and total lack of restraint (I tend to overspend wildly at the farmers market and usually walk away with my wallet around $150-$200  leaner) but also one of time and availability. Saturday morning is usually fairly busy with dog/running/appointment/errand related business. But the other day I was driving around furiously erranding (yes, that is a word I made up just then), and I saw a sign telling me that the Caulfield Farmer's Market was back on. I rushed over (they were starting to close up) and picked up some gorgeous items including blood plums that were so sweet I am convinced they were injected with sugar syrup, corn on the cob that made me scream 'the rains r comin, the rains r comin', tiny little strawberries and blueberries barely made it home unscathed and my absolute favourite vegetable in the universe: butter lettuce. These adorable gems of butter lettuce were in individual pots. That night, I came home and for dinner, I harvested a whole lettuce, tossed it with a dressing (mayo, worstershire, sesame oil, honey and lemon juice, all in very small quantities) and voila - dinner. I didn't put a single other thing in, because it would detract from the simple, fresh, amazing beauty that is the butter lettuce in fresh flight. My heart was singing at the joy of my butter lettuces. I'm having the last one tonight. Anyway, the point of this little ode to my beautiful butter lettuces is simply that if you're not heading down to your local farmers market, you're missing out. They're great all year around, but during summer they really do take on a life of their own. There are loads of markets all over Melbourne, but here are links to the two I tend to frequent:
  • Melbourne Community Farmer's Market, alternatives between Collingwood Children's Farm, GasWorks, St Kilda Peanut Farm and Abbotsford Convent (slow food):  www.mfm.com.au
  • inSeason Markets runs Caulfield, Ballarat and North Melbourne markets: www.inseasonmarkets.com.au
Otherwise, check out this site for listings of farmer's markets all around Victoria: www.whitehat.com.au/victoria/Markets/Farmers.asp]]>
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Pancakes...in a can? http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=410 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=410#comments 2010-01-04 23:44:02 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=410 Pancakes in a can? Batter Blaster has made its portly creator a $15m fortune. And believe it or not, it's organic. "We are one of the few truly innovative products to come out in the egg and dairy set,"  says creator Sean O'Connor. Click here to read how he made his fortune: money.cnn.com/2009/12/23/smallbusiness/batter_blaster.fsb/index.htm Or here to read about the product itself:  www.batterblaster.com
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Cherrylicious http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=395 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=395#comments 2009-12-22 22:00:22 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=395 This summer I found myself gifted with a 5kg box of the most stunning, sweet, juicy cherries. Rather than try to eat the entire box on my own, I decided to get creative, resulting the great Cherrython of 2010.After hours of researching, and collecting tens of recipes, I whittled the list down to four items, which would use about 4kg of my precious cargo and leave me 1kg to eat just as they are - basking in their naked glory, if you like. Anyhoo, the four I decided on were pickled cherries, cherries in spiced port, cherry jam and some cherry and Bailey's ice cream. All of these recipes were easy and fun to do and really quiet different. Three of them will go into the pantry, perhaps to be given away as gifts. The cherry and Bailey's ice cream was simply divine and will be served at the Christmas lunch table with our Christmas pudding. I paid a measly $35 for my 5kg box of cherries, but with cherries down to under $8 a kg at the supermarket, there's no reason you can't have a bash at some of these without breaking the bank. Just beware - taste the cherries before you buy. The quality can vary wildly, as can the sweetness - adjust sugar measurements accordingly. Go to Cook My Radish to check out all the recipes.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=395 0 A win for free speech http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=391 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=391#comments 2009-12-21 02:45:00 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=391 In a huge boost for free speech, Matthew Evans of the SMH has won a case against three restaurateurs who accused him of defamation for a critical review. Read the story here. And read about why Suck My Radish doesn't post negative reviews here.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=391 0 WHAT'S NEW http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=385 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=385#comments 2010-01-17 22:01:03 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=385 It's gonna be a fun-filled week with new recipes, new reviews and some random thoughts right here at home. Today check out Cafe Vue's current cocktail night at Eat My Radish and read about farmer's markets below.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=385 0 Peeling a prawn and carving a turkey http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=369 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=369#comments 2009-12-21 01:32:33 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=369 Xmas banquetI've decided to do my first Christmas lunch for all my chosen friends, lapsed Christians and any of my friends that just don't like their families. I'm having to do a fair amount of research but I've come across some brilliant videos to help me on my way! On The Age website, they've got a cute little Kitchen Secrets video page. They teach you how to carve a Turkey, peel prawns and all sorts of other tidbits. Take a look! And watch for more Christmas news shortly...]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=369 0 Fishy Christmas http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=353 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=353#comments 2009-12-16 04:55:32 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=353 prawnNo coming the raw prawn here - this might not be great for Chanukah, but for Christmas BBQs, it looks like prawns might be all the rage! Reports are indicating that giant prawns more than three times their normal size are being caught off New South Wales. Their unusual girth is being attributed to flooding earlier this year, mostly in Queensland, which has swept them into the ocean, encouraging an incredible hulk-like growth spurt. Tasty.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=353 0 You call that a dinner party? http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=328 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=328#comments 2009-12-06 22:00:21 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=328 Coconut netWell this, my friends, is a dinner party. My good friend Chef Radish and his wife pulled out all the stops to show how all you need to demonstrate first class, five-star cooking is a tiny little kitchen in Elwood and a helluva lot of talent. There were four of us for dinner at Chef Radish's house when he cooked me my birthday present - a five-course meal Shannon Bennett would be proud of. The first course was a palate refreshener; tomato water with truffle oil and watercress. It was served out of a Japanese teapot, using small sake cups. The problem was that it was so utterly divine that we started guzzling and the small portions didn't last long. Luckily, Chef Radish had catered for several refills! The first properly course was an egg net filled with fish and coconut cream, poached yabbies and mango salad. The dish had the most phenomenal warmth in the flavours, accented by the fresh crispness of the mango salad. The yabbies were perfectly cooked and married with the coconut in the net wonderfully. The next course was cured ocean trout with avocado, fennel salt, shiso shoots, honey, daikon pickle and japanese citrus. The trout was cured but not cooked and was almost like a sashmi. The teensiest spash of honey on the plate cut through everything and gave a rounded sweetness that was a really fascinating combination with the daikon. Third up was coral trout with pan fried coconut, coconut rice and lime. If you're not a fan of coconut, this isn't a dish for you. If you are a fan of coconut, this dish is better than most kinds of sex. It was a creamy coconut joy, but with the texture of the shredded coconut providing a crispy juxtaposition to the soft, fluffy rice. Again, perfectly cooked fish was an absolute piece de resistance. Lamb chops with rice, eggplant, spiced yoghurt, pomegranate and a tomato reduction was a complete about-turn, with a much more aggressive flavour.The lamb was tender and of course a completely traditional pairing with the yoghurt, but the pomegranate gave a twist, as did the tomato, which moistened the whole dish and made it all come together. Dessert was provided by Chef Radish's beautiful wife, who made a chai mousse, served with two kinds of chocolate, one being lavender, the other being ginger.  After so much amazing food (not a morsel was left of any course and quite a few second portions were dished out) a light, fluffy dessert was welcome relief! But what the dessert wasn't by any means a shrinking violet - it was light in texture but had a fantastic flavour and the chocolate, acquired on a recent trip to Tasmania, was the perfect bed-partner. And if you thought THAT was good, you should have heard the conversation! [gallery columns="4"]]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=328 0 Food on the tube http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=325 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=325#comments 2009-12-17 05:38:09 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=325 Heston's FeastsHeston Blumenthal is considered one of the fathers of truly experimental cuisine and while his talents lie in the future of cooking, his new show, Heston's Feasts draws inspiration from the past to create banquets that diners in ancient Rome and Greece would have enjoyed, but nothing is ever as it seems. Blumenthal's pub, the Fat Duck, in Berkshire, UK, is famous for its snail porridge. But that's not what I remember him for. I remember him for running an experiment, live on an English evening cookery show, where he steamed scallops, using a few drops of essential oil in the water. The experiment ended with him spitting a scallop out of his mouth onto a plate and saying (while trying to wipe his tongue) "no, no. That didn't work at all". While it struck me as possible professional suicide to experiment in this way on live, national TV, I was also somewhat awed by his chutzpah. After watching Heston's Feasts, I treat him with nothing but awe. In each episode, he chooses a different historical era and the cooks a banquet of the epoque for assorted celebrities various. The episode I was given as a sneak peak featured The Tudors, which is the episode that happens to air on this Sunday. It is also my favourite historical period - I memorised every poem from Tudor Kings & Queens. Anyhoo, the celebs in this episode were: Sophie Ellis-Bextor (singer), Alex Zane (über cool TV host), Cilla Black (60s throwback), Jay Rayner (celebjournalist), Kelvin MacKenzie (former editor of The Sun and steak and kidney pie kinda bloke), Ruth Watson (restauranteur, foodie, food writer, TV presenter). The dishes Heston chooses include butterbeer, blancmange with frogs, cockentrice (a Medieval culinary creation designed to look like a mythical beast but usually made of a pig and a capon) and rice pudding disguised as bangers and mash. I am not going to go into each dish because I want you to watch the show. But this is not a show for ideas for recipes you can make yourself. This is a show about imagination and food and a little bit about history. I found it completely fascinating - the creativity Blumenthal displays in creating and plating each dish (they are like individual works of art) and the lengths he goes to in order to achieve what he needs to is just phenomenal. The other highlight is that despite some moaning and whinging from Kelvin MacKenzie (we are warned from the start that Heston is aiming to win his favour), the celebrities are really good sports. They tuck into the frog without a word of complaint - I was pleasantly surprised! Sunday, December 20, 8:30PM on SBS. ]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=325 0 Let's get something straight http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=319 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=319#comments 2009-11-16 05:55:02 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=319 choppingblockYou may have recently read about Matthew Evans, a Sydney Morning Herald critic, who is being sued for defamation based on a less-than-flattering view of a Sydney eatery. Loyal readers of Suck My Radish might wonder why we don't include any shocking reviews on our website. Allow me to explain. When I started this site, I was looking forward to being to write about food with the consistency of a 'used rubber glove' a la AA Gill, as much as to direct readers to my favourite places to dine. But I have to be realistic - I do not have the financial might of a Fairfax or a News Ltd to back me up if someone doesn't like my opinion or the opinions of my talented and loyal writers. It is for this reason that if we are severely disappointed by a restaurant, we simply don't review it. Our tactic is to not give them any publicity. This might not seem adequate, but I'm afraid that being a small website with little to no funding, it's all we can do. I'd also like to add that while there are some reviewers that give the art a bad name, giving bad reviews for entertainment purposes, I think it's really sad that reviewers in a litigious society such as ours can't just say everything they want to say without fear of retribution. Thanks for listening. Forever yours, Master Radish]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=319 1 Crispy goodness http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=315 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=315#comments 2009-11-12 05:52:32 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=315 CrispsSo you know those annoying ads for the four new chip flavours being released by Smiths? Well someone in my orifice had the brilliant idea of buying all four and testing them out. So far, the leader is Lucas' Late Night Kebab flavour and I can see why. There are traces of cumin and chilli that give it a depth, rather than just a generic meaty taste. That plus the image it conjures of a 4am feast in a kebab shop, tzatziki sliding down your chin, make it quite the treat! I would definitely say the second runner up is Vinnie's BBQ Coat Of Arms, although it does have a bit of that generic meatiness that Lucas' flavour avoided. It's still very good, with a bit of smokiness. Steve's Buttered Popcorn has me all torn up. The flavour is pleasant and tasty, very much like, well, buttered popcorn. But if I wanted to eat that particular treat, why wouldn't I buy, well, buttered popcorn? It sort of freaks me out a bit, I supposed because you can buy bagged popcorn, ready for snacking! However, it wasn't an EPIC FAIL like Aline's Caesar Salad. Poor lass - she didn't get final approval or anything on the flavour combos, but I certainly want my image associated with a pack of crisps that taste like stale lettuce and socks mixed together with an undertone of fish. No thanks. Anyway, the experiment was something a bit different to help our office's tired and crabby workers make it through to the end of the day with a little less boredom...and I might just pick up a pack of the Late Night Kebab flavour on the way home... And if you're really moved at your emotional core by any of the flavours, vote! There's only 24 hours left. http://www.smithsdousaflavour.com.au/]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=315 1 Cooking for the broken hearted http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=300 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=300#comments 2009-10-20 22:00:39 +0000 vanilla-bean http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=300 brokenheartRoughly four weeks ago, the man in my life (known henceforth as The Cinnamon Stick) confessed that he could not commit to me long-term, even after 12 months of what seemed like a pretty decent relationship. For much of the conversation, I stabbed carrot sticks into Philadelphia Cheese adhering to my belief that vegetables can be a crutch in even the most emotionally taxing encounters. Truth be told, my year with The Cinnamon Stick had not been kind to my waistline.  Sure, we both loved food, but neither of us were the kind to seek fine dining. My diet descended into a menu of pizza, pasta, crap vegetarian food (him not me), takeaway noodles, and amazing tubs of blood orange and dark chocolate ice-cream from Gelicious in Swan Street, Richmond. The Cinnamon Stick did not know how to cook. In the final breaths of our liaison he acquired a $400 set of knives, a $300 pot and a one thousand-page vegetarian cookbook. But like his recent failed foray into car purchasing – which involved four months on the internet and joining the Peuguot-lovers’ club as an honorary member (some makes of car have been changed) – these props may have just been an intellectual proposition. After the carrot sticks, I assure you there were tears, tissues and dog-like howling – even beta-Carotene does not heal all. How could he not want to be with such a sweet vanilla bean? But I resisted the vodka bottle, and started to plan how I could adjust to my new life alone on the vanilla bush. All the time in the dairy case Isn’t it funny that while giddy with love we rush around wishing we had more time, and that when suddenly ejected into a vacuum of endless me-minutes, we feel mortally terrified of how to fill that space? Like the demon child of Steve Moneghetti and Martha Stewart, in that first weekend I cleaned the house, restocked my pantry, reorganized my wardrobe by item category, cooked all of my meals for the week, and went running, walking and swimming. What a perfect good-at-life-skills way to spend the hours and days when my brain didn’t function like that of a fully actualized adult. The organising did start to creep my housemate out when I polished silver and began to make a spreadsheet listing all of my wardrobe contents. She refused to let me wash her dishes because she didn’t want to take advantage of me. Plan your recovery My boss gave me a slim little volume called How to get over your ex with a stab of the fork. It’s a truth universally recognized that feeding the hole in your face will temporarily ease the pain of forced separation, food = healing, etc. We Poles have known it for a thousand years. I was a little inspired by an interview I’d fortuitously heard on Radio National a week before the break-up. It was with a woman called Penina Petersen, who has been making a motza with a book called Table Tucker, which teaches you how to cook multiple meals at once so that you can save time and spend it with your family. She has also created a system for calculating exact portions for each recipe, so that you don’t waste food and can avoid the mid-cook-up supermarket dash. Power to Penina, but here’s a break-down of the Vanilla Bean’s much simpler break-up regimen:
  • Start with an inventory of the pantry and fridge. Do you need more condiments, spices and staples like rice and pasta? Tissues?
  • Hit the markets for fruit and veg (cheaper than Coles and the produce doesn’t look like a prop from Ikea). The supermarket yields all the dried-good essentials to restock the pantry, as well as meat to bung in the freezer, and an arsenal of canned tomatoes.
  • Chop and freeze your herbs to add to any dishes in your repertoire at any time.
  • Freeze a chicken with the words ‘BOILER’ on the bag and try to ignore the way its little legs point out of the freezer like a plea for liberation every time you reach for the ice-cream.
  • Pick a day, generally Sunday or Monday night, and chop everything up, trawl your dog-eared recipe books, cook a few dishes, and then portion each meal into a separate meal container, preferably with your ready-made scoops of rice/pasta, meat and steamed veggies in place.
  • Freeze a few portions for busier times.
  • Now reheat and eat to your heart’s content for the rest of the week, knowing that after each afternoon cocktail hour you can return to your sparkling nest and your own TV dinner.
Snacking back to sanity After the initial non-eating shock period, you may want to scoff anything that grows in the garden or has fur or feathers. Resist the urge to pork up. At the start of the week, chop up five carrots, an entire celery and two capsicums, and divide them into neat little freezer bags to pull out of the crisper when you pack your lunch in the morning. If this sounds like too much fibre, pack some low-fat Philly or humus to sweeten the ride. Other great snacks include a little bag of nuts or a few tubs of natural yoghurt, which can be swirled with market-fresh mangos, strawberries and passionfruit. If you forgot to get the fruit, mix in a spoon of jam or apricot preserve for sweetness. Feed your heart surgeons Remember those people you used to spend lazy afternoons with drinking wine; the ones you didn’t shag; the ones who are now putting your heart back together? Cooking for others is one of the most pleasing results of break-up time at the grill. A naff as it is, doing nice things for others does give you the warm fuzzes. Bona fide heart surgeons get paid squillions of dollars per hour (approximately); your personal cardiac team should at least get a meal for their troubles. Vanilla Bean, not has-been Vanilla beans in the cake-making aisle of the supermarket do look a little like dried-up earthworms reposing in their plastic transparent wrappers. I’m alone in the wrapper now; there is no cinnamon stick to share my packaging. But whatever their external circumstances, vanilla beans are self-sufficient little gems tantalizing the nose with their soft aroma. I have a pantry full of wonderful people to cook for now. They are the other ingredients I can mix with to make the perfect dessert now that cinnamon is off the menu.]]>
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Freezer Series, Part III http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=281 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=281#comments 2009-10-11 22:00:10 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=281 Crepe with raspberryThere are few greater pleasures in my life than when my mum makes homemade blintzes, essentially crepes, filled with sweet cheese and served with her homemade blueberry sauce, with cassis. These are my substitute. Blintzes aren't difficult to make - they're crepes, sometimes made using yeast, served sweet or savoury, depending on the filling. They can also be fried. But it's always nicer when someone else does it. Grandmas Crepes are found in a variety of continental-style delis in St Kilda, Caulfield and Bentleigh, and they're really good - the crepes aren't too delicate and the fillings aren't to heavy. They do strike a lovely balance. They come with a varietyof fillings, including sweet cheese and sultana, apple and some savoury fillings too. If you want stockists near you, the phone number is on the packet in the photo. At around a tenner a pack and with five to a serving, they're not expensive. They're sold fresh and I tend to buy a pack, have one or two and then freeze them individually.You can then leave them out to thaw or do the job in the microwave. Whip up a quick coulis with the frozen berries you should definitely have in your fridge and OFF YOU GO! [gallery columns="2"]]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=281 0 A trip down Carnegie lane http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=270 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=270#comments 2009-10-09 09:11:52 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=270 Russian TidbitsHeading into Carnegie to visit a local Chinese restaurant icon, I had no idea that a multicultural mecca, be it of liliputian proportions, awaited. All of the places I describe are on Koornang Road, between Princess Highway and Neerim Road. After eating lunch at Auntie's Dumplings, a local Chinese food icon, I headed off for a wander. The first place I ran into was Russian Tidbits (113 Koornang Road, 9572 3911). This little shop is absolutely fantastic with a wide array of both fresh and packet Eastern European gems. I picked up some kasia (roasted buckwheat) and lots of continental sausage. They also have Russian condiments, jellies, packet soups, sweets, biscuits and so on. This surprise was sweeter than continental cherry jam, because just the weekend before, the last continental butcher on Carlisle Street closed down. Sad. A few doors up at 117 is Asian Grocery. The sign advertises Chinese and Korean groceries, but they have a reasonable Japanese section too. The staff here are actually Chinese and there is a reasonable range of Chinese groceries, including a frozen section. I bought some dried mango and grape-flavoured bubble gum and off we went. The next stop was Mirae Mart (135 Koornang Road, 9572 2555), a mecca of Korean groceries. The range of kim chi was completely staggering. Plus, they've got huge vats of chilli paste - a one litre tub costs around $15. If you're feeding a family or doing a large dinner party it's pretty good value! I have to admit I've never cooked a lot of Korean before, only eaten it in restaurants, so I did creep around the aisles for quite a while, doing a full and thorugh inspection. They also stock some fresh vegetables, including some of the most impressive nashis and turnips I've seen this year! Also, on the same side as Russian Tidbits, there's a small alleyway that houses a tiny little Korean bakery. We picked up some wonderful slices of swiss roll style cakes, both lined with cream but one a butter vanilla and the other chocolate. They were light and fluffy. The overall selection of cakes and pastries looked very different to what you see at Chinese bakeries - there was a fantastic looking coconut bread and even some with red bean. There were also large, party-style cakes and tiny little ones to feed around four people that would be great for the last-minute birthday panic! Finally, there was a really nice selection of funky looking cafes, a gorgeous bakery and a beautifully designed Japanese cafe that I want to go back and try. Watch this space. [gallery columns="4"]]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=270 3 Style After Dark - South Melbourne Market http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=264 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=264#comments 2009-10-14 22:00:02 +0000 cheeky-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=264 Paella and red wineCorner Cecil and Coventry streets. (03) 9209 6295. I arrived at the opening night of Style After Dark pining for paella. Dreaming about this Valencian delight helped me get through the working day and Simply Spanish's version did not disappoint. The Paella Valencia, cooked in front of diner's at the Cecil Street restaurant included chorizo sausage, diced boneless chicken, calamari and mussels. It could have been a little more sloppy but at $12.5 I couldn't complain, considering the hearty serving and friendly service. We washed the paella down with two Spanish reds ($7.5 a glass) and dinner bill came to $42 for two. Brilliant. Our bellies full, we perused the other stalls, sharing a Nutella crepe with walnuts ($7.5) and indulging in some wine tasting. As far as other food goes, there was noodles, dim sum and pizza on offer but when compared with Queen Vic's night markets, the variety was seriously lacking. Hopefully as the weather gets warmer the heat will turn up at the the night market. The atmosphere was a little flat when we visited. The band was tucked away inside so we couldn't hear them strolling along Cecil street. In all I had a great night and if you're in the area I'd recommend Style After Dark as a cheap and cheerful night out. But I would not trek too far to visit. Style After Dark's spring session will run every Thursday from 5.30pm to 9.30pm until November 26. Website: www.southmelbournemarket.com.au/night_market [gallery columns="2"]]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=264 0 http://www.suckmyradish.com/258/ http://www.suckmyradish.com/258/#comments 2009-05-28 22:41:54 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/258/ http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=258 0 The Perfect Baked Potato http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=246 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=246#comments 2009-09-26 11:56:47 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=246 Baked potatoThere's nothing as wonderful as crawling onto the couch after a day at work you'd rather forget, with the perfect jacket baked potato. It doesn't matter your poison - melted cheese, baked beans, sour cream and chopped chives, creamed corn. Whatever. The principal player is the vehicle. The spud. One day I embarked on a quest to understand the technique behind the perfect baked potato. This quest started online. I read every opinion on baked potatoes I could find. And I realised quickly  that everything I'd been doing was wrong - it was no surprise that my baked potatoes were, well, crap. The biggest myth about baked potatoes, and by far the biggest downfall, is the use of tin foil. NO! Put that foil back in the drawer and back the hell away. No foil required here, thanks. What the foil does, is trap the steam, which softens the skin. A truly fantastic jacket potato has a tough, papery, almost chewy outer skin. So ditch the foil from the very beginning. On the same skin topic, before we start anything else, take a fork and pierce the skin of the potato all over. This will help release the steam and allow a thick outer skin to form. Then drizzle olive oil over the top and sprinkle some ground rock salt. Use your hands and rub the oil and salt all over the potato. Finally, put it a VERY hot oven (at least 250 degrees), uncovered on a baking tray. Cooking time will depend on how big the potatoes are, but mine usually take around 30-45 minutes.  I've found that if you use this method, you get perfect jacket potatoes every time, no matter what potatoes you're using. Although if I have a choice, I tend to go for a King Edward.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=246 1 Happy Jew Year http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=209 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=209#comments 2009-09-24 00:55:10 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=209 Honey cake So if you're not aware, last weekend saw the celebration of the Jewish New Year, or Rosh Hashanah, when we, the chosen ones, welcome the start of the year 5770. Yeah, we've been around a while. And it's basically just a complete and utter eat-a-thon. My parents are overseas and it's tradition that you don't stay home and mope on your own, so I was adopted by three beautiful groups of friends. The resulting gorging, in part preparation for the upcoming day of atonement (Yom Kippur) when we don't eat or drink for 24 hours, was mammoth. And it reminded me how wonderful, varied and colourful Jewish food can be. The standard Jewish meal (if you're Ashkenazi) consists of a smorgasbord of starters, a soup, mains, a dessert, cakes and biscuits. On Jewish New Year apple and honey (which are like mascots; honey for a sweet year to come and apple because it's round like a year) take pride of place on the table, both independently and as part of other dishes. Here is a list of the most likely contenders you might see on the table. Starters: -Gefilte fish - Fish patties, fried or boiled and served cold, topped with a piece of boiled carrot and served with horseradish -Chopped liver - don't freak out because it's called liver - it's pâté -Dips - Eggplant often makes an appearance! -Challah - plaited loaf used in the Sabbath ceremony. Has too many variations to list, but on Jewish New Year it is usually round and sweet. -Herring -Dill pickled cucmbers Chicken soup, accompanied by one or all of the following: -Egg noodles (lokchen) -Meat dumplings (kreplach) -Matzoh balls (kinda like a pasta ball, made of ground up matzoh, which is like a water cracker). Main course can be almost anything but usual includes some roast meat and lots of vegetables and salads. One traditional beauty is cholent, a slow-cooked stew that is made over a 12-to-24-hour period. Another often-seen side dish is tzimmes, or carrot cooked with honey and a this one has many variations, with possible example additions including prunes or sesame seeds. Dessert is usually a pudding of some description or sometimes compote. Cake and biscuits make an appearance with tea and coffee. One of the most important things to hit the table on Jewish New Year is honey cake. It's awesome. All Jewish festivals start at sundown. So if the festival is on a Monday, it actually starts on Sunday at sundown and then ends on Monday at sundown. The first night of Rosh Hashanah was last Friday and it saw me picked up and ferried to my beautiful friend and yummy mummy Nelly's house to celebrate with her gorgeous husband, adorable kids, sexy sister and her wonderful and welcoming parents. Everyone was so warm -  it was just the way it should be. And it was doubly as exciting because being of Russian extraction, this family introduced me to a whole lot of culinary offerings I had never tried before! These guys didn't let me down - vodka was on the table from before the food made an appearance. Meanwhile, some of the culinary highlights (all photos are in our gallery) were boiled eggs with caviar, pickled tomatoes (they're beautiful - green, crunchy and delicious) and a lovely chopped herring salad. Nell's mum's soup was beautiful, golden and clear (clarity is one of the most important aspects of the Jewish penicillin) and in a fantastic twist, her matzoh balls were stuffed with chicken meat!) We then had chicken legs stuffed with pesto and baby potatoes, followed by poached pears, followed by honey cake and honey cookies. My honey cookies were a bit of a hit this year. I hadn't made them before, but I was really proud  - they were in the Eastern European style, hard on the outside, soft in the middle with spices that made them taste a little bit like gingerbread. I made four batches over 48 hours. Watch for the recipe soon. The second day's lunch was with my friend Alana and her family who did the most wonderful sit down function for 40 of their closest relatives. Everything was delicious and mostly traditional, with lots of salads and a chocolate roulade filled with cream and blueberries that I'm still dreaming about. But the highlight was cooked tongue, made by Alana's mother as a treat. It was soft and flavoursome - it's best eaten with horseradish. The second night's dinner was with my close friends Mel and Jarrod, who were visiting from interstate, so not only did I get to welcome the new year with them, I also got to spend some serious quality time with them! No one has ever gone hungry in Mel's mum Viv's house - this year was no exception. There was enough food to feed a small army, but to be fair, they had welcomed a small army mishpucha (family). We had traditional starters, followed by beautiful soup with homemade kreplach (now THAT's a treat) made by Mel's grandmother and then lots of mains (of which the highlights were lamb cooked with couscous and chickpeas and a yummy brisket in a tomato-based sauce). Salads were key at this event and you might notice a Caeser salad with a topping looking suspiciously like bacon - it's kosher garlic sausage in disguise! We call it facon. The dessert of berry pudding pavlova served with halva-flavoured persian fairy floss was divine. So that's it for another year chaps - may all of you, chosen or not, have a wonderful, happy and healthy 5770. I look forward to another 12 months of sucking my radish and I hope you will too. -Master Radish [gallery columns="4"]]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=209 0 French Feast http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=202 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=202#comments 2009-09-12 07:09:53 +0000 cheeky-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=202 DuckInspired by the cuisine at Chez Olivier in Prahran, my boy - let's call him Snapper Radish - and I embarked on cooking a three-course French extravaganza. Not an easy feat for a couple who have resorted to Deb, beans and rice for dinner on more than one occasion. After perusing the Food Safari website and Googling for a while we settled on quiche for entree, duck with cherries for main and chocolate pudding for dessert. The first stop at food Mecca, otherwise known as the South Melbourne Market, was the poultry shop. Yes, they had two duck breasts and they only cost about $13. Sourcing the cherries (we cheated and used the tinned variety), potatoes (Kipfler for us) and the other ingredients was easy (including the ready-made shortcrust pastry from Coles). But veal glaze? What the hell, we thought, is veal glaze and why would you pour it over duck? After asking around for a while we found it in a deli at the market. Turns out, it is a reduction of veal stock. I'm not sure why you use veal glaze on duck but I do know it makes a cracking sauce when you simmer it with orange juice and Spanish red wine (ours was about $10). The recipes were fairly straight forward. But we needed to cook the duck for about 10 to 15 minutes longer than the specified time and the sauce took longer than expected to get to the right, syrupy consistency. We also cooked the puddings for an extra five to 10 minutes and they were, if I do say say myself, perfect little bundles of chocolate joy. Snapper Radish and I didn't manage to time the meal like pros - we had to cook the dessert after finishing eating our main. But I was truly amazed we didn't have any major stuff ups. It has inspired us to have our own food safari in Snapper's apartment kitchen. Next stop is Italy and homemade pasta. I'll let you know how it goes. PS I can't believe I admitted to eating Deb. I'm glad this website is anonymous. It was Snapper's fault and I promise never to consume Deb again. [gallery]]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=202 0 Taste of Melbourne http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=179 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=179#comments 2009-09-05 02:27:03 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=179 Verge DessertLast week I headed back to Taste of Melbourne, for my second consecutive year, to enjoy a Tapas-style tour of Melbourne's most popular restaurants.

