The Hungry Bon Vivant to raise funds for the Alannah and Madeline Foundation

The Hungry Bon Vivant supports the The Alannah and Madeline Foundation and has launched a fundraising page to raise donations for this important children’s charity and urges all HBV subscribers and readers to make a donation.

On 28 April 1996 at the historical Port Arthur site in Tasmania, 35 people were tragically killed. Two small children, Alannah and Madeline Mikac, aged six and three, along with their mother, died that day. Because of this terrible act of violence, Alannah and Madeline’s father, Walter Mikac, Phil West and a small group of volunteers, including Port Arthur survivors, worked hard to set up the Foundation, a national charity with the belief that all children should have a safe and happy childhood without being subjected to any form of violence. It was launched on 30 April 1997 by the Prime Minister of Australia.

The Alannah and Madeline Foundation is an Australian charity protecting children from violence and its devastating effects. The Foundation cares for children who experience or witness serious violence and runs programs which help prevent violence in the lives of children. It advocates for the rights of children and is a voice against childhood violence. The Alannah and Madeline Foundation’s vision is that every child will live in a safe and supportive environment.

The Hungry Bon Vivant supports the important work that the Alannah and Madeline Foundation does, its vision and the issues it seeks to address.

A special Hungry Bon Vivant fundraising page has been created to raise money for the Foundation. I urge all of you to make a donation no matter how small (or large!). Donations to the Alannah and Madeline Foundation can be made by clicking here.

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Oasi at North Sydney Cellars

OASI didn’t give a good impression on my first visit. Our party of three arrived to be told that the table had been taken (by one person) despite my host having a confirmed booking (we were only five minutes late). We had to be ushered to raised bench seating outside (luckily it was a sunny autumn day).

Was this just an “off day”? Unfortunately not. Confused service and seating arrangements seemed to be the norm rather than the exception when I have dined there. On my second and most recent experience I had a confirmed table of three placed on a table built for two. Despite the numeral ‘3’ clearly appearing on the table’s reservation card the waiter took about five minutes to investigate the dilemma only to bring over a third seat and setting (despite there being roomier tables that remained empty). Luckily I didn’t mind being up close and personal with my companions (though as they were work colleagues I had to mind my P’s and Q’s). Frustration started to set in trying to order from the trance-like staff that roamed the floor avoiding eye contact.

It’s all a pity, really. Booking was a breeze and a pleasant experience with an email confirmation. My companions on the second visit were also surprised by the inattention – they said that their previous experience had been the opposite.

There was an exception and that was the young guy who was part of the North Sydney Cellar side of the operation. He was more than happy to lend a hand and give advice when I went to the other side of the space in search for a bottle of vino from the excellent range.

Oasi is set in an industrial–style interior in an area shared with North Sydney Cellars. The bistro’s ambience complements this industrial theme with wooden benches and tables scattered about where patrons sit on polished steel chairs and stools. It’s slick and fashionable with a Parisian or San Sebastian wine bar edge to it and North Sydney needs this style of operation on its landscape.

The menu reflects what you would find in a European wine bar – a mixture of grazing-style platters and bistro-style main courses. It’s the sort of sophisticated fare that is perfect for a business lunch or if you want to navigate a steady course in the evening going through a flight of wine. As an example the winter menu featured seared Ulladulla marlin with a barlotti bean puree fennel and cress ($19.50); prawn and crab spaghettini with fresh herbs, tomatoes and mild chili jam ($25.50); four different types of salads (from $9.50) and a selection of sandwiches (like a roasted Berkshire pork belly with five-hour apple butter with radish on soy and linseed ($16.50)). Then there are plates perfect for the wine bar experience: cheese taster plates or cheese cut to order (there is quite an impressive selection of cheeses on offer) and snack plates (like sweet corn fritters with bell pepper jam).

On the first visit I was with two contemporaries and we started with a grazing plate of cured meats ($18.50). The rectangular white plate had three pork shavings – Spanish Monte Nevado jamon serrano, Dorsogna prosciutto and Peter G Bouchier’s ham – all served with white sourdough bread and a creamy garlic aioli. The hams were splendid choices – all with their own unique variations of flavour and texture. The exceptional aioli was delicate so not to overpower the pork slices and was a marvelous accompaniment.

A colleague and I had the shiraz risotto with portebello mushroom, pancetta and aged balsamic ($22.50). The risotto was excellent. The rice was tender and the combination of shiraz and balsamic gave it a complex almost grungy sweet and slightly acidic robust flavour. The addition of the mushrooms and pancetta turned it into a delightful dish – a dish that would be more at home in a Piedmont ristorante than a North Sydney wine bar.

