Теги: magazine   cooking   magazine gourmet traveller  

ISBN: 1034-9006

Год: 2022

Текст
                    

THE WORLD IS WAITING Shared Adventures In Extraordinary Places. For nearly 60 years, Abercrombie & Kent has been creating inspiring adventures exploring the world’s most remarkable locations and cultures. Our portfolio of Small Group Journeys includes the eternal travel favourites — Africa, Egypt, Japan, India, Spain and Morocco — as well as more off-the-beaten-track, emerging destinations that are full of fascination and intrigue such as Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Mongolia, Madagascar, Georgia and Armenia. If you’re looking for a shared adventure in true A&K style — exquisite accommodation, perfectly-paced itineraries, curated cultural experiences, exclusive access and privileges, expert resident tour directors, and unforgettable encounters with local people and wildlife — start exploring now and find yourself somewhere amazing on an A&K Small Group Journey. Kenya & Tanzania Wildlife Safari Egypt & the Nile Classic Japan 12 days from $13,770 pp Departs throughout 2022 10 days from $11,190 pp Departs Jan-May & Sep-Dec 2022 9 days from $16,210 pp Departs Mar-May & Sep-Nov 2022 On this comprehensive introduction to East Africa, witness abundant and diverse wildlife roaming vast, sun-drenched panoramas, and stay in comfortable, spacious lodges with ideal locations in the region’s greatest parks and reserves. Journey to the heart of an ancient land that has captured the imagination of travellers for millennia. Follow in the footsteps of Pharaohs, emperors and conquerors from Cairo to Luxor and along the Nile to Aswan. Discover the incredible breadth of Japan’s culture and history, from contemporary Tokyo to the charms of traditional Kyoto, visiting historic temples, overnighting at a ryokan and sampling its culinary treasures. Taj Mahal and the Treasures of India Spain & Portugal: A Journey Across Iberia Splendours of Morocco 14 days from $13,845 pp Departs Jan-Apr & Oct-Dec 2022 Explore India’s greatest treasures as you visit the timeless Taj Mahal, seek the graceful Bengal tiger, witness a holy rite beside the sacred Ganges, and gain a fascinating glimpse into rural life as you journey through the Rajasthani countryside — all while staying in royal palaces-turned-luxury hotels. 14 days from $15,765 pp Departs May, Jun, Sep & Oct 2022 Explore the best of the entire Iberian peninsula on one spectacular journey, discovering how Moors, Jews and Europeans influenced the culture, cuisine, architecture and arts of Spain and Portugal. 12 days from $10,805 pp Departs throughout 2022 Discover exotic Morocco, from the timeless walled city of Fes to the bustling medina in Marrakech, viewing local Berber life in the ruggedly beautiful High Atlas Mountains and staying at A&K’s Exclusive Desert Tented Camp. To learn more about the full range of A&K Small Group Journeys, please call Abercrombie & Kent on 1300 851 800, visit www.abercrombiekent.com.au or talk to your travel agent. *Terms & Conditions apply. Prices shown are per person based on twin share and are subject to availability.
The Mediterranean issue Food 88 GRECIAN ODYSSEY Brisbane’s Hellenika takes us on an Aegean adventure with a modern spin on Greek classics. Chicken souvlaki .....................90 Corfu bianco (John Dory with potato, onions and lemon) ....................................93 Greek salad ..............................93 Piperies (char-grilled peppers) ................................94 Ari Onassis ................................95 Silverbeet and veal dolmades with tzatziki.......95 Htapodi (grilled octopus) ......96 Galaktoboureko (baked filo custard with orange syrup)..............96 98 A WAY OF LIFE Eat like you’re on holiday with light and bright recipes from Food from the Mediterranean. Green shakshuka with Brussels sprouts, olives and labne................100 Saffron and lemon rice with fried onion ................. 103 Smoky eggplant with sumac onions..................... 104 Grilled sardines with agrodolce dressing .......... 104 Baby snapper in crazy water .................................... 105 106 SUN-KISSED SWEETNESS Food writer and pastry chef Letitia Clark shares Italian desserts from her latest book, La Vita è Dolce. Roast stuffed peaches with almond crumble ....... 109 Sparkling lemon sorbetto in lemons............................. 109 Ricotta, pear and hazelnut layer cake ............................ 110 Almond, ricotta, olive oil and lemon drizzle cake.... 112 Perfect pure panna cotta ..... 113