A group of five of us learned our lesson last year and made sure that we were front and centre when the doors opened, so we could rush in and nab a table, which we did successfully.

For $50 a ticket, we got entry to the Exhibition Buildings in Carlton and 30 Crowns to spend. Crowns are Taste of Melbourne currency. Each restaurant present serves up three dishes, each costing anywhere from 8 to 12 Crowns. You can indulge in a range of small tasters from restaurants like The Boathouse, Press Club, Oyster, Nobu and so on.

A lot of foodie friends don't go, criticising the event for a lack of value and soul. And while I wouldn't walk over hot coals to get here, I really enjoy the event. I get to taste samples from lots of different places and it gives me an idea where my culinary priorities lie, in terms of trying restaurants I haven't yet graced with my presence. We were in a group of five people and shared every dish, giving us tremendous scope across the various dishes on offer.

Here are the 13 restaurants and the dishes we had from each:

-Circa: Chocolate, honeycomb & salted caramel crunch -Jacques Reymond: Tempura of quail breast with tajine flavours & whipped Persian fetta, Martini of bittersweet chocolate with espresso jelly and bourbon vanilla chantilly -Oyster: 'popcorn' prawn with citrus aioli -Botanical: Wagyu burger -The Press Club/Hellenic Republic/Maha: Spring Bay half shell scallops with tarama, Turkish Delight filled doughnus wtih pine nut sugar & rosewater honey -Fifteen: Vanilla panna cotta served  with slow cooked quince -The Court House -The Boathouse: Beef, stout & onion pie floater, clotted cream mousse with ginger nut crumble -Verge: Pressed duck leg with preserved mushrooms and smoked tofu in red miso soup, Milk chocolate delice with coconut and basil and salted caramel popcorn -Movida: Slow cooked cuttlefish with chorizo & chickpeas -Nobu: Yellowtailo jalapeno with yuzu soy -Silks:Baked crab shell served with Portugese sauce -The Brasserie By Philippe Mouchel: milk fed veal tenderloin served with soft polenta and swiss chard and pancetta

Most interesting for me was the Turkish Delight doughnuts, because they ran out last year and I'm not a fan of Press Club, so I'd been hanging out to try them. The inside was gooey and pink and it got me thinking about the ways I can use Turkish Delight in future.

There were so many highlights of the day, but the most wonderful was the duck from Verge and the sashimi from Nobu, both of which were orgasm-inducing. I was also quite impressed by the Silks crab and my companion's panna cotta from Fifteen was really quite lovely, as was the clotted cream mousse from the Boathouse. The prawns from Oyster were simple but so hot and fresh and flavoursome.

Most disappointing was definitely the burger from Botanical which didn't get anyone excited.Also a bit average was the pie from The Boathouse, which looked great, but was stodgy and lacked flavour.

Gary whatshisfacetheonethathashair and the George Theshortonewhocantcookaswellashethinkshecan Columbaris – the two chefs from Masterchef and proprieters of The Boathouse and Press Club/Hellenic Republic/Maha respectively – were swanning around, talking to people and having their photos taken. Sorry, but the whole scene made me a little nauseous. I was there to taste the food, not watch a sickening display of attempted branding. Ick.

Anyway, we had a really fun day and I strongly suggest that you give it a go. In addition to all the restaurants there are a lot of other food displays on offer from a variety of providores, in a similar fashion to the Good Food & Wine Show. A good, clean, fun time was had by all.