One thing that was outstanding about having access to North Sydney Cellars is the range of wine and beer that is available. You can grab a bottle from the “cellar” corkage free or one recommended from the list which comes in what is labeled a ‘quartino’ a 225ml carafe to accompany a dish. The beer list was excellent – examples are Bowral’s Pigs Fly Pale Ale, the Port Macquarie Wicked Elf witbeir, and the Mountain Goat Steam Ale in the bottle. Little Creatures pale ale is on tap. But I couldn’t believe my eyes when I saw on offer Tasmania’s Moo Brew Pale Ale ($7.50). Moo Brew is a boutique beer made in limited batches by Morilla Estates winery just on the edge of Hobart. The week before dining at Oasi I was at Morilla sinking a few of these excellent brews (its marketing slogan being: Not Suitable for Bogans). My contemporaries agreed it was the bier du jour – if you get the opportunity try it as it is a very rare drop in Sydney.

On the second visit I was with my protégé (mentored so well that she got another job) and another contemporary.

The protégé had the crispy snapper with lemon risotto – a medium-sized fillet sitting on top of a bed of gleaming white Arborio rice. She commented that she was pleased with the portion as it was not what she was expecting based on her past experience at Oasi (she thought her last meal there was a tad small). The protégé said she was impressed with the bold, ripe citrus flavours and the rice’s flawless texture but believed she made a fatal error of tucking into the risotto first as the fish’s crispness started to wane and get flimsy. Despite that (her fault not the kitchen’s) it was pan-fried well, not dry or flaky and by all reports, very adequate.

My contemporary chose the tried and tested shiraz risotto. Again the risotto lived up to the standard it had set at the previous lunch. Nothing wrong – all good (it is a winner of a dish).

I was again tempted by the shiraz risotto but opted for the lamb and quince pie with Paris mash and red-onion jam ($18.50) (it was winter, after all). At first I thought it to be a tad small, however it’s the little things that can leave a big impression. The pie was well constructed – a nice, buttery short crust pastry containing a wonderful braise of lamb that was seasoned and sweetened by the quince. The onion reduction on top was sticky – more savoury than sweet which was a good thing as it added some contrast to the filling. The fluffy and silky soft and creamy mash was one of the best I have had for a long time.

Chefs are acutely aware that one thing that can ruin their hard work in producing a memorable food experience is lacklustre or inattentive or uninterested floor staff. The Oasi kitchen need not worry about the results of their labour (the food is good) but they may wish to pass some smelling salts around the waiting staff before I dine there next time – I have a three strikes and you’re out policy when it comes to service.

What: Oasi at North Sydney Cellars, 189 Miller Street, North Sydney, NSW Australia. Phone 9954 0090.

The verdict: Bottle shop prices are a big plus when dining at Oasi and North Sydney Cellars has excellent range of styles from a diversity of regions (and countries). Borderline service needs improvement as it is almost a drawback from dining there (and Oasi could become the premier place to lunch in North Sydney if it improved). The kitchen saves the day – the quality of produce sourced and used is impressive as is the cooking.

Ate there: 17 May and 20 June 2011.

Posted in New South Wales, Sydney, wine | Tagged , , , , , | 4 Comments

Lebrina Restaurant

THERE was good news and bad news. The Hobart taxi driver taking me to Lebrina told me that I won’t be disappointed as Lebrina was easily Tasmania’s best restaurant as he had dined there (the good news), but he said (in an almost hushed guilty tone), that it took him weeks to save to go there (the bad news?).

Arriving at night at Lebrina in the inner-Hobart suburb of New Town you wonder if you are in the right place as you’re confronted by a charming 183os apricot-brick homely cottage surrounded by a hedge with an iron gate and a short path to the front wooden door. I didn’t know whether to knock or just go in, such is the place as dining at Lebrina is like dining in someone’s grand home. We were welcomed by the matire’d (a charming and softly-spoken gentlemen), who lead us to one of the small dining rooms where two other couples were seated.

This intimate and elegant dining room (one of three) is part of the original cottage and was decorated with antiques, lamps and modern paintings. Jazz and Parisian-style ballads softly emanated throughout the room over the hushed chatter of the other diners (this is not a place to bring boisterous guests). There also is the sense that you are about to partake in intimate old-school classic dining.