JANUARY 2022 ON THE COVER Hellenika’s corfu bianco (p93) Recipe Simon Gloftis Photography Chris Court Styling Vivien Walsh SUBSCRIBE magshop.com.au/GMT Details p84 PHOTOGRAPHY ALICIA TAYLOR (SARDINES) & DUY DASH (MCCLAREN VALE). Regulars 7 23 24 26 28 . 30 32 36 43 52 55 116 136 146 154 UPFRONT Editor’s letter, contributors and news. FIVE OF A KIND Mayonnaise. QUICK WORD Meg Mason. COMMUNITY X KYLIE Marlon Motlop. KITCHEN GARDENER Sugar snap peas. WINE COUNTRY South Tasmania. Features 56 MEDITERRANEAN PANTRY From Spain and Italy, to Morocco and Turkey, we hero the essential ingredients from across the Med. 58 THE LIFE AQUATIC 64 APPOINTMENT EATING 70 TAKE ONE FIG Your expert crash course in summer crustaceans, including what to look for as you hit the fish markets. Lee Tran Lam rounds up 22 of the most intriguing dining experiences to mark in your 2022 diary. Greece’s vegetable-forward cooking tradition is finding a new audience in Australia, writes Nadia Bailey. 74 BACK ON THE MENU 78 AFTERNOON DELIGHT With overseas dining back on the menu, here are the spots chefs and restaurateurs are yearning to revisit. Hannah-Rose Yee curates the best books (and accompanying sips) for hot summer afternoons. COCKTAIL HOUR Tommy’s Margarita. REVIEW Dining out. FAST Simple, everyday meals. MASTERCLASS Hortopita. ANATOMY OF A DISH Fattoush. THE ART OF TRAVEL Mediterranean living. Travel 118 COASTAL VINES A taste of the Med with a distinctly Australian twist awaits at McLaren Vale, uncovers Susan Gough Henly. CHECKING IN The Tasman, Hobart. STYLE Home, fashion and beauty. OBJECTS OF DESIRE Ice buckets. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF COUNTRY Gourmet Traveller acknowledges the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation as the traditional custodians of the place we now call Sydney, where this magazine is published. Gourmet Traveller also pays respects to Elders past and present. This issue of Gourmet Traveller is published by Are Media Pty Ltd (Are Media). Are Media may use and disclose your information in accordance with our Privacy Policy, including to provide you with your requested products or services and to keep you informed of other Are publications, products, services and events. Our Privacy Policy is located at aremedia.com.au/privacy/. It also sets out how you can access or correct your personal information and lodge a complaint. Are Media may disclose your personal information offshore to its owners, joint venture partners, service providers and agents located throughout the world, including in New Zealand, USA, the Philippines and the European Union. In addition, this issue may contain Reader Offers, being offers, competitions or surveys. Reader Offers may require you to provide personal information to enter or to take part. Personal information collected for Reader Offers may be disclosed by us to service providers assisting Are Media in the conduct of the Reader Offer and to other organisations providing special prizes or offers that are part of the Reader Offer. An opt-out choice is provided with a Reader Offer. Unless you exercise that opt-out choice, personal information collected for Reader Offers may also be disclosed by us to other organisations for use by them to inform you about other products, services or events or to give to other organisations that may use this information for this purpose. If you require further information, please contact Are’s Privacy Officer either by email at privacyofficer@aremedia.com.au or mail to Privacy Officer, Are Media Pty Ltd, 54 Park St, Sydney, NSW 2000. 126 A CHEF’S GUIDE 128 ESCAPE TO PARADISE 138 LA DOLCE VITA From local lokantas to the best döner, chef Maksut Aşkar shares the best dining destinations in Istanbul. A new wave of luxe openings has hit the coastline of the Mediterranean, discovers Anna McCooe. If you know where to look, there are stylish ways to get out on Australian waters, writes Alexandra Carlton. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 5
THE GRIT AND PASSION OF THE PEOPLE Editor Joanna Hunkin Deputy Editor Karlie Verkerk Art Art Director Lauren de Sousa Group Designers Jeannel Cunanan & Kelsie Walker Words Digital Editor Yvonne C Lam Writer Jordan Kretchmer Writer & Editorial Coordinator Georgie Meredith Food Group Food Director Sophia Young Senior Food Editor Dominic Smith Style Creative Consultant Hannah Blackmore Group Lifestyle Director Brooke Le Poer Trench Group Market Editor Sarah Stern Contributors Nadia Bailey, Alexandra Carlton, Alix Davis, Fiona Donnelly, Michael Harden, Anna Hart, Susan Gough Henly, Kylie Kwong, Anna McCooe, Samantha Payne, Simon Rickard, Katie Spain, Lee Tran Lam, Hannah-Rose Yee Advertising Group Commercial Brand Manager Advertising Production Manager Brand Executive Senior Events Manager Director of Sales (NSW/Vic/WA/SA) Victoria Head of Direct Sales Queensland Head of Sales Creative Director Production Controller Advertising Production Coordinator Rhyl Heavener (02) 8114 9420 Kate Orsborn (02) 9282 8364 Amelia Paterson (02) 9282 8038 Cate Gazal (02) 8116 9342 Karen Holmes (02) 9282 8733 Demi Martello (03) 9823 6368 Judy Taylor (07) 3101 6636 Clare Catt (02) 8116 9341 Sally Jefferys (02) 9282 8321 Dominic Roy (02) 9282 8691 Marketing, Research & Circulation Marketing Director Senior Marketing Manager Circulation Manager Senior Research Analyst General Manager Subscriptions Senior Subscriptions Campaign Manager Junior Subscriptions Campaign Manager Syndication Content Sales Manager Louise Cankett Jillian Hogan Dariya Kaing Ania Falenciak Sean McLintock Ellie Xuereb Anjali Israni Tanuja Singh Are Media Chief Executive Officer Executive General Manager Group Publisher Director of Sales General Manager, Brands & Commercial Solutions Business Manager Jane Huxley Sarah-Belle Murphy Nicole Byers Andrew Cook Jane Waterhouse Rowena Silva Das Editorial office GPO Box 4088, Sydney, NSW 2001, Australia phone +61 2 9282 8758 COME AND VISIT THE COOL CLIMATE CANBERRA WINE DISTRICT Published by Are Media Pty Limited. ABN 18 053 273 546. 54-58 Park St, Sydney, NSW, 2000, (02) 9282 8000. The trade mark Gourmet Traveller is the property of Are Media Pty Limited and is used under licence. ©2020 All rights reserved. Printed by Ovato, 8 Priddle St, Warwick Farm, NSW, 2170. National distribution by Gordon and Gotch Australia Pty Ltd. 1300 650 666. Gourmet Traveller cannot accept unsolicited manuscripts or photographs. If such materials are sent to the magazine, they will not be returned. Price in Australia, $9.99; in New Zealand, NZ$10.99; digital edition, $3.99. Subscription rates: 1 year (12 issues) $74.99 via automatic renewal; 1 year (12 issues) $79.99 via credit card or cheque; NZ (airspeed) 1 year, $120; overseas (airspeed) 1 year, $180; digital edition monthly, $2.99; 6 months, $9.99; 1 year, $19.99. Vol 20 No 5 ISSN 1034-9006 Subscriptions Gourmet Traveller, Reply Paid 5252, Sydney, NSW 2001, Australia, phone 136 116, email magshop@magshop.com.au @gourmettraveller askgourmet@aremedia.com.au GOURMETTRAVELLER.COM.AU canberrawines.com.au
Editor’s letter The last time I swam in the Mediterranean was three years ago, in the grey half light that fills the sky just before dawn. Our early morning dip capped off a night of endless dancing and laughter as we celebrated my best friend’s wedding on the tiny island of Poros in Greece. Together with about 70 other guests, we took over a small seaside resort and embarked on a week of festivities that saw us spend our days floating in the Med and our evenings eating at different tavernas around the island. It was heaven. Imagine my surprise, as I sat poolside at Brisbane’s lush Calile Hotel last year, to find myself transported back to that halcyon holiday, as I dined at Hellenika for the first time. Like most people, as we bid farewell to 2021, I am ready for a holiday. I am ready to lose myself in the magic of the Mediterranean once again. Whether it’s recreating the flavours of Greece through Simon Gloftis’ recipes from Hellenika, or planning a summer break at one of the Med’s most luxurious new openings, this issue is intended to treat everyone to a little seaside escape. Indulge and enjoy. We look forward to sharing more adventures with you this year. ED WHAT GT LOVES THIS MONTH G G PHOTOGRAPHY ALANA LANDSBERRY (PORTRAIT) & AGATHE BARISAN (CHANEL). GOIN R ME RE WE ’ T A P OU HE RE W magshop.com.au/gmt Details p84 Editor’s letter SUBSCRIBE NOW PROV Svante Officially a watering can, this playful creation by Swedish designers Mats Broberg and Johan Ridderstråle serves up both form and function. Available in copper, brass and nickel. robertplumb.com.au Oroton for pets Just when you thought your best friend couldn’t get any cuter, Oroton has unveiled a stylish new range of pet accessories, including dog leads and leather collars in a range of sizes. oroton.com Aje x Local Supply Australian fashion house Aje has teamed up with ethical sunglass brand Local Supply to create an exclusive range of sunnies that are stylish, sustainable and support local charities with every purchase. localsupply.com Gabrielle Chanel Fashion Manifesto After premiering in Paris in 2020, this must-see exhibition makes its international debut at the National Gallery of Victoria. Follow it up with a leisurely lunch across the river at Gimlet or Di Stasio Città. On now until April 25. ngv.vic.gov.au EMAIL ASKGOURMET@AREMEDIA.COM.AU // FOLLOW @ GOURMETTRAVELLER // ONLINE GOURMETTRAVELLER.COM.AU G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 7
Contributors Coriole Vineyards, McLaren Vale, SA 8 118 SIMON GLOFTIS SUSAN GOUGH HENLEY DUY DASH chef and restaurateur writer photographer Grecian odyssey, p88 Forging a name for himself in the kitchen before opening venues across Brisbane and Burleigh Heads, Simon Gloftis (who is of Greek and Polish descent) understands the art of Mediterranean dining. Sharing recipes that are part of his family legacy and that appear on the menu at Hellenika, Gloftis’ poolside Greek restaurant, this Med-spread will add good vibes your summer dining repertoire. “I am really close to these recipes because I cook all of them myself,” says Gloftis. Coastal vines, p118 Travel, wine and food writer Susan Gough Henly divides her time between a farmhouse in France and a treehouse on Sydney’s Northern Beaches. Along the way she fell in love with South Australia’s verdant McLaren Vale. “Sometimes the French take themselves too seriously and often the Aussies don’t take themselves seriously enough,” says Gough Henly. “But in McLaren Vale the combination of passionate irreverence and a fierce focus on quality is perfectly balanced.” Coastal vines, p118 What started as a creative outlet for Duy Dash quickly snowballed into a fully fledged career and he began shooting food and travel editorials across the country. For this issue, the Adelaide-based photographer captures the burgeoning wine region of McLaren Vale on the Fleurieu Peninsula. “It’s been a joy to showcase one of my favourite places in South Australia,” says Dash. “It’s really matured into a place of great food, amazing wine and gorgeous landscapes.” G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R PHOTOGRAPHY DUY DASH (McCLAREN VALE). p
Your design statement... ... lies within. The difference is Gaggenau. Grand architecture demands grand interior pieces. Refrigeration is one such design element and should speak to who you are. Every Gaggenau piece is distinctively designed, crafted from exceptional materials, offers professional performance, and has done so since 1683. Make a statement: www.gaggenau1683.com.au
Dishes and destinations The Gourmet Traveller team share where they’ve been and what they’re eating. Cloudy Bay and East 33’s Natural Wonders tour With vistas like this, the journey is nearly as delightful as the destination, when you hop aboard a seaplane to visit East 33’s oyster farm at Wallis Lake in NSW. There, you’ll be treated to an oyster-inspired three-course lunch with matching Cloudy Bay wines. Jordan Kretchmer, writer Institut Polaire, Hobart Cold climate wines are the drawcard at Institut Polaire, but once you’re inside you’ll be wooed by the bar snacks and chef’s menu. Sea urchin sandwiched between perilla leaves, dipped in tempura batter and lightly fried is just one of the many moreish small bites. 1/7 Murray St, Hobart, Tas. Alix Davis, contributing editor Mosconi, Brisbane Catherine Anders’ cooking is a Mediterranean masterclass in how to make the best produce taste even better. These tender Freemantle octopus tentacles, resting on a simple white bean purée, brightened by a sauce vierge, tastily illustrate her deftness of touch. 164B Arthur St, Fortitude Valley, Qld. Fiona Donnelly, Qld state editor El Grotto, Perth Perth’s favourite beachside cantina pays tribute to the beloved tortas of Mexico via this flank steak, refried black bean and avocado sanger, served in a flat telera wheat roll. An ideal accompaniment to anything El Grotto’s easy-going bartenders throw at you. 5/148 The Esplanade, Scarborough, WA. Max Veenhuyzen, WA state editor 10 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R P&V, Sydney I love P&V – it’s fun, flirty and has a revamped menu of restaurant-quality snacks, including this caper-studded beef tartare adorned with crunchy puffed tenderloins. Washed down with a glass of juicy Lamoresca rosato, it’s pure joy. 268 Oxford St, Paddington, NSW. Georgie Meredith, writer and editorial coordinator
Burnt Butter & Marmalade Negroni 30mL 20mL 30mL 10mL Burnt Butter Triple Juniper Gin* Campari Quality Sweet Vermouth Spiced Marmalade Cordial* Tumbler Glass One large block of ice method Stir briefly (10 seconds) over cubed ice and strain into the glass. garnish * burnt butter triple juniper gin Dehydrated orange. ingredients 100g Unsalted butter 500mL Never Never Triple Juniper Gin method → → → → → Gently brown the butter in a frying pan. Pour gin into a container, add butter and combine. Rest for several hours with lid on. After several hours, place container in freezer. When the butter has completely frozen, strain the liquid through a coffee filter. Pour your butter infused gin back into the gin bottle and keep in the refrigerator for up to 2 months. * spiced marmalade cordial ingredients 250g 125mL 1 ¼ tsp Marmalade Boiling water Cinnamon quill (added whole) Allspice method → → → Combine marmalade and boiling water over mediumhigh heat. Add cinnamon and allspice and bring to the boil. Reduce heat and simmer for 10 minutes. Remove from the heat and allow to cool. Strain to remove solids and store in the refrigerator. for more recipe ideas visit: www.neverneverdistilling.com.au follow us on instagram: @neverneverdistillingco


the pa i n of p e r f e c t i o n, b o t t l e d. levantinehill.com.au
NEWS JANUARY Edited by JORDAN KRETCHMER Kata Kita, Melbourne PHOTOGRAPHY GRIFFIN SIMM. p 18 FEELING ’22 Hot restaurant openings, test your food knowledge with our culinary quiz, big ticket events and a new summer-ready drink to try. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 15
T H E L AT E ST F R O M C H E F S A N D R E STAU R A N TS A R O U N D AU ST R A L I A R E S TA U R A N T N E W S Clockwise from left: Kata Kita’s dining room and the Indonesian-style hot and spicy crab; snacks at the Champagne Bar at QT Melbourne; the kitchen and counterseats at Wilma. Kata Kita is the second restaurant from the Sanusi family, opening on La Trobe Street in Melbourne’s CBD. Showcasing Indonesian hospitality by combining traditional recipes with locally sourced produce, order up babi guling (five-hour slow-roasted spiced pork) with lawar (vegetables with coconut and fried shallot sambal); and Indonesian-style hot and spicy crab. The family also want to familiarise people with bebek goreng madura, a slowly simmered duck dish, served with lemongrass and galangal sambal. Also in the CBD, QT Melbourne is bringing an extra hit of luxury to its lobby, with the arrival of the Champagne Bar. Bottles of vintage Champagne and Martinis can be enjoyed alongside the new snack menu replete with lobster rolls and oysters. Connie’s Pizza is moving on up to a bigger home above Heartbreaker. The late-night hole-in-the-wall will now be able to seat more than 70 guests, and also has a rooftop deck with views over Lonsdale Street, from which you can enjoy 18-inch pizze, eggplant parmigiana and baked clams along with classic cocktails by The Everleigh Bottling Co. CANBERRA The capital has welcomed newcomer Wilma, which has been pitched as a progressive Asian barbecue restaurant. Headed up by James Viles (ex-Biota Dining) along with Brendan Hill (ex-Aria), the pair will serve up hot smoked char siu pork and glazed chilli beef ribs alongside XO pippies and sashimi to the sprawling 200-seat restaurant and bar. 16 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R PHOTOGRAPHY HAYDEN DIB (QT), GRIFFIN SIMM (KATA KITA) & PEW PEW STUDIO (WILMA). MELBOURNE
News SYDNEY PHOTOGRAPHY KENNY SMITH (PALOMA), DEAN SWINDELL (ROTHWELL) & STEVEN WOODBURN (BAY NINE). Clockwise from above: watermelon, molasses and goat’s cheese; and burrata with peaches and hazelnut at Il Pontile; Bay Nine’s tokoroten with kuromitsu and kinako; chef Tomohiro Marshall Oguro; crab salad at Rothwell’s; Paloma Wine Bar’s Alex and Karla Munoz Labart. Sydney is having a real Mediterranean moment. Beau, a new laneway wine bar and deli spin-off by the Nomad crew, will serve lunch-ready manoush topped with spiced lamb shoulder and zhoug; and Ortiz anchovies and shanklish in the front deli. Later in the day, the wine bar will offer cheese, house-made charcuterie, a cold seafood bar and left-of-centre wines on tap. Il Pontile is bringing a slice of the Italian seaside to Woolloomooloo’s finger wharves. Chef Mario Percuoco – a Naples-born chef whose father opened Buon Ricordo in Paddington in the ’80s – is on the pans. Menu standouts include linguine al cartoccio (pasta in a paper parcel with mixed seafood) and sweet layered sfogliatelle. Potts Point has welcomed Bones Ramen, a new pint-sized restaurant by Mike Mu Sung, who also owns the nearby Farmhouse. Chef Jacob Riwaka (ex-Rising Sun and Cornersmith) has crafted a short and sharp menu that features four ramens and four snacks, which may include celeriac chashu with Jerusalem artichoke, shiitake and oyster mushroom broth; or pork shoyu with soy egg, watercress and bamboo shoots. Bay Nine Omakase has opened at Campbells Cove, the waterfront dining precinct in The Rocks. Chef Tomohiro Marshall Oguro, who honed his sushi-making skills at Sushi-E and Stephen Hodges’ Fish Face, has spent the last two years forging strong relationships with seafood suppliers. The restaurant features a 10-seat counter dining experience alongside a handful of smaller floor tables. QUEENSLAND Dan Clark’s second venue Rothwell’s Bar & Grill sees the 1889 Enoteca owner joined by chef Ben Russell (ex-Aria) to deliver an elegant dining room and refined classics to a historic CBD building. Expect spaghetti crowned with sea urchin and caviar, fruits de mer platters, Moreton Bay bugs with café de Paris butter, and lattice pastrywrapped beef Wellington, accompanied by grand chandeliers, U-shaped booths and polished silverware. Finally, the owners of Burleigh Heads’ Labart have opened Paloma Wine Bar. Chef Alex Munoz Labart’s menu offers European-leaning small plates, such as fried school prawns; pig’s-head risoni; and burrata with white anchovies and peppers on toast. You’ll also find steak frites, plus the ‘la burger’, which sees a permanent menu spot for Labart’s much-loved lockdown burger. Wine-wise, expect both old and new world producers, many available by the glass. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 17
FOR GOODNESS SAKE If you’re not familiar with the wonders of sake, this new edition from the mountains of the Aichi Prefecture is the ideal introduction. Sake Sake’s Junmai is a contemporary take – replete with its Jonathan Zawada-designed label and unusual food pairing suggestions – on 2500 years of tradition. Direct from Sekiya Brewery, it uses rice, water and koji to create bright, balanced pure sake, with blossoming floral notes and a subtle, savoury backbone. $69, sakesake.me Christmas may be over but there’s still time to treat yourself with a subscription to Gourmet Traveller and the chance to win a share of up to $200k cash. magshop.com.au/xmas28 O N T H E PA S S w i t h PA U L A PA N TA N O , L O L A’ S L E V E L 1 What are some of your favourite dishes on the menu? I love the socarrat. It’s a crisp rice, which is not like a risotto or a paella – it’s a bit different. It took me a while to train the staff to do it because it’s quite tricky. I also love the pan tumaca, which is like a bruschetta, the only difference is we grate the tomato. That dish reminds me of my childhood. So much of Spanish cooking is about preserved goods, such as anchovies and jamón. How did you settle on the perfect ones to use? It took me a long time to find the right anchovies. There are brands that are super famous, but to me too salty. Once I did a tasting of 15 different types of Cantabrian anchovies – it was insane. I tried the Don Bocarte – they are amazing, so delicate and elegant. The flavour is beautiful but not too overpowering, and the olive oil they use is of an amazing quality, too. You also cook with a charcoal grill. How did that come about? When I arrived in the kitchen there was only a flat grill. I said, unless I have a charcoal, I’m not going to be here. Now we’re planning to increase the size of it, because charcoal is the life of the menu. Lola’s Level 1, 180-186 Campbell Pde, Bondi Beach, lolaslevel1.com.au 18 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R PHOTOGRAPHY PARKER BLAIN (SAKE SAKE) & NIKKI TO (PANTANO). Can you tell us about how you developed the menu at Lola’s Level 1? When I met [the owners] Manny and Marco, the idea was to do something more Mediterranean, not just Italian. I’m from Argentina but I have a Spanish background in my family, so I grew up in an Italian-Spanish environment. I’m not afraid to see new things, to learn new things, and to taste.