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Freezer Series, Part II http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=176 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=176#comments 2009-09-05 23:00:57 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=176 Edited berriesFrozen berries might not be in your every-day first aid kit, but they've saved my life on more than one occasion. These little beauties are great for quick, easy, impressive desserts or snacks. Probably my favourite use for my frozen berries is in my 5-minute berry strudel. You just take a square of puff pastry, sit for 10 minutes, cut into to two rectangles, put some berries down the middle of one, slice some cuts in the other. Place the second rectangle over the top, press down on the edges and do a wash with beaten egg and bake. Scatter some icing sugar over the top when it's done and serve. Quick, easy and, as Frankfurter would say, extremely pleasurable. Just between you and I, I do feel like a bit of a fraud when I whip up that dish. It looks gorgeous and tastes great, but there's so little investment required I feel like a cheat when my friends and family compliment me. I also had one unfortunate occasion when I had a dinner party and...GULP...forgot to do dessert. I whipped this up and no one was any the wiser. Game, set, match. My other favourite use of my frozen berries is a quick berry coulis. Just boil down with some sugar and orange or lemon juice or zest. Add a dash of something alcoholic for a lovely tang - don't tell her I told you, but my mum uses cassis and it works beautifully. Use as much as you want and refreeze the rest. This is a great way to spice up ice-cream with a quick drizzle, a lovely accompaniment to crepes or spooned through some Greek-style yoghurt. Other uses for frozen berries include slipping into muffins or cupakes or even just using as a garnish on desserts or drinks. Also, consider muddling in cocktails for something summery. Frozen berries come in separate or combined varieties - at the moment I'm trending towards the Sara Lee combined selection - the berries are more whole and look really pretty.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=176 0 Israelilicious - Baby Eggplants in Brine http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=167 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=167#comments 2009-08-24 11:36:58 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=167 eggplants These are just the most adorable thing and in addition to being seriously yummy, they make an extraordinary garnish, adding a crazy purple colour to any plate. These little beauties come in the brine in which they are pickled, which turns the same wonderful purple colour. They're salty, but not ridiculously so - it's possible to pop a whole one in your mouth and not have your face turn into a bulldog's arse. They would be a really lovely colourful addition to a starter plate, or sliced into a salad or even just as a gorgeous garnish to add a bit of colour. You can get them in most kosher stores or at Coles in Melbourne's Jewish areas - they're not particularly difficult to find. [gallery]]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=167 0 Cicciolina...shhhhhhhh http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=162 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=162#comments 2009-08-21 05:57:13 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=162 We hope the food stays as wonderful as always, but we also hope that if this is true, the management takes some opportunities for some improvement. For instance: TAKING BOOKINGS. There are so many special occasions that I'd love to have celebrated at Cicciolina, but couldn't, because it wasn't worth gambling on whether or not we'd get a table. Apart from that, we hope everything stays the same. We ? you Cicciolina! Website: www.cicciolinastkilda.com.au]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=162 0 Squeeze of my bun http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=156 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=156#comments 2009-08-21 05:36:33 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=156 IMG_1624Yes, technically, Nam Loong Restaurant is, well, a restaurant. But realistically, while their food is OK, the purpose of this place is to provide me with hot, steaming, savoury or sweet takeaway buns at any time of the day or night, whether I'm sober or drunk. Most likely drunk. When you walk into the cramped entrance of this little Melbourne CBD hole-in-the-wall, your eyes can't help but be drawn to the bunwall. I call it the bunwall because it is a wall of buns. Not because it's some sort of horrible pornographic wall of gluteous maximus appreciation. That would be creepy. Anyway, I digress. The bunwall contains: lotus seed buns, custard buns, red bean buns, sticky rice buns, man tou buns (plain), BBQ roast pork (char siu) buns, vegetarian buns and many, many more. I cannot tell you the number of nights that I have stumbled into this little place, bought four buns and then rushed out into the street and stuffed them into my face, two per cheek, like a chipmunk. There's nothing more heavenly. At at around $1.50 to $2 a pop, they won't break the bank, either. If you do insist on sitting down for dinner, I recommend the Hainan Chicken. It's yum. Nam Loong Restaurant 223 Russell Street, Melbourne 3000. 96634089.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=156 1 Where Sydney-siders park their chopsticks http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=148 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=148#comments 2009-08-21 02:10:23 +0000 harbour-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=148 dim sum smallerWhen the Chinese first settled in Australia during the Victorian Gold Rush of the 1850s and, later, in Sydney, they could not have anticipated the appetite the locals would develop for dim sum, or yum cha as it is known in the Antipodes. But there’s only one rule for eating yum cha in Australia: arrive after 11am and be damned. On weekend mornings, families queue in the stairwells of restaurants in Sydney’s Chinatown, and elsewhere across the city, to savour freshly steamed barbecue pork buns, fried squid legs or even half a salt-and-pepper crab. Those with more adventurous tastes may venture into offal territory – black bean chicken feet and beef tendon, as well as sweet bean curd dessert. Unlike more conventional dining experiences, the opportunity to try new things is great – a poor choice will likely impact more on your pride than your wallet. Whether you like yours by the trolley or a la carte, there is a yum cha restaurant to suit most tastes in Sydney. There are also several good suburban options, including the various branches of Kam Fook (Bondi Junction and Chatswood). Here are five of the best: China Grand Perched atop the Market City shopping centre, this grand space with its chandeliers has undergone many reincarnations, but remains one of Sydney’s most consistent yum cha houses. A speciality of the house is Peking duck, a Catonese staple that is rarely available by the piece – a treat for couples not wishing to overindulge. At $5 a pop it’s an expensive morsel, but well worth it. Har gow, traditional prawn dumplings, are plump and juicy, while the vegetarian variety will have even the staunchest carnivores seduced by shitake. Address: Level 3, Market City, 9 Hay St, Haymarket. 02 9211 8388 Marigold The German beer hall of the Sydney yum cha scene, Marigold packs in up to 800 punters across two levels. Its sheer size means it lacks the attention to service of some other places, but is ideally suited for a business lunch. At the cheaper end of the city restaurants, Marigold offers mainly standard fare, with juicy deep-fried eggplant and tofu a standout dish. They also offer a “Dim Sum Degustation” on Sunday to Thursday nights for $25 a head. Address: Levels 4 & 5, 683-689 George Street. (02) 9281 3388. Website: www.regal.com.au East Ocean When the steamer baskets at a yum cha restaurant have the silver rims, you already expect more. Luckily East Ocean delivers, both in service and fare. A convoy of trolleys is never far away with a dizzying array of dumplings – the crystal dumplings with spinach and prawn are particularly popular and the custard tarts are the best we’ve tried. Those happy to splash out can indulge in crab, prawns or various duck delicacies from the barbecue counter, but be warned, these dishes come at a premium price. Address: 421 - 429 Sussex St, Haymarket. 02 9212 4198 Website: www.eastocean.com.au Regal Slightly north of Chinatown’s epicentre on Sussex Street, Regal is often overlooked in favour of dumpling dens right in the thick of it. But it shouldn’t be. The har gow, the gold standard for yum cha dishes, are thin-skinned and juicy, while plates piled high with squid tentacles are too tempting to pass by.  Bigger groups may combine their yum cha with a specimen from the fish tank – various breeds of crab as well as lobster and abalone are available. The same company owns both Marigold and Regal, but the latter is a class above. Address: 347-353 Sussex St (cnr Liverpool St), Sydney. (02) 9261 8988 Website: www.regal.com.au Da Niang Dumpling Not strictly yum cha, but a good option for solo diners or those who want their dumpling fix on the go, or to go for that matter. Touted in some forums as the McDonald’s of Dixon Street, the dumplings at Dai Nang won’t make you sing, but in terms of value for money it’s hard to compare. A plate of 12 steaming prawn and ginger dumplings might be a bit doughy, but the filling is delicate and is yours for just $8.50, cheaper if you opt for pork or beef. Add some side dishes including wakame salad ($4) and a galaxy of flavour combinations are possible. Address: Shop 42-42A, Dixon St, Haymarket. (02) 9211 0378]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=148 0 Freezer Stories, Part I http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=141 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=141#comments 2009-08-16 07:42:47 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=141 SpinachI've decided to start a little series on things I always keep in my freezer, no matter what. Here is part one: frozen spinach, in cubes. As I work my way through my freezer series, you'll see how many of the items I keep go together - for instance, this frozen spinach goes particularly well with the puff pastry that is also a compulsory staple. Frozen spinach can be mixed in with scrambled eggs, stirred through a soup, creamed with some garlic Hungarian style or wrapped in puff pastry with some feta or ricotta to make tasty triangles for a snack or starter. You can even use some Indian spices and potato and make an Aloo Palak curry, which is one of my favourites. To use this stuff, you just defrost it naturally or in the microwave and then press all the water out of it and drain. Easy.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=141 0 A right Holy Goat http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=137 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=137#comments 2009-08-15 09:37:00 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=137 holy goat cheeseEveryone, my favourite Goat's Cheese in the universe. Holy Goat, everyone. This stuff is heavenly - it's called Silk for good reason - it is just smooth and delicate and creamy and...well...I could go on and on. So I will. I first found this cheese at the farmer's market at Collingwood Children's Farm. Now, if I don't have at least one wheel in the fridge, I feel nervous and edgy. But this is no secret! They often sell out and I have missed out more than once by setting my alarm to snooze on a Saturday morning. They do, children, sell it at the South Melbourne Market, where I go often, but at a $5 premium. Ouch. Anyhoo, the one I prefer is Holy Goat Silk. This is a standard chevre. Then there is Black Silk, a ash-coated version that comes shaped in a pyramid. There is also a fromage frais and while the cheeses made at Sutton Grange Organic Farm, by hand, are all held in high esteem, the La Luna is one of the best known, with its yeast rind and defined wrinkles. The list goes on, but I won't. I absolutely adore this cheese - I smear it on toast, I stuff mushrooms, I dollop it on pasta. I thoroughly recommend you seek it out - because it is organic, if you can't find it at your local deli or market, check wherever keeps a good stock of organic product. It's very worth it. Price ranges from $10 at the farmer's market to up to $15 elsewhere.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=137 0 Lindt Chocolate Café http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=126 http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=126#comments 2009-08-07 13:23:54 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/?p=126 DeliceThe new Lindt cafe has one purpose and one purpose only: to remind you that while Lindt isn't the only premium chocolate available to chocophiles, it’s still a force to be reckoned with. But my bizarre discovery was that the best thing to buy there isn’t even the chocolate! “The French call them “Macarons”. At Lindt we call them “Delice”. Two small mounds of melt in the mouth almond meringue are sandwiched together with a rich chocolate cream filling.” These little guys come in different flavours. If you can grab one, any, my favourites are coconut, rose and strawberry, the macaroons are positively divine. They feature on much of the advertising around the CBD for the store and with good reason. They’re delicate and crumbly, but moist and chewy. Also in the shop are huge jars of Lindt balls, but if you thought the selection was tired, then you were sadly mistaken. In addition to the more traditional dark chocolate, milk chocolate, hazelnut , there are also new additions like peanut butter, when they can keep the jars full. The girl serving me was quick to point out to me how lucky it was that I had walked straight into new stock of the peanut butter devils, which by the way put Reese’s to shame. There is a café within the store, but it was absolutely packed, mostly with Chinese students, who were giggling and chatting and gave the whole shop an exciting and slightly naughty vibe. The queue was so long we gave up waiting, but if you have more chocostamina you can partake in waffles, degustation plates and a range of cakes and other treats. We, on the other hand, carefully ferried our macaroons back to the office for the perfect end to our lunch-hour. If you’re having a crap day and looking for a lunchtime pick me up, stop by. There’s a form of sugar hit here for everyone. Address:  271 Collins Street, (03) 9667 0900]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/?feed=rss2&p=126 1 Match Bar & Grill http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=136 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=136#comments 2010-04-19 23:00:30 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=136 249 Little Lonsdale Street, Melbourne. (03) 9654 6522 I’d never heard of this place, but given its proximity to RMIT I feared it was going to be a student hangout and I was going to be mutton dressed as lamb. Then, as I got closer, it looked very ‘chain-like’ and a little too commercial for my liking. But I was wrong on all counts. This is a cool bar. It’s not the décor, which is cool and laid back, or the massive leather couches that you can sink right into until only your ankles are showing. Or the outside area so you to take advantage of warm balmy Melbourne nights. Or the friendly staff. No. It’s the giant sized cocktails that arrive in retro, oversized cups, shaped like sports balls. Golf balls. Footballs. We partook in a Champagne Smash, consisting of Wyborowa lemon vodka, muddled with fresh peach, lemon and mint, topped with champagne and given the size, designed for two to share ($30). When I came to write this review and I got online to look up the URL, it became apparent that this Match is run by the guys that started Match and Sosho in London. So now it all makes sense. The inventive, colourful cocktails. The cocktail menu at the Melbourne branch features drinks devised by London and New York-based mixologists and the wine list is compiled by Matt Skinner. And the other thing – they have pretty damn good food too! There’s a restaurant menu and a bar menu. We only partook in the bar menu. Baked medjool dates with gorgonzola and prochiutto ($1.50 each), french fries with aioli ($8), prosciutto and gruyere croquetas ($1.50n each) were all fresh and fabulous. The music wasn’t overbearing, the crowd didn’t make me claustrophobic. A definite win. Website: www.matchbar.com/galleryMatchMelbourne.php [gallery columns="2"] Match Bar and Grill on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=136 0 Cup of Truth http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=133 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=133#comments 2010-04-18 23:00:08 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=133 12 Campbell Arcade, Degraves Street Subway, Melbourne. This tiny hole in the wall underground in the CBD changed my life and turned me into a fully-fledged coffee snob. Started by two former baristas from Vue De Monde who invested in their own Synesso coffee machine, these guys are always ready with a pleasant greeting, a charming smile and a fantastic cup of brew. They usually have a single origin or house blend and have a really good understanding of the coffee, so they can tell you the exact features of the single origin they have on offer. I’m a huge fan of Ethiopian coffee (it’s the only kind I stock at home), but unfortunately take my coffee in the tofu style. These guys suggested I try it with honey instead of sugar – it really brought out the flavour of the beans and balanced out the soy. Delicious. Another feature are the prices -$3.20 a regular,$3.80 a medium and they also have a large size. Soy is only 20 cents, which is a pleasant change from the 50 charged elsewhere (total rip off). They also sell re-usable cups. You might be mistaken for believing you’re in little Italy when you stop here in the mornings – it’s one of the only places I’ve seen in town that regularly has punters sitting at the bar having a quick espresso stop – it’s a testament to the quality of the Joe. Cup of Truth on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=133 0 The Mess Hall http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=123 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=123#comments 2010-01-05 22:00:06 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=123 51 Bourke Street, Melbourne. (03) 9654 6800 This place actually does serve food, but I've decided to review it as a bar, because I've yet to have a meal there. But I love it. This place is up the top of Bourke Street and while some of my favourite bars up this end of the city tend to fill up and get packed out (Meyer's Place for example) this relatively unknown gem always seems to be able to fit us in. They've got a full menu, but on our most recent visit we only sampled the polenta chips ($8.50), which were supremely tasty and very crunchy, gorgeous warm plump olives, served with some bread ($8.50) and hot, fresh, whitebait fries ($11.50). There's a very reasonable wine list; reasonable both because of the variety, prices and the fact that almost everything comes by the glass. They also have some local and Italian beers. I really like this place. It's comfortable, not loud, you can have a real conversation and it feels like you're right at home. Website: www.messhall.com.au [gallery] The Mess Hall on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=123 0 Brother Baba Budan http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=113 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=113#comments 2009-10-28 22:00:34 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=113 Brother Baba Buda2 359 Little Bourke St, Melbourne. (03) 3960 6044 This tiny little place in the CBD is one of the key locations on any serious coffee drinker's map of Melbourne. These guys are serious coffee drinkers and while they will make you that weak, soy, latte if you ask for it, they won't like it. There are a few different blends on offer and all of them are fairtrade and cruelty free. The cafe itself is small and can be a squeeze at rush hour, but for some reason I find it comforting and don't mind braving the crush to sip my espresso in the corner. Once you start you can't stop - this place will have the serious coffee drinker coming back again and again. Check out the website for 'cupping' opportunities, which is what they call tasting sessions. Website: www.brotherbababudan.com.au [gallery columns="2"] Brother Baba Budan on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=113 0 mothersMilk http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=108 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=108#comments 2009-10-26 22:00:42 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=108 Mother's Milk 17 Chapel Street, Windsor. (03) 95214119 The Windsor-end of Chapel Street is maturing into a trendy, fun place to hang out, and mothersMilk is a case in point. While it’s not terribly new to the scene, it has managed to retain a comfortable, relaxed atmosphere that makes it still feel like it’s the brand-spanking new kid on the block, with sky-high intentions still in hand. Big, worn leather sofas punctuate the main room, with a large open fire-place.  Outside there are benches and tables and a lovely terrace upstairs that you can hire for events, with a small minimum fee. There is a good wine list, with options by the glass, and beers on tap. There is also a cocktail list with offerings from about $15 to $20. The night we were there they were also reasonably flexible about fixing us up with mixed drinks that weren’t on the menu. And because they don’t serve food, they allow people to order pizza from the joint next door and have it brought over. A tip: if you’re going to go for a pizza, make sure you go for the gourmet offerings – the classics are somewhat lacking. But the pumpkin patch, for instance, which is feta and pumpkin-based, is absolutely mouth-watering. Website: www.mothersmilk.net.au]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=108 0 Coli Chianti 2007 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=92 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=92#comments 2009-10-21 22:00:32 +0000 pourmai-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=92 chiantiI bought this to have with my brother and my dad as we fired up the BBQ while for Bathurst – the car race in NSW that has bogan written all over it. The three of us have somehow developed a bit of a pattern of stumbling upon good, cheap Chianti over the last decade. So naturally, when I saw this classic looking package on the shelf at Cardamones Italian supermarket in Fairfield, I couldn’t resist. The fact that it’s a very drinkable light red in the classic Chianti style was a bonus. This is exactly the type of wine you need as the weather starts turning sunny. Think BBQs, picnics in the park and hot evenings in the back yard with our good friend daylight savings. This little cane enclosed bottle will give you the perfect companion for all these times … well, almost perfect. $20]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=92 0 Penfolds Bin 389 Cabernet Shiraz 2005 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=90 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=90#comments 2009-10-20 22:00:04 +0000 pourmai-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=90 PenfoldsBig, smooth cherry and plum flavours pour straight out of this classic ‘baby Grange’ with surprising ease. There’s a great bit of wood, which balances the fruit nicely and some earthy textures add to the depth. I decanted it for about an hour before the first glass and, remarkably that seemed to be all it needed. I was a little surprised, as the 2002 I’d had a few months ago definitely needed more cellaring, but don’t get me wrong, I’m not complaining. While it’s not the most affordable wine out there, it’s a great wine for a special occasion – of course just opening one of these puppies would be cause enough for a good time. Great to have with any red meat. If you can afford it, I strongly recommend picking up a couple of these for Christmas. $50-60]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=90 0 Double Happiness http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=85 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=85#comments 2009-10-11 22:00:57 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=85 Double Happiness21 Liverpool St, Melbourne. (03) 9650 4488 Double happiness is the Chinese character used to decorate the home of newly married Chinese couples. I might not be getting married any time this millennium, but this particular Double Happiness never ceases to bring me joy. The root of that joy is in the bar's phenomenal cocktail list. It's one of the most creative and inventive in Melbourne and there's always something new to try. On this occasion I decided to have an umeshu on ice (my absolute must have drink at the moment) and my friend went for one of the more fancy offerings, a Dictatorship of the Proletariat ($15), essentially a new take on the Bloody Mary, consisting of cardamom vodka, tomato juice and spices, witha real kick to finish it off. Other cocktails include the Great Leap Forward (Double Happiness lychee vodka, ginger, mint and lime) and the Paper Tiger (Umeshuy, Noilly Prat, lemon and apple). Martinis come in lychee, classic, espresso, chilli and rum varieties. All cocktails and martinis are $15, which to me seems like good value, considering some of the prices I've seen for cocktails in the CBD lately. There's also a wine list and a few beers, including Tsingtao and Kirin. The staff here are always friendly and willing to help you out with suggestions or recommendations. And if you're lovely and tip generously, because they don't serve food they're more than happy for you to order Japanese from the restaurant next door and get it delivered. The only issue with this place, if there is one, is that it's very, very small. That's what makes it great, but can also make it difficult - it can all be a bit much when it's crammed full, but when it's not heaving at capacity, this place is surely one of the best to imbibe at in the CBD. There's also an upstairs bar called New Gold Mountain, run by the same mob, which takes up the first and second floors of the same building. We hope to review it soon. Website: www.double-happiness.org www.newgoldmountain.org [gallery columns="2"] Double Happiness Bar on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=85 0 Pause http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=80 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=80#comments 2009-10-06 22:00:03 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=80 Pause268 Carlisle Street, Balaclava, 3183. (03) 9537 0511 The eastern side of St Kilda has been thankfully slower to develop than the Acland/Fitzroy Street side of the suburb and doesn't feature a whole array watering holes. But thankfully, there's Pause. Pause is has Middle Eastern and Moroccan undertones. With a warm, cavernous feeling, it's a great place to have a party or just chill out and relax. It's highly regarded for its cocktails - and with good reason. I've never been disappointed by the tipple on offer. And in a mega-bonus, at the moment there's a Belvedere Vodka promotion, where on Thursdays and Fridays $20 gets you two of their Belvedere-based concoctions. There is also a lovely mezze-themed menu and I've even stopped in here for dinner on occasion and the food is really quite good - better than you'd expect for a place that markets itself as a bar! There's also a fun open mic night on Thursday evenings, which is always good for a bit of entertainment. Website: www.pausebar.com.au Pause on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=80 0 Tuscan Bar http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=76 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=76#comments 2009-09-28 05:11:42 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=76 Tuscan_Bar1/79 Bourke St, Melbourne, 3000. (03) 9671 3322 When I headed off to Tuscan Bar, I admit I was expecting a level of decadence. Their chandeliers and gaudy art are world famous in Melbourne and I thought I'd be basking in splendour. Not quite. They got the decor right. It's just over the top enough to be great, with three tiered chandeliers, reproductions of the great classic paintings, parquetry and more than a little gold leaf. But the problem is that the atmosphere, clientele and service just don't really enter stage-left in this grand production. It was loud. Too loud. The music was more Chapel Street doof doof than 'take a load off and relax'. I ordered a sparkling, a mineral water and a small bottle of Pipsqueak cider, as well as a bowl of chips. The tab came to $31 - not too bad, I suppose. On the plus side, they seem to take bookings, which is nice if you're going for a special event. The "rooftop terrace" is more like a beer garden, but reasonably spacious and despite the rain on the night I was there, patrons were still up there smoking and chatting like they were in the Bahamas. Tuscan Bar has potential, but personally I think there are better watering holes up that end of town. Website: www.tuscanbar.com.au]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=76 0 Siglo http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=69 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=69#comments 2009-09-12 05:46:05 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=69 Siglo Level 2, 161 Spring St, Melbourne, 3000. 9654 6631 Located on a terrace above sister venue the iconic Supper Club, Siglo opened its doors last year. A lovely venue, but there was something missing the detail. Siglo occupies a prime position, sitting opposite Parliament House, with old advertisements painted onto adjoining brick buildings as a backdrop. But for a bar, Siglo is a lacking in the wine department. There was only a total of 10 wines by the glass, which strikes me as odd for a venue that is clearly very popular with the after-work crowd. Cocktails are around $17.50 and there is a long list of imported, bottled beer. Many of the patrons at adjoining tables were puffing away on cigars, which are available from an extensive offering stored in humidors at the mid-level. There are also bar snacks, but there aren't any wedges with sour cream here - there is truffled duck liver parfait at $12.50 or meatballs with thyme and rosemary for $13.50. Or you can ramp it up a notch with Jamon Iberico for $40 or a dozen oysters for $42. There are some desserts for around $7 to $11. This is a great place to bring a date before or after dinner in the warmer months, but not somewhere I personally would hang out all night. It's pricey and frenetic - there is table service but after waiting half an hour for our order we had to re-submit a plea for a glass of wine. It was also a very suited crowd (we were there on a Friday night) but that might be different on the weekend. Definitely a more formal venue for a special one-off drink.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=69 0 Berlin Bar http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=63 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=63#comments 2009-08-16 09:00:15 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=63 Berlin Bar16 Corrs Lane Melbourne, 3000. 96393396. If you’re looking for a bar with some serious shtick, I think we have a winner. Sliced up into east and west, the theme runs through from entrance to the cocktail menu. To get to Berlin Bar, you first have to negotiate several flights of narrow stairs. Once you get there, you have to ring a doorbell and a gracious member of the (apparently mostly German) staff come and let you in. The main room is West Berlin, with the appropriate chandeliers and grandeur. To get to East Berlin, you pass through Checkpoint Charlie, everything has a more industrial and army-like feel, although there’s a lot of humour in here too, if you care to look closely. There is also, for some inexplicable reason, a large bed in the corner. As there was a function on in East Berlin the night we visited, we thankfully took a seat in West Berlin on a large white leather couch. The cocktail menu, looks like it has been typed up on an old typewriter and gives long, rambling, but also endearing, descriptions of each drink’s provenance and history. On this occasion, we stuck to beer,  thanks to the extensive German beer selection on offer. I had a Schofferhofer Grapefruit (a grapefruit-infused light beer), while my companion had a DAB ($8 and $9 respectively, both 330ml). There are also some Belgian beers on offer, if you can afford them. Kwak, a Belgian ale, was $22 for 330ml and Tripel Karmliet, a Belgian oatmeal ale, was $24 for 330ml. The cocktails are $16 to $20 and there is a reasonable wine list. This place has a lovely feel. It’s cosy and feels private, away from the hustle and bustle outside. The music fits with the theme, and the dark lighting gives the whole place a strange, conspiratorial feel. The only issue is size – we visited on a Friday evening and at least twice the people sitting in the bar were turned away while we sipped our beers. Slowly. Website: www.berlinbar.com.au [gallery columns="2"]]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=63 0 Boire http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=60 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=60#comments 2009-08-16 08:41:20 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=60 Boire92 Smith Street, Collingwood. Uber cool doesn’t even begin to describe Boire, with minimalist taken to extremes, and while I did like, it had a slightly cold edge. With brushed concrete floors and plain Parisien, bistro-style wooden furniture, I immediately liked the lack of fuss in this bar. But the longer we sat, the less comfortable I became. It all started when I decided I wanted a glass of wine. Boire, after all, being the French for ‘drink’ and that was what I was here to do, dammit. My companion pointed out that the entire menu, food, wine etc, is down the entire length of the right-hand side’s wall, on chalkboard. A lovely idea, but slightly impractical if you’re sitting on the right hand side of the room. We chose a Lamont Pinot Gris from Central Otago at $11 a glass or $50 a bottle, which was a nice, light, fruity, drop. The wine selection is extensive and varied. There are also a couple of food options; roasted winder veggies stewed with white beans and parsley crumbs ($20) or pot au feu with mustard and cornichons ($20). We were heading off to dinner elsewhere, so alas, I cannot report on the food, but many friends have told me the food is lovely. They also had a delectable selection of desserts, including crème caramel ($10), poached rhubarb in vanilla syrup jelly with fromage blanc ($10), a cheese plate ($10) or a ‘little almond biscuit’ ($3). Overall I liked Boire, I just think that in the middle of the winter months I prefer somewhere I can cuddle up on a couch, preferably with an open fire. Website: www.boire.com.au]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=60 0 Emerald Peacock http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=53 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=53#comments 2009-08-16 08:25:55 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=53 Emerald PeacockEmerald Peacock 233 Lonsdale Street, Melbourne, 3000. 96548680. Before I went to live overseas, the trend in Melbourne bars was a style of old fashioned luxury and opulence, a la Gin Palace. Emerald Peacock harks back to that theme and I just love it. Located in the heart of the CBD on Lonsdale Street, the first thing that hit me when I walked into the main room, the Peacock Lounge, was the wall paper. It’s that velvetine-style that grandma used to have. It used to be cringe worthy, but now, like everything else retro, it’s uber chic. Emerald Peacock is brought to us by the same crowd that brought us The Red Hummingbird (www.theredhummingbird.com). We took up some couches in the Peacock Lounge and were treated to table service, a rarity nowadays, and had some beautiful Peach Bellinis ($12.50) before moving onto wine and beer on tap. In line with some of the other Melbourne bars (for instance, Madame Brussels), you can also buy jugs of cocktails here for $32 to serve four, if you can stop your blushes long enough to say the name – they’re called Big Cocks. I have to say, that with such a classy-looking joint, I was a little disappointed with that cheap thrill of a title. In addition to the main room, there’s a separate dining room, but you can also eat at the couches in the main room, with tapas from $6 to $14 and yummy pizzas for $17 to $20. There’s also a large rooftop area for the smokers or to enjoy in summer. Check out the website – it’s about as good as they come, with photos, menus and an insight into the feel of the place. One thing to note: I was here on a weeknight. Apparently on the weekend you almost can’t get through the door without being on the guestlist. Website: www.theemeraldpeacock.com]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=53 0 Section 8 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=38 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=38#comments 2009-08-08 08:59:30 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?p=38 Section 8 Bar27-29 Tattersalls Lane, Melbourne Well it seems that in the case of Section 8, some crates, graffiti and shopping containers do a bar make. This place is principally open air, despite a little bit of roofing. This can be both a curse and a blessing in the milder climes, but during the really hot summer days air con comes in the form of an internalized cooling system called Longnecks and in the winter months there’s a wonderful intra-body heating facility called mulled wine. In the old shipping container that has been turned into a bar, there are all the other drinks in between, including cocktails and various wines. But don’t get prissy – we’re in a converted car park, not the Cipriani. When I visited recently on a Saturday afternoon after seeing a film at the Melbourne International Film Festival (saw a Serbian flick called Tears For Sale – absolutely brilliant) I gave the mulled wine a shot. Essentially it’s heated red wine with spices and fruit. It was just so gorgeous, I can’t even begin to describe the thought that soon it might be warm and I might have to give it up! This place is quite young and at night can get packed, but it’s a great place to stop off, before or after a dirty dumpling run (DDR©) in or near Chinatown. For those of you accustomed to doing DDRs©, feel free to drop in before or after Camy’s – it’s in the same lane. [gallery columns="2"]]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=38 0 Glossary http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?page_id=7 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?page_id=7#comments 2009-06-23 07:17:56 +0000 admin http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?page_id=7 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=7 0 Quantity Conversion http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?page_id=5 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?page_id=5#comments 2009-06-23 07:17:04 +0000 admin http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?page_id=5 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=5 0 About Reviews http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?page_id=4 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?page_id=4#comments 2009-06-23 07:15:58 +0000 admin http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?page_id=4 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=4 0 About Us http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?page_id=2 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?page_id=2#comments 2009-06-22 13:13:18 +0000 admin http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?page_id=2 http://www.suckmyradish.com/DrinkMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=2 0 Rich N Saucy http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=137 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=137#comments 2009-10-22 22:00:55 +0000 touchmai-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=137 Rich N Saucy 2This fruity cocktail ain't just for the chicks -it's a rich, fruity option, but it has a bit more weight and punch behind it. 60mls Ketel One Citron or other lemon vodka 15mls berry dessert sauce or coulis 30mls pineapple juice 30mls orange juice 10mls lemon juice -Add all ingredients to a Boston shaker and shake vigorously. -Strain into a large martini glass -Garnish with a lemon knot.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=137 0 Stawberries & Cream http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=127 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=127#comments 2009-10-21 22:00:05 +0000 touchmai-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=127 Strawberries & CreamThis is surely a cocktail for the ladies, but what about serving it instead of a dessert at your next dinner party?

30mls Baileys
30mls Rubis
10mls cream
30mls milk
3 white sugar cubes
4 strawberries
1 blueberry

-Rim a rocks glass with sugar.
-Muddle three of the strawberries and white sugar in a Boston shaker then add the cream, milk, Baileys and Rubis. Then shake it like your mama taught you.
-Strain into the rocks glass and add ice to top up the drink.
-Garnish with split strawberry and a blueberry.

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Clockwork Orange http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=125 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=125#comments 2009-10-20 22:00:48 +0000 touchmai-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=125 Clockwork OrangeThis beautifully balanced drink is fruity and spicy and lovely to warm you up in winter and the hazelnut undertones from the Frangelico set the whole thing on fire. 30mls vodka 15mls Galliano 15mls Frangelico ½ an orange 2 sugar cubes Pinch of cinnamon -Muddle the orange and sugar in a Boston shaker. -Add a decent pinch of cinnamon. -Add spirits and ice, then shake hard until ice cold. -Fill a balloon glass with fresh ice and strain the cocktail mixture over the top, adding a dash of red orange juice if required. -Garnish with a speared lemon wheel and cherry.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=125 0 Green Fairy http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=122 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=122#comments 2009-10-20 22:00:51 +0000 touchmai-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=122 Green FairyModern absinthe might not be the same poison that enticed Van Gogh into slicing off his ear, but it should still be approached with caution. At up to around 70% alcohol, compared to 50 to 60% for vodka, it's powerful stuff. 30mls absinthe 30mls apple schnapps 45mls apple juice 1 squirt of passionfruit pulp -Add ingredients into Boston shaker and shake vigorously. -Strain into a large martini or wine glass and garnish with an apple fan.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=122 0 Fawlty Martini http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=117 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=117#comments 2009-10-18 22:00:16 +0000 touchmai-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=117 Fawlty MartiniThis beautiful cocktail was created by Touchmai Radish for the bar he works at but it was renamed. Philistines. 60mls Smirnoff citron 10mls elderflower cordial 45 pineapple juice 30 cranberry juice 3 basil leaves -Add ingredients apart from basil into a Boston shaker and shake vigorously. -Double strain into a large martini glass. -Garnish with basil. Also known as BASEEEEEEEEEEL.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=117 0 Strawberry Margarita http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=113 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=113#comments 2009-10-15 22:00:04 +0000 touchmai-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=113 Sstrawberry MargaritaThis tequila-based beauty will be the life of any party, especially if you're putting on a sombrero and munching into a taco. Why not make this simple drink next time you're having people over for a burrito or fajita as a special treat? 45 mls Don Julio Reposardo tequila (or any other) 15mls Cointreau 4 Strawberries 50mls Lime Juice 10mls Sugar Syrup -Muddle strawberries then put all the ingredients into a Boston shaker. -Rim a large martini glass with salt. -Shake and strain into the glass lass, and garnish with a lemon twist or strawberry.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=113 0 Spring Surprise http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=107 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=107#comments 2009-10-06 23:00:06 +0000 touchmai-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=107 Spring Surprise Use this mix fruit and fizz to welcome Spring, with watermelon, orange, apple and passionfruit flavours. It's a party on your tongue and everyone's invited! (I admit we need to work on our marketing, but seriously, it's awesome.) 30ml watermelon liqueur 15ml Cointreau 30ml apple juice 15ml passionfruit pulp Dash of sparkling wine, prosecco or champagne -Add all ingredients except sparkling wine to a Boston Shaker and shake vigorously. -Strain the shaken contents into a rocks glass filled with ice and top with sparkling wine. -Garnish with a lid of dried pineapple wheel skewered with a cherry, or a simple bunch of fresh grapes.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=107 0 Champagne Float http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=99 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=99#comments 2009-09-27 11:06:37 +0000 touchmai-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=99 Champagne Float Learn how to float champagne in a cocktail like a pro. Soon you'll think you're Tom Cruise in cocktail. OK, OK. Maybe not Tom Cruise. Bryan Brown?
  1. Place the flat bottom end of the bar spoon, with ‘shovel’ end pointed upwards, on top of the mixture that you want to float the champagne onto.
  2. Slowly pour the champagne onto the stem of the spoon allowing it to gently slide down on the mixture.
  3. As you are pouring , move the bar spoon and champagne upwards keeping the flat base of the spoon on the top of the champagne until you reach desired amount of champagne.
(Instructions show the black arrow dictating the movement of the spoon with the yellow arrows showing the flow of champagne.)]]>
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BellaBaci http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=93 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=93#comments 2009-10-05 23:07:49 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=93 BellaBaci 1Dedicated to Touchmai's beautiful girlfriend Bella, the one champagne wonder, this berry fizz is  perfect for the girl's night on the tiles. 20ml strawberry liqueur (Rubis) 10ml Chambord 5ml Campari 1 strawberry 3 blueberries 100ml champagne, prosecco or sparkling wine -Add spirits and berries into a Boston Shaker, and muddle (in other words, smoosh). -Shake mixture and strain into the bottom of a flute glass. -Using a barspoon, float the fizz on the red mixture. (To learn how to execute a champagne float, click here) -Garnish with a berry skewer.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=93 0 Orange Gimlet http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=90 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=90#comments 2009-09-24 23:00:35 +0000 touchmai-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=90 Orange GimletAn almost too drinkable mix of gin and juice, this is a cross between two old classics - the Gimlet and the Screwdriver. 60mls dry gin 15mls lime cordial 15mls lime juice 1 tbsp orange marmalade 20ml orange juice -Shake all ingredients in a Boston shaker -Shake and serve in a champagne saucer. -Garnish with an orange twist.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=90 0 Not-So Old Fashioned http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=85 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=85#comments 2009-09-27 10:51:36 +0000 touchmai-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=85 Old FashionedFor the whiskey and bourbon lover, you can't go past an Old Fashioned, but the star anise in this version gives a welcome kick you're not expecting. 60mls Jameson or other whiskey 1 sugar cube 3 drops of Angostura Bitters 2 star anise ‘stars’ Orange Peel -In a rocks glass, coat one sugar cube in bitters and dissolve in a dash of soda water. -Add a few large ice cubes to rocks glass and pour in the Jameson. -Add the star anise and the orange peel, then stir and serve.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=85 0 St. Germain Martini http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=81 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=81#comments 2009-09-27 10:46:24 +0000 touchmai-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=81 St Germain MartiniA new twist on an old classic, this aromatic Elderflower and vodka-based martini is sure to tickle your tastebuds. 15mls St. Germain Elderflower Liqueur 60mls Vodka -Fill a Boston Shaker with big ice cubes and pour over you St Germain liqueur. -With a bar spoon, gently mix the liqueur over the ice until fully coated. -Using a strainer, drain any excess liqueur. -Add two standard shots of vodka to the Boston with the liqueur coated ice. -Stir with a bar spoon gently until the Boston shaker is ice cold to the touch. -Double strain into a small martini glass and garnish with an orchid flower or rose petal.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=81 0 Passionfruit Mojito http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=76 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=76#comments 2009-09-12 07:54:20 +0000 touchmai-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=76 Passionfruit mojitoA nice twist on an old classic, this is a drink you can have any time of the day or night. Why not try freezing ice cubes of passionfruit pulp so you have it whenever you get the craving? 60ml Mount Gay Rum 1 whole lime 7 mint leaves 1 whole  passionfruit 30 mls pink grapefruit juice Muddle one whole lime and add a dash of simple syrup. Add about 7 leaves of mint (simply tear them and slap them to release oils, do not muddle or shake). Add the pulp of one whole passionfruit. Put ingredients into a highball glass and then fill glass completely with crushed ice. Add two shots of Mount Gay rum and then stir mixture. Top with crushed ice and finish with a dash of pink grapefruit juice.  Try not to guzzle.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=76 0 Cosmopolitan http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=70 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=70#comments 2009-09-12 07:40:19 +0000 touchmai-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=70 CosmoYou don't have to be Sarah Jessica Parker to have a sip of one of these babies (and it's Master Radish's absolute, solid favourite). Makes one drink. One shot vodka (30ml) A shot and a half a shot of cranberry juice  (45ml) Half a shot of Cointreau or Triple Sec (15ml) 4 squeezed lime wedges Orange to garnish Ice
Put the ice, vodka, cranberry juice and limes into a Boston shaker and shake well. Double strain into a martini glasses and serve, each garnished with an orange rind strip.
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Glasgow Kiss http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=65 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=65#comments 2009-08-10 07:18:25 +0000 touchmai-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=65 Glasgow KissFruity, but not complicated and refreshing. You might already have the ingredients lying around the house... 30mls Chambord 30mls Frangelico 60mls Pineapple Juice Add ingredients to a boston shaker. Shake very vigorously and strain into a flute glass. Serve with an orange twist.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=65 0 Gomme sugar syrup http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=58 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=58#comments 2009-09-01 06:09:09 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=58 Sugar Learn how to make your own sugar syrup to use in cocktails or add to iced tea, in preparation for summer. This is a simple gomme recipe. If you want to get technical, a traditional syrup should have gum arabic in it. Simmer one part sugar and one part water over a medium heat - we suggest you start with one cup of each. Once all the sugar has dissolved and the liquid runs clear, drag a spoon across the surface to remove any scum. This is a basic sugar syrup. You can leave it plain if you wish, or give it a sexy twist by adding two split vanilla beans. Or one or two star anise. Leave in fridge for one to two weeks and then add to mojitos, mai tais, margaritas etc... KAN PAI!]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=58 0 Passionfruit Toddy http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=40 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=40#comments 2009-09-12 22:00:27 +0000 admin http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?p=40 Passionfruit ToddyA nice fruity, but wintery drink, this takes a little bit more effort, but it's lovely to serve as a dessert or in between courses if you're having a dinner party and need to buy yourself some extra time. 10 mls Grand Marnier 30mls Malibu 20mls Midori 90mls Pineapple Juice Dash Lemon Juice 1 whole Passionfruit Blueberries & Strawberries. Add ingredients into milk jug including fruit and add some hot water. Gently heat mixture to a warm-hot temperature. Strain liquid into balloon glass and scoop ‘cooked’ fruit into half an empty passionfruit.]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=40 0 Glossary http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?page_id=7 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?page_id=7#comments 2009-06-23 07:41:14 +0000 admin http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?page_id=7 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=7 0 Quantity Conversion http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?page_id=5 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?page_id=5#comments 2009-06-23 07:40:25 +0000 admin http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?page_id=5 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=5 0 About Reviews http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?page_id=4 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?page_id=4#comments 2009-06-23 07:39:54 +0000 admin http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?page_id=4 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=4 0 About Us http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?page_id=2 http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?page_id=2#comments 2009-06-22 13:38:51 +0000 admin http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?page_id=2 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=2 0 MAZE http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1380 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1380#comments 2010-11-07 09:25:41 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1380 8 Whiteman St, Level 1 Crown Metropol (03) 9292 6268 Score: 32/40 If Maze wasn’t billed as a ‘Gordon Ramsey Restaurant’, I probably would have been there sooner. He clearly cannot have a meaningful contribution to the thousands of restaurant that bear his name, which is clearly for sale. He’s a culinary call-girl. But when a work contact asked me there for lunch, I thought, ‘why not?’. So off I went. And I’m really glad I did. Maze’s menu is one of a grazing, tapas style. The lunch special at three courses for $38 or four courses for $49 is very reasonable and one of the great lunch finds in or around the CBD. There were three of us, so we managed to cover the entire menu, including: -Marinated beetroot with goat's curd cabernet sauvignon vinaigrette and toasted pine nuts -Applewood smoked kingfish with fennel purée and pickled celery globe artichoke and finger limes -Seared yellow fin tuna with white radish and yuzu and enoki mushrooms with black garlic -A butternut squash with compressed cucumber and pumpkin seeds -Ox “tongue and cheek” with  caper and raisin as well as carrots and horseradish pomme purée. -Smoked haddock veloute with watercress saag aloo with poached quail eggs. The service was friendly and helpful, the food was of an extremely high standard and any menu built around me shoving as many flavours in my face as possible is always a winner with me. Atmosphere: 8/10 Service: 7/10 Value for money: 8/10 Food: 9/10 Website: www.gordonramsay.com/mazemelbourne [gallery link="file"] Maze Melbourne on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1380 0 TAXI http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1370 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1370#comments 2010-11-07 08:50:24 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1370 Transport Hotel, Federation Sq (03) 9654 8808 Score: No score The story of this meal at Taxi Dining Room is a complicated one, but one I absolutely have to tell. I came here for dinner with the family for my brother’s birthday. I’m not going to go into details, but it was a meal I’d rather forget. The service was shocking, the food was disappointing and the whole experience was a bit of a disaster.

After much thought, I made the decision to call the restaurant and have a word with the Maitre D. Not only did he listen, he understood, took the complaint seriously and asked us back for a complimentary meal to make amends.

Sometimes restaurants get it wrong – we all do. But the making of a good restaurant is not just whether they can get it right. It’s whether they know how to fix it when they don’t.

So with much trepidation, we ventured back to Taxi Dining Room for our complimentary meal. I’m not going to score the meal, but I’m going to tell you about our second venture. It was one of the best meals I’ve had in Melbourne.

The first dish was scampi with truffle oil, with salmon roe, witlof and chervil. It was an absolute triumph. I adore witlof – the peppery flavour set against the richness and warmth of the truffle oil and saltiness of the roe. The scampi were small, sweet and succulent.

The second dish was smoked mangrove duck breast with apple and Asian mushrooms with balsamic reduction. The duck was juicy and tender and the balsamic wrapped itself around everything like a sweet, sticky, cuddly blanket.

Third up was sticky pork belly with seared scallop, red chilli sauce and a young coconut salad. The rich, fatty pork was lightened up with the fresh, crispy salad and the scallop was completely rare and tender inside – it melted away with no chewing required.

A tom kha with lightly seared kingfish, enoki and chilli was rich and flavoursome. It wasn’t too rich, which is a risk with some soups that have been over-developed. It left me wanting more.

Pan-fried wild barramundi with a cucumber and prawn salad, with king prawn tail and orange miso paste. Barra isn’t my favourite fish, but the dish was good and the serving extremely generous.

Wagyu porterhouse with king brown mushrooms and a yakuniku dipping sauce was completely divine. The meat was tender and soft and cooked rare. But the real triumph was the dipping sauce which made the meat sing with happiness in my mouth. It consists of mirin, Chinese rice wine, nashi, sesame and soy. Divine.

After quick palate refresher of orange and sake granita with strawberry jelly, we were into dessert. The dessert was a strawberry sorbet, cherry granita and strawberry soufflé. The ices were beautiful, but the piece de resistance was the soufflé – classic and utterly perfect. It tasted like an old-fashioned tea party.

We chose a 2008 pinot blanc ($90) to go with the meal.

As I said, I’m not going to rate this meal, because to be fair it would have to be a hybrid review of the first and second visits. But I will say this: they set out to win us back and they did. If this is what Taxi is capable of, then I hope they keep doing it because it was one of our best meals this year.

Also, apologies for the terrible photos - the restaurant was one of the darkest I've been to, but the views were phenomenal.

[gallery link="file"] Taxi Dining Room on Urbanspoon]]>
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Rosa's Kitchen http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1360 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1360#comments 2010-11-02 11:37:25 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1360 253 Flinders Lane, Melbourne Score: 33/40 I always feel sad giving away my favourite places, but if I can’t tell you about them little radishes, who can I possibly tell? Rosa’s Kitchen is a slice of real Italy, Sicily to be precise, in the centre of Melbourne’s CBD. Located in the CAE building on Flinders Lane, the menu changes every day, based on what Rosa feels like cooking or what’s in season. There is a $39 degusation if you can’t make up your mind. The menu is small, with only around 5 dishes, some of which always sell out early, but it’s all about quality at Rosa’s. Making up your mind is never straightforward here. But if you’re not sure, you can always ask Rosa herself for a suggestion – she’s an almost constant fixture in the kitchen. Service is usually frenetic but helpful and friendly. Just beware – no cards allowed when it comes time to settle the bill. On our last visit, my dining companions had lamb with peas & potatoes ($23) and I had what I always have, the antipasto platter ($15/$27). The antipasto platter invariably has a zucchini fritter, a variety of salads and cold meats, some olives, frittata and ricotta. It’s absolutely divine every time I visit. I simply cannot fault it. For dessert we chose a lemon and marscarpone tart ($7.50) – you’d hate it I’ll have yours. One of the nicest touches here is also the complimentary stovetop coffee for everyone at the end of your meal. Just like mama used to make. (Well she didn’t, because we’re Jewish so it was usually tea with honey and lemon, but you get my drift.) Atmosphere: 8/10 Service: 7/10 Value for money: 9/10 Food: 9/10 [gallery link="file"] Journal on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1360 0 Windsor Castle http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1357 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1357#comments 2010-11-02 11:23:47 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1357 89 Albert St, Prahran 9521 1867 Score: 19/40 The Windsor Castle makes me sad. This place smacks of potential, but just ALWAYS disappoints. A friend who was going away to Europe for a few months had a leaving lunch at the WC (note the irony) so I didn’t have much choice but to head on over. At the bar things always go well. The staff a friendly, funny and always game for a laugh. But head into the dining room and things go well and truly awry. Heading over to order at the counter, it doesn’t matter what day or time you’re there, the staff are always grumpy, unfriendly, unhelpful and just generally a bit of a pain in the pie-hole. On this occasion, add to that list dim-witted and incapable and you’re starting to get an idea about how badly things worked out. Almost everyone’s orders were incorrect. And when the female staff member realised this, she got very shirty…with US?! Then, when she thought that she'd under-charged someone, she actually came over to the table and asked for the difference - which she later returned when we pointed out that our guest had, in fact, paid the right amount. It was eye-rollingly bad service. The next issue was portion size. This place is not cheap, for a pub. It’s a full kitchen that aims to please with more than just a defrosted parma. But if you’re going to charge the prices, I hope you can deliver. Wild mushroom agnolotti with leek sauce, ricotta and truffle oil ($16/$21) was OK. But the serving was measly. Four agnolotti does not a main course make The steak sandwich was tasty, according to the diner sitting next to me, but when I dove in to steal some chips (it took me around 35 seconds of strong self-control to resist), imagine my shock that they were cold. Cold and sad little chippies. The pork belly with braised savoy cabbage, smoky bacon, parsnip puree and caramelised jus ($26) was one of the only triumphs of the day. I chose a smaller dish of prawn spring rolls with sweet chilli peanut sauce ($10). Surprisingly a generous portion, hot and fresh, but really nothing special. This is a lovely cosy venue in a great spot away from the hustle and bustle of crazy Chapel Street. But they continuously disappoint with grumpy wait staff and sub-par food or portions. When they get it right, it’s fantastic, but I’m not game to keep trying in the blind hope that they might accidentally score a point. Beers only for me, thanks. Atmosphere: 6/10 Service: 2/10 Value for money: 5/10 Windsor Castle Hotel on Urbanspoon Food: 6/10]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1357 0 Press Club http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1349 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1349#comments 2010-11-02 11:15:04 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1349 72 Flinders St, Melbourne (03) 9677 9677 Score: 33/40 I don’t like Press Club. Well. I don’t like George Calombaris. He annoys me. I don’t think he really understands food. I think his ideas are lacklustre. I think he’s ridiculously arrogant for someone who hasn’t achieved much. But between falling in love with Hellenic Republic, making Maha among my regular haunts and my latest visit to Press Club, I think I might have to rethink everything I know about Calombaris and food. My first visit to Press Club was for lunch. We had the roast lunch special, which was chicken, I thought it was incredibly average and dull. So heading back for my second visit, I wasn’t expecting a lot. My dining companions knew heading over, that I had some pretty serious dietary restrictions as a result of some medical testing I was scheduled for the next day. I wasn’t going to say anything, but my friends piped up and the next thing I knew, he was demanding to know anything and everything I couldn’t consume. These included: dairy, gluten, wheat and a host of other essential ingredients. He ticked me off for being too embarrassed to pipe up for myself, informing me that it’s his job to ensure I have the perfect dining experience, no matter what my restrictions or dislikes. He then proceed to construct a menu for me based on these factors. On the spot. Then he offered me some gluten-free bread to munch on while my companions tucked into some of the more traditional variety. I started with raw tuna with radish, pickle, watermelon, avgotaraho (sun-dried pressed mullet roe) and flowers ($29.90). Fresh, the taste of spring. Stunning. Next up was lamb off the spit with marouli salad ($39.90). I had without any of the dairy-laced accompaniments, but it really didn’t take anything away from the dish. The meat was succulent, tasty and tender. All the things lamb sometimes isn’t when it’s off a spit. But the dessert. The dessert. It is incredibly difficult to make a good, standout dessert without dairy or any of the things I couldn’t eat. Not only did they do it, they freaking rocked the Kasbah. Seriously – one of the best desserts I’ve ever had. Raspberry and rosewater soup with rose jelly, nitrus citrus, cherries and raspberry sorbet. It was like a glass of pure joy. While usually I am totally unrestricted with what I eat, what Press Club did that day was an art. They served me a meal of the highest possibly quality, with as many restrictions as a Christina Aguilera concert rider, with no forewarning. They did it with a smile and a flourish and I wanted to kiss each and every one of them. (nothing to do with the food strapping Greek demi-g-ds, each and every one). Despite this top-class experience at Press Club and my love of Maha and Hellenic Republic, I still hate George Colombaris. For the time being, anyway. Atmosphere: 8/10 Service: 10/10 Value for money: 7/10 Food: 8/10 Website: www.thepressclub.com.au [gallery link="file"] The Press Club on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1349 0 Thy Thy 1 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1343 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1343#comments 2010-11-02 10:57:45 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1343 142 Victoria St, Richmond 9429 1104 Score: Ahhhhh Thy Thy. An old friend that never lets me down. I needed a cheap, happy meal that consisted in some way of fish before we headed into the city for party fun-times. I immediately thought of Thy Thy. So off we went. A whole steamed flounder with soy, ginger and spring onion ($19), please hold the MSG. And a plate of mixed veggies ($8.8) will do it for me every time and it’s enough food to feed four, with a couple of servings of rice. The service is curt but always with a sense of humour – especially when it’s someones birthday and they bring out the big guns. Um. Gun. A single banana fritter, standing to attention with a scoop of vanilla ice cream perched strategically on either side. Always comes with a sparkler in the top and the whole restaurant giggling as they sing happy birthday. I also love the drinks and I don't mean beer. Wonderful creations of coconut milk, condensed milk and agar agar jelly, as well as kidney beans or even sweet corn, can double as desserts, if the, ahem, guns don't take your fancy. Atmosphere: 8/10 Service: 7/10 Value for money: 10/10 Food: 9/10 [gallery link="file"] Thy Thy on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1343 0 Es Teler 77 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1338 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1338#comments 2010-11-02 10:45:28 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1338 319 Swanston St, Melbourne (03) 9663 4243 Score:34/40 Cheap dinner in the city? Stop always taking the easy option and heading off for dumplings and try something different instead. What about Indonesian? There is no country called ‘Asia’. And that is becoming increasingly apparent  as more and more varieties of ‘Asian’ food start to open higher standards of eateries in Melbourne, a lot in the CBD. For a mid-week lunch I headed off to Es Teler 77 with a friend who had a hankering for a Nasi Goreng. In we walked…and in the first 20 seconds, I knew it was going to be good. I stood staring at photos and a specials board for at least 15 minutes before I could bring myself to choose a dish. Always a good sign. I ended up choosing Special Ikan Balado ($11.80), which is a small whole fried fish, served with balado and steamed rice, veggies and a clear broth. Balado is a chilli sambal from West Sumatra, which was smothered all over the crispy-fried fish. This dish blew my mind. Spicy but not so spicy you couldn’t taste the flavours. The soup had a kick but was lovely to wash down the meal and the cucumber slices on the side, clearly intended to be a garnish, actually complimented the flavours perfectly. My friend chose a vegetarian nasi goreng ($8), which was huge, steaming hot and totally delicious. There’s no table service here – you wander up to a cafeteria-style window to order and take a number and a seat. The food is prepared on the spot and is always hot and fresh. Forget dumplings. This is the shizz. Atmosphere: 8/10 Service: 7/10 Value for money: 10/10 Food: 9/10 www.esteler77.com [gallery link="file"] Es Teler 77 on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1338 0 Globe http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1327 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1327#comments 2010-11-02 09:26:06 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1327 218 Chapel St, Prahran (03) 9510 8693 Score:28/40 Anyone who lives south-side remembers Globe. This trendiferous café used to draw the hippest cats from around Prahran and Winsdor with its perfect perching spot on Chapel Street. But Globe has been reborn. And whether you like it or not, it’s upped the chic factor by several notches. The décor isn’t fancy, but it’s certainly got an air of a café that’s grown from adolescence into adulthood, as has the menu, which has been vamped up and made more interesting. On this occasion I visited for breakfast. I shared the house fry-up with a girlfriend and while it was tasty, at $22 a pop I didn’t feel there was much bang for our buck – they could have been a little more generous with the portions. Elsewhere on our breakfast table, baked eggs in spicy tomato and bean sauce with multi-seed bread ($15) was delicious, while a BBQ lamb sanga ($16) was also given a nod of approval. I’ll definitely be back for dinner, with most dishes under $20 a main and a great range of fish, veges or meat. The staff were friendly, funny and attentive. Tick, tick, tick. Atmosphere:  7/10 Service: 7/10 Value for money: 7/10 Food: 7/10 Website: www.globecafe.com.au [gallery link="file" columns="2"] Globe Café on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1327 0 Sails On the Bay http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1309 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1309#comments 2010-11-02 09:15:51 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1309 15 Elwood Foreshore, Elwood. 9525 6933 Score: 35/40 With a breath-taking view, friendly service and mouthwatering food, I'm reluctant to tell you guys about this place. I want it to just be mine, mine, mine. We were looking for somewhere new, on the south-side to celebrate my dad's birthday. After being blown away by the degustation at Attica the previous year, we were looking for something special, although given that Attica was for his 60th, perhaps not quite as pricey. We had all heard whispers about Sails and decided that this was the perfect occasion to try it out. We walked along the beach as the sunset, towards the front entrance of the restaurant. We were greeted by warm, friendly staff (all of whom had a sense of humour) and finished watching the sun set over Port Philip Bay against the front wall of the restaurant, which is made entirely of glass. It was magic. For dinner both myself and my brother, SuckMai Radish, decided on the Melange - a $70 seafood dinner, with three courses. My dad decided on the venison and my mum had quail. The cold entree was three oysters served natural, one in bloody mary and one in green tea and sake shots. This was followed by a crab, lemon & basil salad and a wasabi pannacotta & bug tartare with lime foam. The second course was grilled salmon in a sherry and white wine sauce, grilled marlin in a miso broth. The piece de resistance was the final round; wok fried crab, mussels, prawn & scampi with chilli, ginger, coriander & coconut. All were completely scrumptious, as were the dishes chosen by our folks, which we sampled. But we ate so much we didn't know if we could fit in dessert... Bwahahahaha! As if we couldn't cram some dessert in there. Don't be ridiculous. The desserts were sucked up off the plates I could even, um, write down what they were or take a photo (how embarrassment). But this is a night and a meal that all of us enjoyed. While Sails isn't necessarily on the food map like some of its bigger brothers, it deserves to be. Atmosphere: 8/10 Service: 10/10 Value for money: 8/10 Food: 9/10 Website: www.sailsonthebay.com.au [gallery link="file"] Sails On The Bay on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1309 0 Yuu Hong Kong http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1299 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1299#comments 2010-11-02 08:54:18 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1299 Shop 320-321, 3/F, Hopewell Centre. (852) 2861 2023 Score: 28/40 Yuu is well-hidden but worth seeking out, with unusual Japanese fair and ridiculously friendly and helpful staff. This place is hidden at the top of a highrise in the busy Wan Chai district, just near the centre of the island. I was taken here by friends and didn’t even get a look at the menu, so unfortunately I don’t have any prices for you, my little radishes, but it’s not an expensive place. The first fantastic offering to hit the table were some seriously high-rent sake flasks. The flasks were filled with water down a centre chamber then frozen. The sake is then poured into the main area, with the frozen water keeping the sake frigidly cold. The first two dishes were a sushi/sashimi platter and avocado rolls. The quality of the fish was high and the presentation stunning. I simply cannot have Japanese food without an array of delectable Japanese pickles (a mixed pickle plate is known as Oshinko), but imagine my surprise when the most phenomenal array of colours arrived at our table. Purple picked garlic cloves, gobo (burdock root), ginger, daikon and many, many more. The next two dishes were served in large, hot, stone bowls. One was a rice dish with meat and some vegetables. The second bowl was a large seafood noodle soup dish with tofu and seaweed. Huge crab claws were poking out and the whole thing was ridiculously tasty. This is a cute little place and almost every dish has a twist – it’s not your straight up classic Japanese. Which makes for a nice change. Atmosphere: 7/10 Service: 7/10 Value for money: 7/10 Food: 7/10 [gallery link="file"]]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1299 0 Plan B by Becasse http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1293 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1293#comments 2010-06-18 07:04:47 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1293 204 Clarence Street,Sydney. (02) 9283 3440 Please don’t hate me, but I went to Plan B by Becasse and I didn’t have the wagyu burger. But the good news is that I had a sandwich; the most gorgeous sandy I’ve had in years. And I haven’t even told you about the plum tart yet… So I headed up to Sydney for work. I like Sydney. And I was sitting in my company’s Sydney office and I called my girlfriend, Harbour Radish. “Um, where do I go for lunch?” “What do you feel like?” “Something Sydney people would eat for lunch.” “Where are you?” “I don’t know. Hang on, I’ll use the GPS on my iPhone. OK. I’m in York Street.” “Go to Plan B by Becasse”.  So I Googled it, printed off a map and away I went! Now, Plan B is the extraordinarily small, down-market café next to the famous Sydney restaurant Becasse. And its signature thing is a wagyu hamburger ($10). It also has pastries made by Becasse’s patissier. When it is described as a ‘hole in the wall’, you can take the description as completely literal. There are only five seats in the whole place and all were taken. And one of the diners was eating a burger. And. Well. It looked, um, dry. So I decided the world was trying to tell me something and had a peek in the fridge at the sandwiches. And instantly fell in love. My lunch was packed up and off I went back to the office (I followed the map all the way back) and laid out my desk-picnic. The sandwich ($9.00) was filled with proschiutto, cornichons, gruyere cheese, lettuce and tomato. The bread was crispy outside but really soft inside. Have you noticed that lately sandwiches seem to occur in rolls that are so hard you practically need a mouth full of canine teeth to take them apart? Well this sandwich was the perfect combination of crispy but soft. Divine. I also picked up a tiny little blood plum tart. Just something small and sweet – the pastry was crispy and delicious, the custard inside creamy and full-bodied and the plum was sweet and sour. Amazing. And then to top it all off, I picked up a CHERRY COKE (?!) on the way back to the office. Haven’t had one for years – the medicinal aftertaste never gets old. http://www.becasse.com.au/planb.php [gallery link="file"] Plan B on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1293 0 Zumbo http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1283 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1283#comments 2010-06-18 06:54:29 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1283 296 Darling Street, Balmain, 2040. (02) 9810 7318 Adriano Zumbo has been the talk of the town since his appearance on Masterchef, but after a visit to his Sydney shop and a tasting of his wares, I’m more than happy to admit, all the hype is justified. The man is a genius and this is surely the best patisserie in Australia. I’ve been to Sydney for work several times in the last year and every time I’ve boarded the plane from Melbourne I’ve promised myself that this is it. This is the visit when I’ll finally make it to Zumbo. But it’s location – at Balmain – as always left it just out of reach, when all my meetings are in the CBD. But on this occasion I decided to go for the weekend. So all bets were off. First stop was the patisserie. This simple, minimalist and tiny shop is such a humble welcome to the treasures inside. The first thing that hits you when you look into the fridge is the colours – the amazing, vibrant, beautiful colours. The second thing that hits you is the shapes and structures. Little tiny works of art stuck together with egg whites, sugars, chocolates and all sorts of other methods. There are tarts, cakes, mousses, puddings and slices. And in an adjacent display is a mountain of perfect macarons. I spent around $40 at the cake shop, picking up two cakes. The first was Dr Apple, consisting of pistachio dacquoise, apple cider jelly, vanilla crème Chantilly, calvados cooked apples, green apple mousse ($7.90) and a Charlotte Full, consisting of olive oil mousse with rhubarb ripple, passionfruit crème,  biscuit macarons and fresh berries ($7.90). I then chose a selection of macarons, including buttered popcorn, raspberry, coconut and pandan, blueberry and lavender, rice pudding and caramel. The absolute standouts were the coconut pandan, blueberry lavender and raspberry, but they were all fabulous. I don’t even know how to describe them – they were all perfectly formed, perfectly risen and struck just the right note between crispy and chewy. The flavours reminded me of Jelly Belly jelly beans, in that the flavours had a level of perfection that seemed impossible and all were so clearly sharp and identifiable. We then wandered around the corner to Zumbo’s chocolate shop to taste what they had in store. We tasted several different varieties and all were pleasing, although my companions thought the chocolate covered salt and vinegar crisps were a little odd. I didn’t mind them- I love chocolate with salt.  The other standout were some of the strange creations Adriano had set up for Easter, including an entire fried breakfast, in a frying pan mind, entirely made of chocolate. Or an entire chicken, filled with eggs, also made of chocolate. Both of these places are worth a visit, and are doors apart so there’s no need to miss one or the other. [gallery link="file"] Adriano Zumbo Café Chocolat on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1283 0 Toko http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1272 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1272#comments 2010-06-18 06:38:03 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1272 490 Crown Street, Surry Hills, Sydney. (02) 9357 6100. Score: 27/40 Despite a few speedbumps, I had a great night at Toko – lovely food and a fantastic menu. They were the redeeming features in a night punctuated with crappy seating and uninterested waiting staff. Toko doesn’t take bookings and is arse tighteningly cool. So we were prepared to join the extensive waiting list. We went in, put our names on the list and went down the road for a drink. When they were ready, they summoned us with a phonecall and back we headed. Our first problem was the seats. We were seated in the very back corner, next to the grill, without the benefit of the screens to shield us from the smoke. Immediately we could see that we were going to experience a certain level of discomfort, as our eyes started to water. But it was bearable. We ordered a bottle of sake – a cloudy, not at all dry variety, served cold. We tucked in heartily. Then the food started to arrive. We started with moriawase tempura – mixed tempura. It was fresh and delicious, with some slightly unexpected additions thrown in for surprise value. They included a vine of cherry tomatoes and a piece of avocado, among more traditional offerings. The cherry tomatoes were little bundles of lava-like joy. The avocado got a serious thumbs-down and was spawn of satan. The next dish was soft-shell crab sushi. The little rolls were surrounded by a thin layer of daikon, outside the seaweed, which was a really interesting touch and overall the balance was great. Not too much rice compared to fillings and the crab was lightly fried and crunchy. The next dish was horenso, spinach with sesame and soy. It was disappointing. It’s a very simple dish and easy to do well. But instead of the more traditional paste made by toasting the sesame and grinding it into a paste, there was just the thin soy and some sesame over the top. It was thin and salty and lacked flavour. It was at this point that, with tears streaming down our faces, we asked to be move and were shifted to the middle of the restaurant. The smoke had become unbearable. We were moved into the centre of the restaurant, to our great relief, but at that point, having had some uninterested service, we appeared to become complete invisible. It was hard to get anyone’s attention for just about anything. But the dishes continued to emerge. Next one up was probably the dish of the night; robata grilled scallops with sweet pickled apple and jalapeno garlic. They were absolutely divine and the scallops weren’t overdone, with a ‘pink’ centre. The final dish was grilled wheels of courgette topped with some sesame which were simple and tasty. We also partook in a dessert. The total cost of the bill was $120. Not bad for the amount of food we had. Atmosphere: 8/10 Service: 4/10 Value for money: 7/10 Food: 8/10 [gallery link="file" columns="4"] Toko on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1272 0 Village Belle Hotel http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1266 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1266#comments 2010-04-21 23:00:46 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1266 202 Barkly St , St Kilda, 3182. (03) 9534 2200 Score: 28/40 When a friend announced that were heading for a pub meal, I was giddy with excitement, but when I found out she meant this pub, my stomach lurched, mainly because I had never heard a word about it. But I’m happy to report that my fears were misplaced. As soon as we sat down, it hit beer o’clock. Off we went to the bar where they had a nice selection of beers, ales, lagers and cider. I chose a Bulmer’s cider. Delicious. This is a typical pub menu; five kinds of parma ($18.50 - $19.90), steaks ($18.90 - $28.50), lamb shank ($17.50), fish & chips ($15), beef and bacon pie ($15.90) and a variety of other pasta, snacks and even salads. But something strange came over me, as I sat in the pub. It was a warm and pleasant night, I don’t eat parma and nothing else took my fancy. Nothing except the snapper on the specials menu. There were quite a few things that worried me. Firstly, fish on the specials menu can sometimes be dodgy. Secondly, could a pub turn around a whole baby snapper with a pepper salsa that didn’t taste like, well, poo? The answer, dear radishes, is…wait for it…YES! My little darling snapper was absolutely delicious; perfectly cooked, slightly blackened, giving it a smoky flavor, but it was also tender and moist inside. The fish was covered in a really tasty, slightly spicy salsa, made with a variety of peppers and capsicum.  It was served with chips and salad. The busy kitchen means that everything that emerges is fresh and hot. The staff, mostly backpackers from what we could tell, were also friendly, chatty and helpful and our food didn’t take too long to arrive. The atmosphere is laid back, casual and relaxed. Atmosphere: 7/10 Service: 7/10 Value for money: 7/10 Food: 7/10 [gallery link="file"] Village Belle Hotel on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1266 0 Harajuku Crepes http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1262 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1262#comments 2010-04-20 23:00:13 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1262 Shop 148 Knox Place, Melbourne Central If you’re feeling down and you need a pick-me-up, Harajuku Crepes makes you feel like you’ve entered a happy, colourful, whipped cream wonderland. All over the walls there are plastic replicas of what you can choose. While there are a few savoury offerings (chicken curry or ham and cheese, for instance) the real joy of this place is in its sweet offerings. The crepes are made to order so they’re hot and fresh and delicious and filled with pretty much anything you can think of. The place is tiny, with few seats, so be prepared to buy your dessert and walk with it, or perch on a stool for 10 minutes and wolf it down. We went for the Brownie Deluxe, with brownie, strawberries, cream and chocolate ($6.50), Cheesecake Deluxe, with cheesecake, blueberry, strawberry, cream and strawberry topping ($6.50) and one with mango and ice cream ($5.70). If you don’t like the kind of Asian-style dessert where the centrepiece is whipped cream from a can, don’t bother. But if you’re into bright colours, sweet sweets and fruit from a can, this is the place. And it’s my absolute favourite place in the universe for a pick-me-up treat, especially when you want a walk around the city with a friend. A pancake friend. Website: www.harajukucrepes.com.au [gallery link="file" columns="2"] Harajuku Crepes on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1262 0 Grigons & Orr http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1254 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1254#comments 2010-04-20 23:00:31 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1254 445 Queensberry St, North Melbourne. Score: 28/40 The only worry about this beautiful little 1950s throwback, was that its food wouldn’t live up to the gimmick, but it did and it did it well. The first issue was drinks. I love a wide and varied selection in the drinks department and this place delivers. With soda floats ($5), smoothies with agave syrup and organic yoghurt ($5.50), milkshakes ($5), virgin marys and even Berocca ($3). Even the water has mint and strawberries floating in it. The amazing thing about this café (and its gimmick) is the attention to detail. Someone has done a really beautiful job of setting this place up; from the milk bar feel of the shelves piled high with household items, to the old copies of Woman’s Day hanging up for patrons to read. On the every table chrome-framed table there are little touches to take you back in time a  few decades, including porcelain sugar jars in all shapes and sizes. For eating, we chose a BLT with tomato, bacon, cos, chilli chutney with mayo ($9.50) and a roast pumpkin tart with leeks, feta, pomegranate dressing ($13). Both were, flat out, absolutely delicious. Everything was fresh and light and the condiments were applied in just the right quantity so you didn’t have an overpowering flavour that took away from all the other ingredients. For dessert we had a banana split ($6). I am happy to report that the whipped cream came from a can (none of this hoity toity stuff) and there were both nuts and sprinkles applied. It really hit the spot. There’s also an ice cream sundae for anyone that has an aversion to bananas. Friends who live in the area are also highly recommend breakfasts at Grigons, and while I haven’t had breakfast there yet, the menu looks pretty inviting, including; Bircher Muesli served with a mixed berry compote ($8), apple fritters with walnuts, caramel sauce and mascarpone ($9.50), couscous porridge with coconut cream goji berries, toasted almonds & shaved coconut & honey ($10), shakshouka ($12), eggs anyway with a variety of sides, two kinds of omelette, ricotta pancakes and brandied blueberries with toasted almond flakes & Barbados cream ($12), French toast with balsamic glaze and crispy bacon or banana, hazelnuts, yoghurt and strawberries ($12/$14) or pan-fried tofu with spinach, mushrooms and soy honey dressing ($12.50)…and can you believe it, more. The only slight letdown was the amount of time we waited for our food and had to make multiple requests for orders. But the staff were good-natured and the food more than made up for that small point. I’ll be back. Atmosphere: 7/10 Service: 6/10 Value for money: 6/10 Food: 9/10 Website: www.grigonsorr.com.au [gallery link="file" columns="5"] Grigons & Orr on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1254 0 Sichuan Dining Room http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1250 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1250#comments 2010-04-19 23:00:04 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1250 Mid City Arcade, 200 Bourke St, Melbourne. (03) 9663 5472 Score: 24/40 I first wandered into this place around a year ago after reading a fantastic review and seeing some great pics on the website of That Jess Ho.  And it’s now a firm, reliable favourite. I’ve now been to Sichuan Dining Room enough times to sample quite a few things on the menu. But here are my two favourites. The pork and salted pickled cabbage noodle soup ($9) is fabulous but not for the faint-hearted. Large strips of fat adorn these plump pieces of tender meat. The noodles are delicious and the cabbage adds a wonderful saltiness to the taste. Gorgeous. The other favourite of mine here is the fish-flavoured eggplant with minced pork ($9). The eggplant is stewed to absolute perfection and so ridiculously tender. It is served with rice and is so more-ish I finish it every time. This place is cheap, cheerful and parked a little bit out of the way so it’s usually relatively easy to get a table. Atmosphere: 6/10 Service: 6/10 Value for money: 6/10 Food: 6/10 [gallery link="file" columns="2"]]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1250 0 Chu The Pho Bo Ga http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1245 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1245#comments 2010-04-18 23:00:42 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1245 270 Victoria Street, Richmond. (03) 9427 7749 Score: 32/40 I’ve never been to Vietnam. And I’ve never been to a specialty pho restaurant. But next time I have a hankering for a noodle soup, only one of these options will do. Chu The is slightly further away from the Punt Road end of Victoria Street. It is small and dirty and dingy and absolutely packed to the rafters with pho punters of every shape and size. We ordered a serving of spring rolls – they were stunning fresh and crunchy and served with all the usual trimmings on the side. That was only the distraction munch while we checked out the extensive options for our pho. You can have whatever meaty options out want, or combination of options. There is something for everyone: brisket, ox tail, tripe, chicken giblets and liver. A pho will cost you around $10 and they are bowls of joy and happiness, served with holy basil and bean shoots and all the best crunchiness. The soup is flavoursome and has little pearls of beautiful fat pearling on the surface. The noodles are springy and have lovely texture and all variations we tried (brisket, oxtail and beef) were great. And in the very best Vietnamese traditions, a list of 15 drinks made having a cold beverage, or dessert, or dessert and beverage in one, yummy. I also want to make special note of the staff, who were helpful, smiling and charming through the whole experience. That makes for a nice change from some of the restaurants in this area. And I found it just in time for winter, when noodle slurping is almost compulsory. Atmosphere: 7/10 Service: 7/10 Value for money: 10/10 Food: 8/10 [gallery link="file" columns="4"] Chu The Pho Bo Ga on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1245 0 Dinkum Pies http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1238 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1238#comments 2010-04-12 23:00:08 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1238 In my traipsing through the city in my lunch-hour running various errands, I have often found myself rushing through the Block Arcade and passing this nondescript, slightly worse for wear canteen-style pie joint. So one day, when I found myself with a serious case of pie hankering, I could hear this place calling to me. ‘Come to us little Radish, come to us!’  So off I traipsed, dragging along a friend for company. There’s a reason this place is packed from about 12:30pm until 2pm. It makes pies. Good, old-fashioned pies. In almost every flavour you can imagine. Plus, to top it off, they have all the pastry yummies of yester-year – caramel slices, custard tarts and lots more. My order was for a steak pie and can of coke ($4.90), but unfortunately I ended up with a breakfast pie (filled with an egg, bacon and other bits and bobs). I can’t say it was massively enjoyable, but once I took it back to the counter and they apologetically replaced it with a good ol’ meat pie, I tucked it and it was, simply put, gorgeous. Hot and fresh, meaty with the perfect flaky pastry, and at $5 for lunch, what a bargain! [gallery link="file"] Dinkum Pies on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1238 0 Coda http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1226 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1226#comments 2010-04-12 23:00:09 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1226 Basement 141 Flinders Lane, Melbourne. (03) 9650 3155 Score: 27/40 The first time I heard about Coda, was actually by being told about it by a chef at another restaurant. I was sitting at the bar at Cumulus Inc, which fronts onto the kitchen. I was sitting there with a workmate for a post-work drink and autopsy of our days, and we ended up nattering away about food, when a young, female sous chef leaned over and whispered ‘the best place in town, apart from here of course, is Coda’. From then on, it seemed like every man and his dog had been to Coda. But not me. I had been looking for an excuse to venture there for a while, knowing it’s a reasonably pricey venue, and when I asked a girlfriend out for a pre-wedding dinner, it seemed like the perfect time to pop in. So three of us chicks ventured over one evening. The staff were suitably up their own arses for us to be assured that this is the Melbourne dining experience of the month. They pretty much ignored us and then as they walked us to our table they were sure to kiss, shake hands with or at the very least warmly greet all the regulars, or friends they recognised. The menu at Coda is a sort of semi-tapas experience. There are a number of smaller tapas-style dishes for starters, often by the piece, and then larger main-style dishes, but few of them. We started with the blackened quail, daikon and shiso salad ($7 each). The quail was crispy and dark on the outside, but juicy and plump inside. The sugarcane prawn with sweet chilli sauce ($6 each) were a very unexpected surprise. They arrived, balls of prawn with the sugarcane sticking out in the middle, but covered in little rice-puff-noodley-type things. They were crunchy and juicy and delicious. But I was disappointed that my companions didn’t munch on the sugar cane and spit out the husk like I did – well, that is until I realised that meant I could have theirs too. The next dish was probably my favourite; The Coda roll. Described as a ‘crisp parcel’ (read: spring roll) of bone marrow, ginger, shitake mushroom and rice paddy herb ($10.8 each). The spring roll was fresh and hot and crispy and delicious. The flavour of the marrow was perfectly complemented by the other ingredients – possibly magnified. The rice paddy herb was a marriage made in heaven, and really interesting, with an almost aniseed-type flavour. A friend who couldn’t stomach the idea of marrow instead had a Hà Nôi style crispy rice paper roll, with nuoc mam dipping sauce ($6.8 each) which she reported to be lovely. The next dish was betel leaf filled with spanner crab, galangal, roasted chilli and lime ($5.8 each). I love betel leaf and this dish was the perfect complement to its flavour but also did justice to the spanner crab, which doesn’t have a massively strong flavour and is easily overpowered. For our mains we chose roasted yellow duck curry ($36) and sizzling prawns with king brown mushrooms ($34). Both here horrifically disappointing after the stunning array of tasty starters. The duck curry was so salty I would say it was almost inedible. All I could taste was salt, salt and more salt. The sizzling prawns were reminiscent of a bad suburban takeaway, with their sweet cloying flavour and for the price, we were really disappointed with the number of prawns – I don’t even think we managed two per person on a table of three. To finish off, we couldn’t go past a good, old-fashioned Bombe Alaska. It was absolutely beautiful and ridiculously tasty. The waitress that served us kindly informed us that she was ‘really scared’ as she lit the dish alight, because she had only done it once before, but she did a great job and it looked really gorgeous – even with the threat of serious burns, we polished it off quick smart. The waiting staff were very attentive once we were seated and seemed almost desperate to help us with our wine selection. We had a half bottle of Cuilleron ‘la lolieres’ St Peray Marsanne ’07, from the Northern Rhone in France ($58). I then had a glass of the Whittmann Estate Riesling ’07 Rheinhassen, Germany ($15). There was a good wine list, with a good selection. But we did notice that the staff were tending to push us towards the upper end of the price range, despite us saying that we weren’t really wine buffs and were looking for something more moderately priced. Overall Coda is a great dining experience, but only if you stick to the smaller dishes. There needs to be some serious work on the disappointing main courses. And while I know it was our first time, it would be nice to be treated with as much care as friends and family of the staff that walk in the door. Website: www.codarestaurant.com.au Atmosphere: 7/10 Service: 6/10 Value for money: 7/10 Food: 7/10 [gallery link="file" columns="4"] Coda on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1226 0 Maha Restaurant & Bar http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1220 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1220#comments 2010-04-11 23:00:57 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=1220 21 Bond Street, Melbourne. 9629 5900. Score: 28/40 This is a good, solid Middle Eastern restaurant – despite the restaurant being in the Columbaris chain. Lunch at Maha is a real bargain and very reminiscent of more traditional dining in this style. A two course soufra (a mix cold, small mezze and larger hot dishes) is $35, three courses is $40 and four courses is $45. It’s a great way to have large variety on the table and share with friends. Don’t be scared to mention any likes or dislikes; they always ask and are more than happy to tailor the selection for you. We went for the two-course menu. The starter consisted of a range of different dips and salad-style dishes. The best one is their pumpkin dip which is fantastic and spiced but sweet. Other dishes included a baba ganoush, warmed olives and some warm, crumbed mushrooms. The hot dishes consisted of a tuna fillet, slightly over done for my personal taste but probably what the majority of people would like, served with pomegranate. The second dish was a slow-cooked lamb, but my friend is not a lamb-eater, so she had ravioli, which I have to say was lovely but a slightly strange vegetarian option for a Middle Eastern style restaurant. We topped off the meal with jallab; a fizzy soft drink flavoured with date and rosewater syrup and packed full of fresh mint – beautifully refreshing. I remember going to Maha the week it opened; it was a very average meal. But in the times I’ve been since then (it opened just over two years ago), I’ve been really impressed with the way it is maturing. Everything from the service, to the cuisine on offer to the structure of the menu has improved and it’s now a good solid offering. There are still very small things that keep this restaurant from becoming truly great (see the ravioli comment above), but overall, this is a place I’m happy to visit when the soufra mood takes me. Atmosphere: 7/10 Service: 7/10 Value for money: 7/10 Food: 7/10 Website: www.mahabg.com.au [gallery link="file"] Maha Bar and Grill on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=1220 0 Cafe Vue Christopher Columbus Voyages Cocktail Night http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=884 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=884#comments 2010-01-17 22:00:47 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=884 430 Little Collins S, Melbourne. (03) 9691 3838 This month we decided to venture back to the Cafe Vue in Normanby Chambers for their weekly cocktail night - the theme, ripe with rum and some tasty sounding morsels, finally sounding like something we might enjoy. The cocktail night is weekly, with themes that last four weeks. The cost is $75 a head, which includes five cocktails and five tasty snacks. The first course in this rummage around the world was a Nitro Caipirinha (Brazil), teamed with a prawn & avocado ceviche. The drink was in granita form, served in half a lime on a bed of salt, and was made with cachaça, a rum made directly from sugar cane juice, lime juice and sugar syrup. It was described by the waiter as an amuse bouche, or a palate refresher - a little but cheeky given that the granita clearly wasn't the size of a standard cocktail, but I was willing to forgive because it tasted so good. But if the cocktail was good, the ceviche was a slam-dunk. It was served in a martini glass, with an avocado mousse at the bottom that tasted like suspiciously like an old-fashioned guacamole, then topped with a tomato and coriander salsa, then the prawns, which like any ceviche had been cured in citrus, and topped with crispy onions. It was lip-smackingly good - the flavours were just perfectly complimentary, the textures were luscious and the crispy onions finished off everything with a perfect crunch. Really a top notch effort. The second course was ocean trout en papillote and a Banana Mai Tai (USA). The Macquarie Harbour trout was cooked to absolute perfection in a banana leaf, with snow peas and caramelised onions. There was no hint whatsoever of the promised kaffir lime leaf emulsion, but it was still lovely. The mai tai included orange blossom, lime, banana infused rum. We were warned that the taste of banana wouldn't hit us forcefully, but was extremely subtle. Um. It was so subtle it was almost indiscernible. Call me a stickler, but if I have a 'banana mai tai', I would, if possible, like it to herald some banana flavour! But that doesn't mean it wasn't a good drink . The third course was a lamb cassoulet jaffle, served with a homemade tomato sauce. Apparently there's a MUCH more chic name for the tomato sauce, but the waitress couldn't remember it. Inside the jaffle was beans, buffalo milk yoghurt and confit of lamb. I'm sorry to say it, but I couldn't eat this. It was absolutely disgusting. I don't often use that word when I'm writing about food, but it was truly foul. It felt like I was eating pet food - it was awfully bland, with no seasoning that I could make out. I didn't want to put tomato sauce on it because in my house, putting tomato sauce on lamb is a crime. And the whole thing had been pureed or something, so it was literally smooth like meat paste. It. Was. Bad. The drink was a world apart - a nice, old-fashioned mojito (Cuba). Sugar, lime, mint and of course rum, but on this occasion it was tonka bean-infused rum. Just tasted like rum to me folks, but it was good and washed away the taste of the jaffle nicely. The fourth course was Keen's cheddar with black pepper lavosh and served with a blood plum cooked in honey. I'm not a big fan of cheese plates, but this was a good one. The simple cheddar was complimented perfectly by the blood plum and the drink, a Dark & Stormy (Bermuda), couldn't have been paired more perfectly. The final course was a mixed blessing. Dessert was a banana, coconut & lime sorbet with poached pineapple and a wedge of frangipani. It was a summer delight, full of the tastes of January. But the drink was a total disaster. It was supposed to be a Pumpkin Pie Pina Colada (Puerto Rico) . Roasted coconut-infused rum at the bottom, with a pumpkin creme anglaise on top. We were instructed to taste the bottom layer first before mixing everything up and having them together. A quick sip of the rum base wasn't too bad. But once you mixed them together - and please bear with me here readers because I'm being literal, not metaphorical - the drink tasted like vomit. Real, actual, vomit flavour. It made me absolute nauseous. When the waiter came over to clear our plates for the last time, he asked about the drink, noticing that none of us had finished it. I told him that despite the fact that it was the drink on the menu I was most excited about, it was bar far the most disappointing. He seemed resigned and explained that they'd been tinkering with the flavours and admitted that there was probably a little bit more work left to do. This 'threw up' a conundrum. Should I be pleased that he was honest and admitted that we were probably right and the drink needed work, or unhappy that the drink was essentially served despite the staff knowing it wasn't up to scratch? I'm still mulling over that one. Let me know what you think. Overall, this is one of the best cocktail nights I've been to at Cafe Vue. Out of the five cocktails and five dishes, four out of each of the five were fantastic and that's a pretty good effort. While the principal staff-member who explained each of the cocktails to us was helpful and intelligent, the others were borderline useless and terribly uninterested. The quality of the service at Cafe Vue has declined remarkably. But I still think the cocktail night is a fun night out and always full of surprises. This restaurant has not been scored as it was a special eating event. The menu for the current cocktail night can be found on the restaurant's website: www.vuedemonde.com.au/cafe-vue.aspx [gallery link="file" columns="4"] Café Vue on Urbanspoon ]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=884 0 Dainty Sichuan, Toorak Road http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=878 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=878#comments 2010-01-19 22:00:09 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=878 176 Toorak Rd, South Yarra. (03) 9078 1686 Score: 30/40 An outpost of the CBD version of the same name, this place doesn't disappoint, with the same fiery, tasty food, at reasonable prices. I wanted to take Touchmai Radish out for dinner and chose this place as the location, mainly because of the Chongqing Chicken, which makes me happy for days after I eat it. But I had to explain to him - he hasn't had a huge amount of experience with authentic Sichuan cooking - that we really needed to balance the meal with some spicy, and not so spicy dishes, because otherwise we'd suffer serious consequences. He laughed in the face of danger and we ordered one moderate, two non and one face-eatingly spicy dish. Here's how it panned out. I demanded that we order at least two moderate-to-non-spicy dishes. I chose the preserved egg in beancurd ($10.80) and shredded pork with black fungus ($19.80). Both were great, with the garlicky pork being particularly tasty and the cold tofu dish providing the flame retardant we so desperately needed. Next up was the moderately spicy Chongqing Chilli Chicken ($23.80), which I call chicken lucky dip. Whenever I'm in China I really try to hunt this dish down, but it's made a resurgence in Australia in recent times, showing up on almost all Chinese menus, Sichuanese or not, so I don't have to go quite as far afield to get a hit.The chicken is fried and golden and hidden in mounds of dried chillies. The little chicken pieces are succulent and spicy, but not so much that you can't still taste the more subtle nuances of the flavour. Which is more than I can say for the next dish we ordered... Which was the Hot and Spicy Fish Slices Hot Pot ($27.80). I basically dared my brother to order it, and he did, and in the process almost burnt both our faces off. Seriously. We both felt nauseous and sweaty and a little bit emotionally drained after eating what would probably equate to a 16th of this massive bowl of hot pot. Most of the liquid (or should I say lava) in the bowl consisted of high-grade chilli oil, including some actual floating chillis and about five handfuls of Sichuan peppercorns, which numb the tongue. The fish was delicate and light, but only in texture. I have no idea what it tasted of, because all I could taste was fire. When I chatted to the waitresses about it and explained in Chinese that I felt like my face was on fire, the young Chinese kids at the next table started laughing - apparently even they don't order that particular warming specialty, claiming it's just far too hot! Anyway, Touchmai certainly learnt his lesson - Sichuan food must be taken seriously. When they rate it at the top of the chilli scale (as they clearly do on the menu), they really mean it. Dainty Sichuan never disappoints - the food is hot and fresh and tasty and the prices are very moderate. The only suggestion I 'd make is come with a larger group, if possible. The portions are large and the more people you bring, the better the value. But as with most Chinese places nowadays, if you can't get it all intya, just ask for some takeaway containers - they're more than happy to oblige. Atmosphere: 9/10 Service: 7/10 Value for money: 7/10 Food: 7/10 [gallery link="file" columns="2"] Dainty Sichuan on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=878 0 Old Town Kopitiam Mamak http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=867 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=867#comments 2010-01-18 22:00:46 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=867 Level 2, Shop 11 QV Square, QV Building, Melbourne. 