The menu is short and heavily influenced by what Tasmanian produce is in season. The wine list runs for pages with an impressive (but quite overwhelming) choice of not only Tasmanian wines but wines from regions around the world. As the menus were presented so was a small plate of appetisers – parmesan biscuits and croutons with tapenade.

Lebrina’s May menu featured five entrées: wood-baked cherry tomatoes with a Belstone goat cheese panna cotta and pancetta ($27.50); seared local pigeon breast, cabbage pudding, apple, sage and pig’s ear crackling ($29.50); double-cooked Heidi Gruyere cheese soufflé ($27.50); an eggplant imam bayeldi which is spiced eggplant with fresh coriander, mint, yoghurt and wafers ($27.50); and seared local abalone with comfit pork cheek, celeriac salad and shallot jelly ($29.50).

I chose the seared local pigeon breast ($29.50) – my dining partner (never usually hungry nor a bon vivant), passed as she was saving her appetite for dessert.

Pig ear crackling – why not? These thin, crescent-shaped stands were crisp and chewy – but lacked the full flavours that you get from perfectly roasted and salted pig skin and that nice soft fatty underlayer. That’s not a bad thing – typical pork crackling would have been too overbearing and heavy as an accompaniment to the beautifully seared crimson pigeon that sat on a apple and sage flavored purée with a cabbage pudding “dome”. The slices of pigeon breast had been lightly seared – the gaminess of the meat and its jus marrying well with the slight sourness of the cabbage pudding. The apple and sage added an extra dimension – the woody flavours of the sage combined with the acidity of the apple giving the dish an awakening.

Again, there were only five dishes as main courses: wood-roasted king fish fillet (line caught) with cracked farro, fresh herbs, lemon and local olive oil; crisp duck fillet with la peara and shitake mushroom; baked clover country lamb neck with English spinach sformata sauce paloise and pan juices; seared venison tenderloin with chestnut puree and fresh horseradish; and beef fillet with an oxtail broth with Parmigianino gnocchi. All mains were $45 and come complete without the need for side orders (meaning the mains came this evening with beans and potato both served in a small copper saucepan).

My main was the beef fillet witth ox tail broth and parmigianino and potato gnocchi.

The beef was a large thick round of tender fillet, cooked medium to rare surrounded by a rich and well-seasoned oxtail reduction. Large, square gnocchi flavored with Parmigiano cheese and shavings on top made this a rich, hearty and sophisticated winter meal. Extra bread was offered to soak up the juices and was not refused. I recommended the dish.

We decided to share a desert – the malt crème brulee with caramelised honey ice cream ($18.50). It was exceptionally creamy – the subtle malt flavours combing with the richness of the caramelised honey flavour created a malteaser honeyed sensation. Sweet but not too overbearing or heavy. A classic dessert revved up to another level.

We left Lebrina feeling not only spoilt by our charming matrie’d but also overindulged by the well-executed dishes from the kitchen.

Now back to my mate the Hobart cabbie. As is the case with taxi drivers you only believe half of what they say. Yes, the meal was magnificent but considering the charming and attentive service, quality ingredients, attention to detail and the overall sophistication and intimacy of Lebrina, it is a dining experience well worth saving for without having to feel guilty.

The verdict: Owner and chef Scott Minervini has created an intimate and sophisticated atmosphere where he serves European-inspired dishes with quirky touches dominated by the use of Tasmanian seasonal produce with genuine, warm-hearted service as part of the experience.

What: Lebrina Restaurant, 155 New Town Road, New Town (Hobart), Tasmania, Australia. Phone (03) 6228-7775. Open for dinner from Tuesday to Saturday.

Ate there: 12 May 2011.

The Hungry Bon Vivant supports the The Alannah and Madeline Foundation.

Alannah and MadelineOn 28 April 1996 at the historical Port Arthur site in Tasmania, 35 people were tragically killed. Two small children, Alannah and Madeline Mikac, aged six and three, along with their mother, died that day. The Alannah and Madeline Foundation, a national charity, was created in their memory with the belief that all children should have a safe and happy childhood without being subjected to any form of violence.

The Hungry Bon Vivant supports the important work that the Alannah and Madeline Foundation does, its vision and the issues it seeks to address. For information on the Foundation’s work and vision click here.

A special Hungry Bon Vivant fundraising page has been created to raise money for the Foundation. Donations to the Alannah and Madeline Foundation can be made by clicking here.

Posted in Fine dining, Hobart, Modern European, Tasmania | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment