Category: Melbourne

  • What the Chefs Buy: South Melbourne and Prahran Markets

    What the Chefs Buy: South Melbourne and Prahran Markets

    A market that chefs use is a different institution from a market that tourists visit. The distinction is in the sourcing depth — which vendors have the relationships with the farms, which fish hall has the buying power to access the best catch, which deli c…

  • Drinking Without Drinking: Melbourne’s Serious Non-Alcoholic Culture

    Drinking Without Drinking: Melbourne’s Serious Non-Alcoholic Culture

    The non-alcoholic drinks world spent its early years in Melbourne making the same mistake: trying to replicate the flavour of alcohol without understanding that what people were mourning was not ethanol but complexity. A non-alcoholic gin substitute that ta…

  • Victorian Whisky and the Wine-Country Barrel

    Victorian Whisky and the Wine-Country Barrel

    The argument for Australian whisky has always been environmental. Not the malted barley, which is not radically different from what you would find in Scotland; not the distillation equipment, which most serious Australian producers have acquired from establ…

  • What the Menu Reveals: Melbourne’s Serious Tasting Tables

    What the Menu Reveals: Melbourne’s Serious Tasting Tables

    A tasting menu is a proposition. Behind the sequence of courses, behind the wine pairing and the amuse-bouches and the petit fours, is an argument about what fine dining should be — what a kitchen’s understanding of Australian cooking looks like when given…

  • The City’s Most Honest Hour

    The City’s Most Honest Hour

    Melbourne performs itself spectacularly well from midday onwards — the long lunch, the wine bar, the evening degustation, the theatre of a city that has thought carefully about what it wants to be and constructed the infrastructure accordingly. But the city…

  • Brae: The Farm as the Kitchen’s Conscience

    Brae: The Farm as the Kitchen’s Conscience

    Every serious restaurant invokes provenance. Brae, Dan Hunter’s farm-restaurant in Birregurra, is one of the very few in the world where provenance is not a claim but a structural fact. The farm that supplies the kitchen is the farm that surrounds the dinin…

  • Past Lygon Street: The Real Italian Cooking of Melbourne

    Past Lygon Street: The Real Italian Cooking of Melbourne

    Lygon Street is not the whole story. It is not even the most interesting chapter. The broad, tourist-facing strip of Carlton that gave the world its image of Melbourne’s Italian community — the red-and-white checkered tablecloths, the gelato shops, the espr…

  • Low Intervention, Strong Opinions: The Inner North’s Natural Wine Culture

    Low Intervention, Strong Opinions: The Inner North’s Natural Wine Culture

    The inner north of Melbourne — Fitzroy, Collingwood, Brunswick, Northcote — has claimed a specific viticulture as its own, and the claim is not particularly recent any more. What began in the mid-2000s as a counterculture position — natural wine as an ethic…

  • The Mornington Peninsula as a Complete Culinary World

    The Mornington Peninsula as a Complete Culinary World

    The Mornington Peninsula is described, routinely, as a day trip — a scenic alternative to the weekend at home, a loose itinerary of cellar doors and beaches and a lunch somewhere pleasant. This framing is not incorrect, exactly; it is just catastrophically…

  • The Flat White Is Not the Point

    The Flat White Is Not the Point

    Melbourne has been described as Australia’s coffee capital so many times that the description has become meaningless — a marketing convenience, a tourism shorthand, a thing people say to visitors before handing them a flat white and considering the subject…