9654 2682 Score: 29/40 When the food bloggers of Melbourne started chattering about this mouthwatering Malaysian gem, I knew a visit must be urgently scheduled. And I was not disappointed. Having been a writer for over half my life, when I decided to combine my love of food with my chosen profession, it was a marriage made in heaven, for me at least. Part of my journey has been connecting with the food community in Melbourne, or at least trying to. Many of the Melbourne food bloggers are active Twitterers and when the Tweet lines started to buzz about a place called Mamak (Old Town Kopitiam Mamak) I just had to go and see what all the fuss was about for myself. Chef Radish had previously visited Old Town Kopitiam Mamak on Bourke Street and given it a less than impressive write-up, and a score of just 22/40, so I was nervous. But boggers Jeroxie, MyFoodTrail and Essjay Eats made everything sound so tasty that a serious craving started to develop - and I hadn't even walked in the door yet! When I finally got in and sat down to look at the menu, out came the iPhone for some serious decoding. It didn't annoy me - it got me really excited! It's not often that I need to have a menu translated. But when it does, it usually means eating delicacies I've never had before. Bring it on. We started with the Roti Canai ($4). This was a beautiful, fresh, flaky roti and the sauces were really flavoursome and delicious. Next up was satay. We ordered half a dozen of the chicken variety ($8), but were a little surprised that you can't mix the chicken and beef, half/half in a serving, given that they're the same price and I like a bit of variety in my satay and just about everything else. But what perplexed us even more was then they arrived and were simply not cooked through. Very disappointing. They took them away and replaced them, but argued that the first batch had been fine. Two strikes. I've since been back and the satays have definitely been cooked, but it would be remiss of me not to mention it. It was disappointing to have them arguing, when there was blood clearly visible in the chicken. Having said that, on subsequent visits the satays have been tasty and fresh, slightly blackened, giving a sexy smokey aftertaste and the sauce is better than most other places I've tried. Next up was the complicated procedure of ordering a rice biryani, with two dishes and sauce ($9). We chose fried chicken, beef simmered in dark soy and the sauce was chicken kurma. The chicken was fresh and crispy, the beef was spiced beautifully, with star anise. For dessert we had a roti tissue, also called a roti helicopter in some parts apparently ($7), and a pulut hitam ($5), which is slow cooked black glutinous rice with coconut cream and palm sugar. The roti tissue is a thin and is shaped like a large teepee. It is drizzled with condensed milk and rosewater syrup and was a little piece of heaven. It was the perfect dessert because it was so light and finished off the meal perfectly. The rice was tasty, but not outstanding. The people at the next table were having an ais kacang, a shaved ice dessert, which looked phenomenal but they would have had to call an ambulance if we were going to be able to fit anything else in! One of the great joys of Malaysian, Vietnamese and Indonesian dining is the drinks. Growing up in Hong Kong, I miss being able to have an iced milo or homemade iced lemon tea with a meal. This place has the drinks list to end all drinks lists. On this occasion I chose a Milo Dinosaur, a jar of iced Milo with an extra spoonful of powdered undissolved Milo added on top ($4.50), while my companions had  coffee frappe ($5.90) and a Bandung, which is a glass of iced milk flavoured with rosewater syrup or cordial. All three were great, but the Bandung was so different and reminded me a little bit of a much sweeter lassi. Apart from arguing with us over the raw satay, the service was quick and pleasant. The staff had a sense of humour and dealt with the queuing hordes (us) with endless patience. Since this initial visit, I've been back to Old Town Kopitiam Mamak twice and I'm more than sure that I'll be back again soon. A long, interesting, varied menu means I can have new things ever visit for at least a few more months and still have room for my old favourites, like a Roti Canai and a Milo Dinosaur. Thumbs up. Atmosphere: 8/10 Service: 4/10 Value for money: 9/10 Food: 8/10 [gallery link="file" columns="5"]]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=867 1 Shark Fin House http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=842 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=842#comments 2010-01-05 22:00:18 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=842 131 Little Bourke Street, Melbourne. (03) 9663 1555 Score: 19/40 I think in my heart I knew, but I had to confirm it; Shark Fin House is way past its prime. The only time I'd ever come back here is during the massive Saturday or Sunday rush when the staff are so rushed off their feet that they're actually carrying fresh yum cha and not things that have been sitting on the trolley for an hour and a half. I'm not going to spend too long talking about Shark Fin. We went for yum cha, just the two of us. We had a very average lucnh, with very average service and it wasn't particularly cheap. Because I'd had a reasonably disappointing experience the previous month, I did a second visit to confirm my suspicions of slipping standards. We had some shark fin dumplings, some crystal prawn dumplings (har gow), some jellyfish with duck tongues, tofu rolls stuffed with prawn, some chive dumplings and some egg tarts to finish off. The bill came to over $50. It was average. Just average. The service was as rude as I've come to expect at any Chinese restaurant but they actually refused a few times to even hear what we were after, which seemed above and beyond the call of their cultural nonchalance. I won't be coming here again unless it is in peak, rush hour (we were there at lunchtime on a week day) and I'm desperate. Sorry guys. Atmosphere: 5/10 Service: 4/10 Value for money: 5/10 Food: 5/10 Website: www.sharkfin.com.au [gallery link="file" columns="5"] Shark Fin House on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=842 1 Hellenic Republic http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=827 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=827#comments 2010-01-04 22:00:34 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=827 434 Lygon St, Brunswick. (03) 9381 1222. Score: 36/40 I am not a fan of Press Club, so I was nervous about Hellenic. So I was surprised to find that I absolutely loved it - the food was beautiful and the prices extraordinarily reasonable. The service was a bit sketchy, but they were pleasant and friendly.We started with a serving of the Taramosalta, the traditional cod roe dip ($10) although in this case it was a more natural white, rather than the bright, neon pink we're all used to. But it wasn't lacking any flavour - it was absolutely delicious.  We teamed it with some mixed Australian and Greek olives ($8) and Kefalograviera Saganaki ($11.50), a signature dish of pan-fried Greek cheese with peppered figs ($11.50). The olives were served warm and were really tasty, and a perfect accompaniment to the cheese and taramo. The saganaki was nerve wracking, because I didn't  like the idea of anyone faffing around with such a classic, beautiful dish. But it was a triumph - the figs were peppery and sweet at the same time, and set off the flavour of the cheese. Gorgeous. Next up we had a village salad ($11.50), a traditional Greek affair with a generous slab of feta, a plate of chicken from the spit ($19.50), Calamari ($19.50) and giant beans with tomato and olive oil ($10). The salad was simple but lovely, and the feta was of a very high quality. The chicken was succulent and juicy, as was the calamari, which had been chargrilled, was just barely cooked and lacked any and all chewiness. The giant beans are something I don't often see on Melbourne restaurant menus and I wish you did - they're tasty and homely. We finished off with Greek doughnuts with Greek doughnuts with Attiki honey and walnuts ($12.50). They were a bit disappointing at first, but we quickly established that all the honey had dribbled down the bottom and got smearing - as soon as they were all smeared up they were just the tastiest little babies. We were so full and hadn't finished anything else we'd ordered but still managed to squeeze in two of these each. So yummy. There was only two of us and with a few glasses of wine, which you can get by the glass, and an imported Greek beer for me (Alpha, Mythos $8) we paid around $60 each, but we could have easily fed another two people. The great thing about Hellenic is that they lack the pretension of George Columbaris' other restaurants - they'll happily pack up the leftovers so you can take it all home for the unlucky sod that couldn't make it, or just for breakfast. I strongly recommend Hellenic Republic. I am totally convinced. Great atmosphere, faultless food, lots of options for vegetarians and really reasonable prices for food of this quality. I was disappointed with some forgetful, dozy service, but the staff were generally helpful and friendly - never rude - so I'm not going to judge too harshly. Two thumbs up. Atmosphere: 10/10 Service: 6/10 Value for money: 10/10 Food: 10/10 Website: www.hellenicrepublic.com.au [gallery link="file"] Hellenic Republic on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=827 0 Tiba's Lebanese Restaurant http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=821 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=821#comments 2009-12-29 22:00:01 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=821 Tiba's Lebanese Restaurant, 504 Sydney Road, Brunswick. (03) 9380 8425 Score: 34/40 The food at Tiba's is solid and fresh, if a little basic, but it is the prices make it one of the best eats in town. We came to this eatery with a group of around 15 people. We ordered one of each of the six set menus (pretty much platters) and some extras to pad everything out. Each platter had a range of meats, dips and garnishes and there was one vegetarian option.  They range from $13 for the vegetarian one, all the way up to $30 for the special which includes almost everything you can think of. We had felafel, shawarma, sausage, lamb cutlet, chicken wings, kofta, quail, salads, humous, tzatziki, baba ganoush, spinach pie, vine leaves, cheese pie, vine leaves and so much more. Of course you can order things separately if you want to but the platters make a lot of sense. Everything was fresh and hot and tasty - especially the quail, which was particularly juicy and delicious. There were more than enough options for our vegetarian friends, although they had to fight us for the crunchy felafel. One of the highlights for me was also the mekhallel, or bright pink pickled radish, which I absolutely adore and was present in vast quantities. This Muslim establishment allows strictly no alcohol, but who needs it - the drinks here are completely hilarious. I chose Sunkist. Awesome. But really, the attraction with Tiba's is in the price. We paid around $12 a head including soft drinks. How can you go wrong? Atmosphere: 9/10 Service: 9/10 Value for money: 9/10 Food: 7/10 [gallery link="file" columns="5"] Tibas Lebanese Restaurant on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=821 0 Belgian Beer Cafe Bluestone http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=810 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=810#comments 2009-12-28 22:00:06 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=810 557 St Kilda Road, Melbourne. 9529 2899 Score: 22/40 We headed here for lunch on a Friday and it was a mixed experience. There were some highlights...and unfortunately some low-lights. The Belgian Beer Cafe on St Kilda Road (as opposed to the one in the bottom of the Eureka Tower) houses a very large beer garden - a top place to come and sample a specialty beer on a warm afternoon. But right up the back, there's a restaurant. And that's where we headed. There's a European feel to the menu, for obvious reasons, with some Belgian, German and French influences, as well as some good ol Aussie cafe favourites. We started with a selection of appetizers that included: Pork Belly salted and twice cooked with apple pickles ($11.00), duck liver pate served with toast and condiments ($9.00) and Cheese croquettes ($9.00). We added to that mussels mariniere, so steamed with white wine, celery, onion, leek and thyme ($27) and a side dish of the luscious stoemp, which is mashed potato with Kaiser bacon and parsley ($8.50). The starters were generally good, and generally hot and fresh.My highlight was the pork, which was fatty and rich and the apple was perfectly seasonsed. The stoemp, which I haven't had for several years, was gorgeous - rich and perfect with the saltiness of the bacon. We were also taken aback by the extremely generous sized  servings. The mussels were awful. Dry and flavourless. Criminal, because mussels are so easy when done properly. I'm not a professional, trained chef and my mussels are SO much better than what they provided...very disappointing indeed. Certainly not worth the whopping $27 pricetag. The service was frustrating. We were interrupted during conversations by waiters who felt the need to give input and they seemed very committed one moment and a little disinterested the next. Because we were visiting for a birthday, I went to the waiter's station privately and asked that we have a serving of waffles delivered with a birthday candle for my friend. The waffles arrived, without a candle, delivered by a guy who wasn't our waiter. It was a poor showing. Obviously the highlight at this place is the beer. There is an endless list and I finally got to have some fruit beer, which I love. To the traditional beer drinker fruit beer (especially the berry variety) can be very sweet, but I love it. I had a raspberry beer to start with, Lindemans Framboise, 375ml ($12.50) which was lovely. Then moved onto a tap beer, Belle-Vue Cherry beer, which was less sweet and tasted a bit like maraschino. Loved it. So it was a mixed experience with highlights and lowlights.The moral to this story is: if you go, and eat in the restaurant, order carefully. But I'll be sticking the beer garden and finger food outside. Atmosphere: 6/10 Service: 4/10 Value for money: 5/10 Food: 7/10 Website: www.belgianbeercafemelbourne.com [gallery link="file" columns="5"]
9529 2899
Belgian Beer Café Bluestone on Urbanspoon]]>
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Cafe Vue http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=802 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=802#comments 2009-12-28 22:00:29 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=802 430 Little Collins St, Melbourne, 3000. (03) 9691 389 Score: 27/40 After my most recent trip to Cafe Vue, I have much better things to report. The lunchbox this time around was absolutely scrummylicious. I've reported on the Cafe Vue lunchbox before. Last time around, it was really disappointing and I wondered whether standards had slipped.  I am pleased to report that this lunchbox was right back up to scratch. It contained: a brioche with smoked salmon and aoili, a tomato and basil salad, a pork rillete with a crouton stick and a strawberry eclair. It was fine for me for lunch, but if you were starving hungry I'm not sure the quantities would be enough to keep you going for the rest of a working afternoon. But for $15, it really was quite reasonable. Also, I've included a picture of the famed Cafe Vue burger and fries ($12). Interestingly enough, I think it used to be made with wagyu, but now appears to have come down in price and is using standard beef.  Inneresting... Service:  8/10 Food: 8/10 Value for money: 3/10 Ambience: 8/10 Website: www.vuedemonde.com.au/cafe-vue.aspx [gallery link="file" columns="2"] Café Vue on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=802 0 Cumulus Inc http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=784 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=784#comments 2009-12-13 22:00:48 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=784 45 Flinders Lane, Melbourne. (03) 96501445. Score: 31/40 I originally went to Cumulus Inc about six months ago, but had to wait for a second visit to really make up my mind about this place. This review is an amalgalm of two experiences at Andrew McConnell's chic CBD eatery. The most annoying thing about Cumulus is that you can't book - it's a bit of a pain. But the restaurant is fairly casual and people don't tend to sit down for a 4-hour meal. So the turnover is quite quick and there is lots of bar seating, which means getting a seat without a reservation is not totally out of the question. The menu is set up, almost in a tapas style. While they don't call it tapas & raciones, the set-up with smaller and larger dishes reminded me a little bit of MoVida. Then there are some larger selections of charcuterie if you want a melange of various offerings. I'm going to give a list of the dishes we ate, with a note of whether I ate them at the first or second visits, the first visit being about six months ago and the second being last week. Where the dishes were menu items I'll try to provide some pricing! So off we go: -Fried padron peppers. This was a special (the peppers aren't always available) and is one of my all-time favourites. The juicy little green suckers are like the culinary version of musical chairs - usually they're sweet and flavoursome. But one in four is so spicy it makes the top pop off your head and steam pours out. Fantastic. (second visit) -Pheasant drumsticks with salsa verde and aioli was a special and absolutely blew our minds. They were crunchy and fresh and gamey and just gorgeous little bursts of flavour. (first visit) -School prawns sauteed with chilli and garlic ($14 second visit). There's only one word to describe these little guys: succulent. They're crispy, but juicy and the flavour is intense. It was a very generous purpose and we ate them like a bar snack as we chatted over a glass of wine as we waited for our more substantial dishes to arrive. -Scallop wrapped in speck with caper and raisin vinaigrette ($5 first visit). These guys were juicy and succulent, but the speck had a slight crispiness and the vinaigrette a kick. -Slow-cooked octopus with aioli and dehydrated olives ($9 both visits). Seems this slow-cooked octopus is being a bit of a McConnell staple, because it was on the menu at Cutler & Co too, where it was just as good. Cooking the octopus at a low temperature for an extended period takes all the rubbery texture out of the flesh and makes it soft and light and it just disintegrates in your mouth. -Pork belly & cassoulet ($23 first visit) was gorgeous. The pork belly was thin and crispy and the cassoulet was made with white haricot beans. It was slightly dry, but the flavours were right and the portion generous. -Foie gras parfait with toasted brioche ($17 both visits) is just divine. Light and airy, it has a lovely sweetness. But the brioche isn't the sweetest I've had, so the sugar isn't overwhelming. The second time it was served slightly differently, but was just as good. -Rocket, radiccio, salted ricotta and candied walnuts ($8 second visit) was a lovely side-salad - nothing earth shattering but a welcome accompaniment to the foie gras, which is no light snack, and adds some welcome greenery. -Seared tuna with white anchovy and picked garlic (special, first visit) was so stunning. I would have liked the tuna even less cooked than it was, but I do veer on the extremely underdone side when it comes to things like tuna and salmon. Anyway, the saltiness of the anchovies married perfectly with the robustness of the tuna. Great dish. -Madeleines filled with lemon curd ($2.5 both visits). These are made to order, so they're ridiculously fresh and warm and gooey. It's also wonderful to have something on the menu that is just a mouthful of something sweet, rather than having to invest in a full-sized course. These guys are the perfect way to finish a meal and I have dreamed about them regularly since I partook in my first serving. The wine list is extremely reasonable and varied with some similarities to the list at Cutler & Co. And there are options by the glass and some fantastic cocktail-makers behind the bar. This is a great restaurant. I highly recommend it. Sometimes the service is extremely weak, as I experienced on my first visit, however the second visit suggested that perhaps I'd just had some terribly bad luck. Also, I strongly suggest that if possible you take the opportunity to sit overlooking the kitchen - the kitchen staff are really lovely and watching them prepare the food is a real treat - you might even pick up some tricks! Atmosphere: 9/10 Service: 6/10 Value for money: 8/10 Food: 8/10 Website: www.cumulusinc.com.au [gallery link="file"] Cumulus Inc. on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=784 1 MoVida Bar De Tapas http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=765 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=765#comments 2009-12-09 22:00:13 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=765 Kingfish1 Hosier Lane, Melbourne. (03) 9663 3038. Score: 37/40 MoVida is one of my top three Melbourne restaurants, but this is my first visit in about 8 months. Oh sweet Spanish lover, how I've missed you. We actually headed to Hosier Lane to try out MoVida Next Door (yes, yes I know, I still haven't been). But due to it not being open on a Monday, we snuck into MoVida proper instead, for some post-work snacking and grazing. Forgive some of the lack of pricing - a lot of the dishes we had were on the specials menu, which is given verbally by the waitress. We started with a cigarillo each ($5), which is baby leek wrapped in brik pastry served with a chicken liver parfait. It was fresh and tasty, but the parfait was quite powerful and slightly over-powered the other flavours on the place. Nevertheless a wonderful start! Next up was rabbit belly with chanterelle on brioche. The chanterelles were huge and moist and beautiful. The sweet eggy brioche perfectly complemented the rabbit, although some of my dining companions thought the brioche could have been in a slightly smaller cube. Slow-roasted salt bush goat with sherry and onions was beautiful and it was a racion size and quite huge. Natural oysters from Barilla Bay in Tasmania served with carrot escabache (pickled in vinegar) were fresh and had a bit of a kick. Duck (migas - a whole duck cooked in a salt-crust) served with roasted grapes was tender and delicious. Oven-baked, cured kingfish belly with black radish, padron chilli and chorizo. Another triumph. I made a real effort to order some of the newer dishes I haven't had before, but I simply couldn't eat at MoVida without getting one dish I dream about at least once a week: oven-roasted portabello mushrooms finished with sherry vinegar ($11). The mushrooms are so tender and juicy and they've got a sharp twang from the vinegar. I've tried to do this dish myself, but it doesn't taste the same when you don't have it out of the earthenware jar in the bowels of MoVida. One of the highlights of the meal was also a bottle of Mas Comtal 2008 merlot roseo, from Rueda in Spain ($55). It's not easy to find a light rose - trust me, I've tried. But this one is light and sweet. Beautiful. Many of my friends who have eaten at MoVida complain about the service, saying the staff are almost always rude and obnoxious. On our visit we were served by a female hostess, seemingly more senior because she was in all black and not wearing an apron. She was completely lovely and accommodating throughout the whole meal, until a small, angry little man took over and displayed the kind of arrogant, obnoxious attitude that I've heard so much about. A shame, but thankfully his involvement in our evening was limited. MoVida is always a joy. I love eating tapas, lots of small dishes, the variety, the casual nature of it all. You can eat here inexpensively, or go all out, and the food is always fantastic. Oh baby, I missed you. Atmosphere: 9/10 Service: 8/10 Value for money: 10/10 Food: 10/10 Website: www.movida.com.au [gallery link="file" columns="4"] MoVida Bar de Tapas on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=765 0 Cutler & Co http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=742 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=742#comments 2009-12-06 22:00:28 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=742 57 Gertrude St, Fitzroy. (03) 9419 4888 Score: 35/40 Finally, a visit to Cutler & Co. I was so worried it would disappoint, but thankfully every single course of our eight-course degustation was an absolute joy. You could be forgiven for walking straight past Cutler & Co - it is extremely non-descript outside. But the inside has a really special, if not slighly impractical, feel. The colours are warm and the furnishigs extremely trendiferous. The light fittings were adorable and the exposed brickwork gave a cute industrial element to the design. Staff were gracious and helpful from the time I was escorted to the table, to the time we made our exit. Our booking was for 8pm, but the restaurant was still quite sparsely populated upon arrival. The tables were well-spaced giving a little bit of privacy and easy maneuvering. Unfortunately, as the restaurant began to fill, we discovered a problem. Noise. We had to shout throughout the entire meal, constantly leaning forward and struggling to hear the conversation. This is a complaint I've heard from quite a few patrons of this restaurant - such a shame because all the other elements are so strong. The first course was a selection of appetisers. A slice of bresaola with a horseradish breadstick, a clair de lune oyster and slow-cooked octopus topped with chorizo and picked garlic. All stunning and the octopus shared more than a passing resemblance to the sclow-cooked octopus at Andrew McConnell's other venture, Cumulus Inc. The second course was one of Cutler's flagship dishes, the cured kingfish with horseradish snow. The kingfish was completely fresh and divine and the snow, which is like a horseradish granita, lifted the whole dish, refreshing, spicing and blending the flavours all at the same time. Asparagus salad with seared scallop and pickled spanner crab was the first of the more substantial dishes. The scallops were seared to perfection, the asparagus still retained their crunch and the crab was delicate and sour at the same time. Pressed quail terrine, a foie gras cigar, orange and pistachio was one of my less favourite dishes. I'm not a huge fan of terrine - I'm definitely more of a pâté kinda girl. Other components included golden sultana and pickled cherry. The dish worked and was extremely tasty,but wasn't the most exciting of the night for me personally. The next offering was John Dory, grilled red claw yabby, fennel and nettle butter and a parsnip puree. Just gorgeous. The fish was perfectly cooked and the yabby added a new dimension of flavour. Wood-grilled Wagyu striploin was served with a sweetcorn puree, nettle sauce, spiced red wine sauce and grilled spring onion. The meat was seared and very pink and it barely needed teeth to be ingested. The spring onion brought out the best of the meat's flavour and the sweet corn was a wonderful partner to the red wine gravy. The next course was described as: yoghurt, rhubarb, lavender and green olive nougatine. What an undersell. The yoghurt was in a block of jelly. The rhubarb was a confit. A little puffy ball of caramelised milk foam. Shards of green olive nougatine. Everything came together so beautifully, both in texture, in flavour, in colour. The final course was violet ice cream, chocolate ganache, sour cherry. A flavour that is also a scent (violet, lavendar) is always a strange thing. The flavour of the violet ice cream wasn't so powerful that it confused the palate with a question of scent vs flavour. It was happily both. The chocolate ganache was more aggressive, but welcome. A hazelnut sponge soaked up the melting ice cream and ganache. Cutler & Co stands up among Melbourne's great food destinations, with Attica and Vue De Monde. We tried to book in September for a Saturday-night meal in November and we had to wait until very late in the month. But it was worth it. Atmosphere: 7/10 Service: 9/10 Value for money: 9/10 Food: 10/10 Website: www.cutlerandco.com.au [gallery link="file" columns="5"] Cutler & Co on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=742 0 Shoya http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=726 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=726#comments 2009-12-08 22:00:49 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=726 25 Market Lane, Melbourne. (03) 9650 0848 Score: 37/40 There are lots of places to get a bento in Melbourne. But this is the best I've had. Shoya (which means rising house) is supposedly one of Melbourne’s best Japanese restaurant. Unfortunately neither time nor my bank balance had allowed me to visit and attempt to verify this claim, but I decided, after a particularly bad morning at work, to treat myself to lunch, with a fellow blogger and foodie. It's just one of those things - comfort eating excuses can be particularly delicious, whether you're snacking on nachos as you read Pokerblog or you're heading out for a surf 'n' turf at lunchtime! Shoya has several lunch set options, ranging from $24.50 to $65. I went for the eponymous Shoya Set, which is $28. I was rewarded with an endless array of literally perfectly cooked and prepared Japanese dishes, starting with a stunning dish of sashimi that included an array of fish including salmon, kingfish and scallop. The next dish was a very small pickled eel salad and it wasn't on the list of dishes on the menu, so I think it was a bonus amuse bouche. The next dish was chilled beancurd with strips of bonito flake. The tofu was reasonably solid, silken and extremely tasty. Savoury egg custard topped with a bright green broad bean was one of my favourites and contained little morsels of seafood and meat.A large portion of tempura was straight out of the deep fryer and into my gob, and included both vegetables and a large prawn. A beautiful piece of white fish came next and was so perfect. Crispy skin but moist inside. The hot dishes were topped off with a small bowl of udon, in the most stunning stock. We think the noodles were hand made, but irrespective, they were bouncy, but soft and delicate too. The stock was well-balanced with just the right amount of salt for me. My dining companion was slightly less indulgent than me (thank goodness, because she helped me eat all of my food!) and chose a stunning Shoya Ramen ($15), topped with a large piece of stewed pork that just crumbled under the softest touch. For dessert we shared my last course - green tea ice cream. Um. Excuse me. Don't roll your eyes, thanks, I'm not a big fan of green tea ice cream either, but I strongly recommend you try this version - it tasted of the essence of tea and was absolutely delightful. Having had lunch at Shoya, to say I am desperate to go back for dinner is possibly the greatest understatement of the century. The staff were friendly, the atmosphere classy, with simply and classic decor, and the food, quite simply, beautiful. I strongly recommend Shoya for lunch. Watch this space for dinner. Atmosphere: 9/10 Service: 9/10 Value for money: 9/10 Food: 10/10 Website: www.shoya.com.au [gallery link="file" columns="5"] Shoya Nouvelle Wafu Cuisine on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=726 2 Eclipse http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=718 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=718#comments 2009-12-07 22:00:57 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=718 7A/495 Collins St, Melbourne  (entrances on Flinders La) Score: 27/40 No Twi-hards, this isn't some sort of Twilight preview, this is a fabulous new inner-city cafe that just has a real sense of class. Right in the deepest, darkest bowels of the Intercontinental Hotel, new cafe Eclipse has opened in Flinders Lane. It's uber-cool and reeks of chic, with exposed brick and an industrial feel. But the real treat here is not in the design, it's in the food. On the day we went, panini on offer included zucchini, creme fraiche, mushroom, spinach and another with salami, goats cheese, grilled capsicum and rocket. The menu also includes some fantastic salads and we chose one of broad bean, candied walnuts, dutch carrots and aged balsamic ($11). On the menu was also a few hot dishes and a large selection of breakfast options which continue until 11am. The chef also occasionally puts a dessert on the menu and we had a taste of a lemonade, pumpkin cheesecake. Watch out for it - a lovely summer refresher. The coffee here is absolutely fabulous and they take it VERY seriously. There are also some lovely little cupcakes on offer (teensy weensy ones) and if can, try to visit before Christmas, because the mince pies blew my mind. My only issue with this little gem is with the service. It may just be infant teething issues, but accuracy and speed on the coffee machine could be improved - especially during the morning rush when I've sometimes had to wait up to 15 minutes for a takeaway coffee... But having said that, this is a lovely place to visit for lunch and definitely a cut above most of the lunchtime offers available at this end of the city. Atmosphere: 7/10 Service: 6/10 Value for money: 7/10 Food: 7/10 [gallery link="file" columns="4"]]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=718 0 Cicciolina http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=698 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=698#comments 2009-11-19 22:00:28 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=698 130 Acland Street, St Kilda. (03) 9525 3333. Score: 36/40 I just couldn’t continue my European food odyssey without a trip to the temple at which Melbourne food lovers go to worship. Yes, children. I’m talking about Cicciolina. The biggest pain about Cicciolina is that it doesn’t take bookings. So we went to the gorgeous back bar early – 7pm – put our names on the list and ordered a bottle of prosecco and a small jug of cassis. We were willing to wait. We were seated by 8pm, which was a lovely surprise on a Saturday night and everyone knows Cicciolina is worth a much longer wait. On the way into the restaurant from the back bar, I asked our waiter whether brains were on the menu that night. He laughed in a slightly maniacal way and informed me that if brains weren’t on the menu, they wouldn’t be able to open the doors. A good sign, children, a good sign. The thing that struck me before I’d even looked at the menu was the extremely well-priced wine list. We went with an old favourite, a Bollini Pinot Grigio, and it was under $40 and absolutely delicious – perfect for the hot, balmy weather. It will come as absolutely no surprise that I ordered the brains wrapped in proschiutto, eggplant and basil, deep fried and served with roasted capisicum, fried chives and roasted garlic aioli ($15.50). This is a serious dish for the serious brain-lover. This ain’t no wallflower. This ain’t for wimps. This is richer than Bill Gates, more powerful than Warren Buffet. Less than a week before I had brains at Bistro Thierry, so it was an interesting comparison. The Thierry dish was lighter and more subtle. The Cicciolina dish is more robust and crispy, from the deep fried pancetta, providing a nice contrast of textures. The only aspect that let the Cicciolina version down was the portion size – it was huge. And because I am a pig, I ate it all. Then I spent the space between entree and main feeling sorry for myself. Apart from that, they were completely different dishes – and wonderfully so. For a main course, I had another entree, with a soufflé of blue swimmer crab meat, shallot and lemon thyme and served on a champagne and chive veloute ($19.50). Another extremely rich dish but light. The soufflé was so packed full of crab meat I expected to find a whole claw in the middle as a prize. The veloute required copious bread dipping once the soufflé had disappeared (didn’t take long). My dining companions had roasted local snapper fillet served on a leek and black mussel & parmesan fondue with gnochette pasta and squid ink crumbs ($39) and eye fillet with kipfler potatoes, sautéed silverbeet, tempura baby zucchini and truffled mushroom butter ($42.50). Something quite strange happened after Shtick Radish ordered  his dish, the steak. Originally he ordered the rib eye. But the waitress, after consulting with the kitchen, returned to the table and explained that while there were two rib-eye left, the chef didn’t feel they were good enough to serve. It was disappointing, but also really pleasing that rather than just cooking it up and sticking it on a plate or telling us it had ‘run out’ they were honest and up front. Our waitress turned out to be one of the most pleasing aspects of the whole meal. She was friendly but not intrusive. Humorous but not cheesy. And I have to say that every other staff-member we encountered, from the back bar to the front of house, were funny, pleasant and really set the tone for a magnificent evening. Anyway, back to the food, the steak and the fish both got glowing reports. While all the food was of the high quality we’ve come to expect from Cicciolina, the thing that stunned us was the size of the portions. I had two entrees, my dining companions had a main course each and we were completely stuffed. We couldn’t even fit in a slice of Cicciolina’s world-famous-in-Melbourne tarte tatin. It’s been a while since I’ve venture to this stalwart of Melbourne restaurants, but it never disappoints. The day it opens its doors on Carlisle Street, less than two blocks from my house, as it plans to do, will be a very happy day indeed. Atmosphere: 9/10 Service: 10/10 Value for money: 8/10 Food: 9/10 Website: www.cicciolinastkilda.com.au [gallery link="file" columns="4"] Cicciolina on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=698 0 Bistro Thierry http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=681 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=681#comments 2009-11-18 22:00:59 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=681 511 Malvern Road, Toorak. (03) 9824 0888. Score: 31.5/40 The day had finally arrived. My 30th birthday. Lord help me, I’m no longer in my twenties. To celebrate or commiserate, we all headed off, me wearing black, for champagne and lunch at Bistro Thierry. The main reason I chose this spot is first and foremost because I have been going through a European food phase. French and Italian mostly, but I can feel a trip to MoVida coming on pretty soon. But there were two other reasons. The first was that I’ve heard fantastic things about Bistro Thierry from just about everyone I know who’s dined here. Including a Frenchie or two. And the final reason was that, having requested my friends get me extremely expensive gifts for my birthday (which they did), it seemed slightly unreasonable to expect them to shell out $100 a head for a fancy lunch. Bistro Thierry has one of the most reasonable lunch specials in town. So off we went. “Bistro Thierry was created with a single purpose: to give customers a chance to experience all the ambience, warmth and hospitality of a bistro in Lyon or Paris,” proclaims the website. Well it has achieved what it set out to do, within the parameters of its clientele - hoards of waspy, Toorak ladies who lunch. So admittedly, we had a little giggle at the bad spray tans and wondered how they could lift their hands to eat their food, given the weight of the carats. The prix fixe menu is $30 for two courses including a glass of wine.  The portions are slightly smaller than a la carte (as you would expect) but you get a wide range of choices. To start with, I had cervelles d'agneau, Prince Albert, pan-fried lambs brains wrapped in air dried ham with a sauté of mushrooms and a tarragon mayonnaise. It was utterly gorgeous. Huge leaves of tarragon just complemented the flavours perfectly and the creamy mayo lifted the dish completely off the plate. My mum decided to order a la carte and chose for her starter calamari served with mixed leaves and a spicy Provencale sauce ($19). It was crispy, fresh and delicious. For mains, Harbour Radish and I had poisson sauté aux epinards, or pan-seared fish with sauteed spinach, lemon and extra virgin olive oil. It was simple, but utterly flawless. My friend Gordon had the poulet à la “Tourangelle”, or roasted free-range chicken with parsley stuffing and braised peas ($33) and my mum had a second starter, a salad of magret de canard. Everyone was pleased with their dishes. But dessert was the masterpiece. Two of us opted for crème caramel, one had a tarte tatin, but my mum hit the big-time, with meringue légère au chocolat au lait, or light meringue served with vanilla ice-cream, crème Chantilly and a milk chocolate sauce ($13.50). This is the dessert equivalent of bathing in fresh goat’s milk and then having a three-hour massage from a gorgeous Swede. When it arrived at the table, its sheer size freaked us out a bit, but the fantastic thing about it was that it was rich without being overpowering. It was classic and exciting. It was luxurious but not wanton. I think you get the idea. It was the sort of dessert you could eat at any time of day, after any meal and not push yourself over the edge into feeling that over-full nauseous feeling. The wine included in the set-menu price was extremely reasonable, as were the other by-the-glass offerings. If this is lunch at Bistro Thierry, you can bet I’ll be back for dinner. But if you’re looking for a sophisticated taste of Paris at a reasonable cost, head over for lunch. It won’t disappoint. Atmosphere: 7/10 Service: 7/10 Value for money: 8/10 Food: 9.5/10 Wesbite: www.bistrothierry.com [gallery link="file" columns="4"] Bistro Thierry on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=681 0 Element Bistro Sydney http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=674 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=674#comments 2009-11-17 22:00:53 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=674 163 King St, Sydney. Tel: (02) 9231 0013 Score: 33/40 I only had one night in Sydney and that meant one dinner. Just one. I wanted something reasonably -priced,  a bit different and preferably European. I can quite happily say that Element was one of the best finds of the year. To start with, let me set the scene. Element is under some stairs, almost completely hidden from view in Sydney's CBD. It is absolutely tiny - I doubt it could seat more than 30 people. But the minute you walk in, you feel relaxed and at ease. The waitress was absolutely lovely and welcoming and the interior is simple, but classy and warm. In addition to a reasonable length French menu, there was also a specials menu. The highlight of the specials menu was a gorgeous little addition -  a homemade lemonade ($5). I ordered it straight away and it was divine - sweet and sour, with a touch of fizz and completely refreshing. We also noted the quality of the lovely sourdough put on the table and when we inquired as to the provenance, we found out it was from the bakery at which my dining companion's husband works! Harbour Radish, one of the founding writers of Suck My Radish, thinks Element has got very, very good taste, indeed. We started with a prawn-filled zucchini flower with sauce vierge ($7) and escabéche of sardine on toast with rouille ($7) to share. Both were fantastic. The sardine was not overcooked and just fell apart with tenderness. The zucchini flower was beautiful and delicate, but it was just so refreshing to have one stuffed with something other than three different types of cheese. Phew. Next up we had papardelle with slow braised lamb shoulder, celeriac, cavolo nero and gremolata ($29), teamed with entree, a rocket & pear salade with manchego, dates, spiced walnuts & white balsamic ($17) to share. The salad was a real treat - a twist on an old classic and really the perfect bedmate to the pasta. The pasta was soft, but al dente. The lamb could have been richer, but to be honest I'm glad it wasn't. I'm getting a bit tired of having flavours knock my tongue out of my mouth at every opportunity. It was extremely tasty and we wolfed it down. For dessert we shared a blood orange & vanilla pannacotta with chocolate sauce and toasted Almond Brittle ($14) . When I say it was orgasmic, I do not exaggerate. The calm, solid flavours of the pannacotta teamed beautifully with the sharpness of the blood orange and the crunchiness of the brittle just brought everything together. There was more than a little bit of spoon wrestling towards the end, I can tell you. Other menu items included a French onion sou ($16), confit duck with roasted carrot puree & sarladaise potato ($29) and four-week dry aged on the bone rib eye (300g) with pomme frites, café de paris butter ($36). Specials included a whole pan-fried rainbow trout with almond beurre noisette ($30), a spring pea, thyme and asparagus risotto  ($28) and a pork and pistachio terrine with grilled peaches ($17). There was a very reasonable wine list, with quite a few options by the glass, with a house label vintage for $7 a glass and some specials. This is old french classics with the kind of twists that keep things fresh. Element would make a fantastic bistro for a date, with a work colleague for lunch or just when you want to curl up over a good book and a bowl of steaming french onion soup. What a find. Atmosphere: 8/10 Service: 8/10 Value for money: 8/10 Food: 9/10 Website: www.elementbistro.com.au [gallery link="file" columns="5"] Element Bistro on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=674 0 Pacific Seafood BBQ House http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=661 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=661#comments 2009-11-16 22:00:58 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=661 Shop 1, 210 Toorak Road, South Yarra. (03) 9826 3838 Score: 35/40 My brother runs a bar, so it’s rare that my family get to see him for a Jewish Friday night dinner. So when he got the night off, we zipped him straight into one of our Chinese faves for some pork and seafood. Go figure! It was brother’s special, with a few requests from me on the particular night we headed over to Pacific Seafood & BBQ in South Yarra. It was heaving, as usual, and the food was fantastic, as usual. As soon as you’re seated in this loud, bustling, colourful restaurant, they stick a bowl of lovely meaty broth in front of you, as an amuse bouche. It’s quite warming and delicious. After perusing the menu and rejecting both deer meat and crocodile, feeling they weren’t really in the spirit of Cantonese dining, we started off with a combination meat platter of char siu (sweet barbecued pork) and crispy-skinned duck ($14). It was fantastic. So much so that I had to bat my family away with my chopsticks to procure a reasonably-intact photo. Next up was my request – the jellyfish ($15.50). It’s one of my great favourites, being a fan of variations in texture. It is seasoned with sesame oil and served with mustard, and as pointed out by our waiter, served cold. This comment upset me a bit, because it assumed that we knew absolutely nothing about Chinese food. When I told him, in fluent Mandarin, that we’d eaten it many times, given that I had grown up in HK and my parents both still lived there after almost 30 years,  and we’d always found the taste and temperature quite adequate, he laughed, apologised, and on we pushed. It was delicious. Next up was the eel served in XO sauce ($22). I’m far more used to having the eel Japanese style – in fact I think the only other time I’d had eel in a Chinese style was steamed in a hollowed piece of bamboo on the outskirts of Beijing. Well, this dish was quite lovely. The eel was tender and juicy and the XO not overpowering. As soon as we spotted dou miao, or snow pea shoots ($17), on another table, we jumped on the bandwagon.  This is my family’s favourite vegetable, but it isn’t available all-year-round, so when we see it we grab it. The shoots are so soft and delicate and you can eat kilos and kilos of it without breaking a sweat. On this occasion we were served sautéed garlic, with a little bit of dou miao. I mean, I’m a fan of garlic, but this just took it way too far. I would suggest asking for a little bit less if you have this particular dish any time soon. I was a little surprised when my bro ordered the deep fried scallops in salt with spicy salt and chilli ($24) and the deep fried soft shell crab ($15). Did everything we eat have to be deep fried?! But actually, for something trying to watch their weight like I have been, it was like a trip down naughty lane; a trip I have to say I quite enjoyed. The scallops were crispy outside, succulent and delicious inside and so fresh. The soft shell crab just melted in your mouth. Seriously good dishes. We also had a large-sized special fried rice ($9) on the side, ostensibly to soak up all the oil, and more than a few Tsingdao beers. Overall a really fantastic meal. This is a place to come with family, friends or workmates you don’t really want to talk to (it’s loud enough that you can ignore each other without uncomfortable silences). Great value, great food. What more do you need? Atmosphere: 9/10 Service: 8/10 Value for money: 9/10 Food: 9/10 [gallery link="file" columns="5"] Pacific Seafood BBQ House on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=661 1 Din Tai Fung Sydney http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=649 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=649#comments 2009-11-16 03:03:50 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=649 Shop 11/04, World Square Shopping Centre, 644 George Street, Sydney. (02) 9264 6010 Score: 34.5/40 You might say I flew to Sydney just to eat at Din Tai Fung. Well, we’re not telling my boss that, but you’re not far from the truth. So when I decided I would fly to Sydney for a conference, I called my friend Madame Radish and demanded that she take me there for lunch as soon as I arrived. Understanding that I was a desperate, desperate woman, she agreed. I hadn’t been to Din Tai Fung since a visit to Shanghai for the Olympics. The Taiwanese chain is massively popular in the mainland and for good reason – the dumplings are succulent, the dishes wide and varied and the quality consistent. I wasn’t disappointed. Madame Radish did most of the ordering (I was a bit flustered by the frantic rush to get there – late arrivals are not an option because they don’t take bookings), but I’m seriously glad she did, because we had the most fabulous array of dishes. First to arrive was the tofu with pork floss and century eggs ($6.80). Also known as preserved egg or thousand-year-old egg, these are duck, chicken or quail eggs that have been preserved in a mixture of clay, ash, salt, lime, and rice straw for several weeks to months. The yolk goes dark green and the white becomes a dark brown, transparent jelly. Now, I know that even the sight of can make some diners queasy, but give it a shot. You’ll be surprised. A little bit of soy makes the flavours stand out more. But even though the eggs were delicious and the floss ridiculously tasty, the tofu was the real stand-out. According to the staff they don’t make it themselves, but the quality of the tofu (which is served very cold) was really gorgeous - creamy and flavoursome. Next up was water spinach (aka morning glory) with garlic ($10.80). This was a great dish – not too much garlic (yes, you CAN have too much garlic) and not overcooked. Still a little bit al dente. Dan Dan Noodles ($10.80) were an ordering accident and not what we were intending. They were lovely, but a bit to satay-esque for me. Of course, we ordered the xiao long bao ($8.80). We’ve seen these guys before – they’re the little tiny pork dumplings filled with hot soup. To eat, one must make a tiny incision, suck out the soup and then move on to the meat and bones of the matter. These were particularly fine specimens; hot, fresh and delicate, but still intact and easily removable from the steamer basket from whence they came. We only ordered one pork bun ($2.80) and we regretted it. This wasn’t your average char siu bao, the red, sweet pork-filled buns. This was a much more savoury, northern-style bun, with a more glutinous outer skin. As soon as I bit into my half, I was flooded with memories of travelling on the mainland, staying at university boarding houses and buying them on the way each day to class. Absolutely gorgeous. The final dish was vegetable and pork wonton in spicy sauce ($7.80). Madame Radish wasn’t as impressed as I was with this dish, saying they lacked punch, but I thought they were really lovely. Spicy but an aftertaste of sweetness. While steaming hot dumplings might sound a bit much going into summer, Din Tai Fung has something to balance it all out – with fresh, chilled watermelon juice as a drink option. Atmosphere: 8/10 Service: 8/10 Value for money: 9/10 Food: 9.5/10 Website: www.dintaifung.com.au [gallery link="file" columns="4"] Din Tai Fung on Urbanspoon]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=649 0 Lebanese Talk of the Town http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=641 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=641#comments 2009-10-29 22:00:12 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=641 Felafel446 Glenhuntly Road, Elsternwick. (03) 9528 6591. Score: 33/40 This place has been a Glenhuntly Road staple for over twenty years and there’s a reason for that -  it’s great, well-priced, vegetarian-friendly food served up by a duo that make you feel like you’re eating in their living room. Sam and his wife have been running this restaurant for donkey’s years. They’ve seen and heard it all and while their no-fuss attitude can be abrasive, stop for a chat and you’ll realize they they don’t come much friendlier and more welcoming. The menu is a what’s what of middle eastern classics, with shish kebabs, falafel, dips and salads galore. Everything is fresh and the kitchen is clean and quick. Most of the main courses are around $20 and come with two skewers, three salads and two dips, as well as pita bread. While meat eaters can enjoy chicken, lamb and beef offerings, the vegetarians have more choice than just the compulsory falafel, with potato and curry pie ($5.50), stuffed capsicums ($9), stuffed vine leaves ($5) and cabbage rolls ($8). Being non-vegetarians, we went for a shish tawook, or marinated chicken ($18) and falafel ($17). The salads were fresh and varied – so much so we got some extra salads just so we would feel like we weren’t missing out. When I ordered a piece of baklawa at the end of the meal ($3) and a Lebanese coffee, Sam couldn’t disguise his pleasure. He grabbed a piece off the sticky, nutty dessert off the mammoth tray, brought it over, told us to stop chatting and just listen. He then proceeded to stick a fork in the top of the piece, with a loud, audible crunch. He then grinned a massive, leery grin and said, ’See how fresh?!’. It was adorable and completely true – their baklawa, lady’s fingers and bird nests are not over-soaked with sticky syrup. They are crunchy and delicious and you’d swear they were made three minutes before you walked in the door. They also have wonderful, chewy Turkish Delight on offer. This place has won a slew of awards for its vegetarian food, but veggie and meat eaters alike will be happy with the offerings. They do a roaring take-away trade, but don’t be afraid to eat in – otherwise you’ll miss out on the entertainment. Atmosphere: 7/10 Service: 9/10 Value for money: 9/10 Food: 8/10 [gallery link="file" columns="4"]]]> http://www.suckmyradish.com/MixMyRadish/?feed=rss2&p=641 0 Demi Tasse http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=635 http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=635#comments 2009-10-28 22:00:30 +0000 master-radish http://www.suckmyradish.com/EatMyRadish/?p=635 550 Lonsdale st, Melbourne. (03) 9642 3571 Score: 33/40 This little hole in the wall nestled in the heart of Melbourne’s legal district, is famous for its coffee, and deservedly so, but don’t underestimate it on the food front either, with some of the tastiest lunch fare around. With dishes like glazed meatloaf ($10.50) and veal and pork meatballs ($9.50) on the menu here, there is a distinctly old-fashioned theme to this menu. But old classics are also given a modern twist, like cevap sausage rolls ($2.50) or bruschetta with Portuguese sardines. Ther