10 News SUMMER EVENTS WORTH BOOKING 11 T 1. Which Italian cheese is named after sheep’s milk? CUL E H INARY QU THREE OF A KIND 17 IZ 2. In wine terms, what does blanc de blancs mean? 3. Jollof rice is considered the national dish of which country? 4. Campari, red vermouth and soda water are the three ingredients for which classic cocktail? 5. What does bánh mì translate to? 6. Which celebrity does not have their own cooking show — Lady Gaga, Paris Hilton or Selena Gomez? 7. Now considered a culinary delicacy, what were Akoya originally farmed for? 8. True or false: jackfruit is the largest tree-borne fruit in the world. 9. Name two types of Japanese noodles. 10. What are juvenile oysters known as? 11. Name the three main types of grapes used to make Champagne. 12. What’s the name for a Korean paste made from fermented soybeans and salt? 13. Which famed New York restaurant recently overhauled its menu to be entirely vegan? 14. Which of these is not a pasta shape: mantecato, conchiglie, mafaldine? 15. What are the four key flavour profiles found in Thai cooking? 16. In which year was Gourmet Traveller first published: 1982, 1966 or 1971? 17. Where was Neil Perry’s first restaurant? 18. In the 1996 film Big Night, what is the centrepiece of the feast? Answers on page 22 1 Sydney Festival After spirits were dampened last year, Sydney Festival is poised to return in all its theatrical glory. Highlights include Sydney Symphony Under the Stars, a 22-night music series called Speakers Corner, and free performances dotted throughout the city. January 6-30, sydneyfestival.org.au 2 Australian Open This grand slam event returns to remind everyone just how well Melbourne does sports and culture combined. While the athletic prowess and fierce competition is the centrepiece of the event, you can also expect well-curated dining experiences by Shane Delia, Ben Shewry, Nornie Bero and more. January 17-30, ausopen.com 3 Mona Foma Tasmania’s annual summer festival will take place across two weekends in both Launceston and Hobart. Mona Foma artistic director and Violent Femmes bassist Brian Ritchie has curated the dual city festival with boundary-pushing art, theatre and music. January 21-23 (Launceston); January 28-30 (Hobart), mofo.net.au 3 2 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 1
News RECIPES FOR SUCCESS Food For Everyone founder and artist Gemma Leslie has just released a third round of her recipe-meets-charity posters. Made in collaboration with long-standing and upcoming chefs and authors, the series creates visual representations of recipes, with half of all profits from sales being donated to food banks, including OzHarvest, SecondBite and Asylum Seeker Resource Centre. The latest series of A2 posters includes recipes by Guillaume Brahimi (apple tarte Tatin with vanilla bean crème anglaise), author Emiko Davies (tagliolini al limone) and this month’s Gourmet Traveller cover star Simon Gloftis (Hellenika’s htapodi). Growing since its inception last year, Food For Everyone now includes plates, a colouring book and tea towels. “It began as a project to raise money for those struggling at the height of the pandemic, and today we’re a social enterprise partnering with food banks across the country,” says Leslie. $90, foodforeveryone.org.au Spreadable cheese may sound like something that should only appear in children’s lunch boxes, but hold that thought and trust cheesemonger Anthony Femia. Finca Valdivieso is a family-run dairy that began making Manchego in 1880 and its Manchego cream cheese combines summer truffle harvested from Soria with the raw milk cheese. It is now being exclusively imported by Melbourne’s Maker and Monger. “It’s best served alongside lightly toasted crusty sourdough that’s been rubbed with fresh garlic and thinly sliced Iberico jamón,” says Femia. $25, makerandmonger.com.au Answers 1. Pecorino 2. Champagne made exclusively from white grapes 3. Nigeria 4. Americano 5. In bread 6. Lady Gaga 7. Pearls 8. True 9. Ramen, udon, soba, yakisoba, sōmen and hiyamugi are all possible answers 10. Spat 11. Chardonnay, pinot noir and pinot meunier 12. Doenjang 13. Eleven Madison Park 14. Mantecato 15. Sour, salty, spicy and sweet 16. 1966 17. Bondi (Blue Water Grill) 18. A timballo (baked pasta dish) 20 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R BOOK NOW Fresh from a successful season in Melbourne, Moulin Rouge! The Musical will touch down at Sydney’s Capitol T h e a t r e i n M a y. moulinrougemusical.com PHOTOGRAPHY KATE SHANASY (MAKER AND MONGER). CRÈME DE LA CRÈME
PHOTOGRAPHY PETE DILLON & PAUL GOSNEY. PREMIUM MARKET When Anthony Puharich opened Victor Churchill in Sydney 12 years ago, he didn’t anticipate the global recognition the butchery would receive. Now, with some time to reflect and grow, he’s brought the concept to Melbourne. “They say, ‘If it ain’t broke don’t fix it,’ and Victor Churchill has been referred to as the most beautiful butcher shop in the world, so I’ve applied the same thinking,” says Puharich. “But I never would have gotten away with a copycat version of the Sydney shop. I had to give Melbourne their own thing. It’s got tweaks and improvements for them to feel proud of.” The familiarity of Churchill’s avant-garde meat market remains in all its marble-floored and copper-accented glory, with the spectacle of butchers at work and fat-marbled steaks arranged artfully, the scent of rotisserie-cooked chickens filling the room. “You walk in and know it’s Victor Churchill – Melbourne has the salt brick dry-ageing room and the wooden chopping blocks; the butchers are still on display too. The single biggest difference is the 12-seater bar we’ve created,” says Puharich. People will be able to take a seat and enjoy dry-aged steaks grilled over coals, or a selection of house-made charcuterie with a glass of Champagne or shiraz. Along with the obvious signatures, there will also be brasserie-style starter plates, such as steak tartare, carpaccio, oysters and even lobster freshly plucked from the tank. The evolution of the store hasn’t been linear or fast moving. “I was meant to open Victor Churchill New York with Anthony Bourdain – I’d met Anthony when he was here filming No Reservations and we became friends,” says Puharich. The pair started planning, but reported leasing complications followed by Bourdain’s untimely death meant this plan never eventuated. “I didn’t think about expansion for a couple of years [after that],” says Puharich. Eventually he began searching for the right location and building. A Melbourne shop made sense, given Vic’s Meats (the meat supply arm of the business) has been working with restaurants in the state for more than 17 years, including Flowerdrum, Grossi, Stokehouse, Attica, Brae and MoVida. “There’s all these great chefs that I’ve had long relationships with,” says Puharich. After relocating to Melbourne to ensure the smooth opening, Puharich is hopeful the reception of the High Street store in Armadale is as appreciated as Sydney has been. “I love Melbourne, and they know their stuff down here,” says Puharich. “There’s a reason why they were next.” 953 High St, Armadale, Vic, victorchurchill.com G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 21

Five of a kind Mayonnaise Swiped on a sandwich or mixed through a salad, these mayos are the best on the market. DOODLES CREEK MAYONNAISE Named after the spring-fed stream running through the producer’s family farm, Doodles Creek has perfected the classic French-style mayonnaise. White wine vinegar and lemon juice bringn a subtle tang, while free-range egg yolks provide a buttery consistency and rounded flavour. Great for potato salads. $10 for $285gm, doodlescreek.com VO TEA M F A ROZA’S DILL AND PARSLEY Chopped herbs are a vibrant addition here, giving Roza’s velvety spread a wonderfully garden-fresh flavour. This one is as versatile as it is delicious and works wonders with seafood. Layer on toasted sourdough and serve with mussels; pair with chunky hot chips and battered fish; or elevate your dinner-party blinis with a generous dollop. $9 for 240ml, harrisfarm.com.au WORDS GEORGIE MEREDITH. PHOTOGRAPHY ALANA LANDSBERRY. STYLING LAUREN DE SOUSA. GT KEWPIE WASABI Japanese mayo label Kewpie is a cult-classic the world over, and for good reason. The OG mayonnaise is silky, sweet and packs a perfect umami punch – add wasabi oil and horseradish to the mix and the result is this bright, sinus-clearing condiment. Drizzle over rice bowls or pair with miso-roasted salmon for a piquant kick. $5.85 for 300ml, twoprovidores.com.au URITE WEST WALLA FARM FRENCH MAYONNAISE Rich and yolky, with a thick, whipped consistency, this decadent jar of mayo is the reigning champion here. Made in New South Wales with local free-range eggs, it’s luxuriously creamy and offers a beautifully rounded flavour with just a hint of acidity. An ethereal dip for fritto misto or simple poached prawns. $10 for 250gm, westwallafarm.com.au GIN MAYO The brightly illustrated tube may be the first thing to catch your eye, but it’s the zippy, Marie Rose-style sauce inside that will keep you coming back for more. Sweetened with tomato paste, it’s then spiked with Bobby’s dry gin to bring zingy, botanical afternotes. Slather on a bacon and egg roll, and boom – the crowd goes wild! $15 for 170ml, notwasted.com.au G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 23
OR MEG MASON A 24 D WIT H C QUI K W Interview HANNAH-ROSE YEE The best-selling author of Sorrow and Bliss on a Kiwi camping Christmas, feijoas and why she can never eat another Ginger Nut. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
Memories My parents moved to Australia from New Zealand when I was 16 and my brother stayed behind because he was already at university. What we didn’t know was that we would never, to this day, ever live in the same country at the same time, ever again. We haven’t had that home that you trek back to every Christmas; we’ve been much more of a literal and figurative moveable feast… But about three years ago, my brother and his wife bought a farm in the South Island of New Zealand. There was no house on it, but we decided that we would go camping there. So for three weeks, all of us descended. PHOTOGRAPHY GRANT SPARKES CARROLL. My mum produced a full Christmas dinner that we ate out in the middle of a field at a long table. She’d done these amazing roast chickens, and all these vegetables that she had made my whole childhood and that just taste like Christmas to me. We hadn’t all been home, somewhere that belonged to us, for 25 years by then. It was the most meaningful and incredible Christmas. If I even The most amazing food holiday we’ve been on was to Sri Lanka before the pandemic. The house that we stayed at had a beautiful chef who worked there. At breakfast she would serve buffalo curd with treacle. I gather you were meant to have a little scoop on the side with fruit or an amazing pancake-y thing she was making. I could just put it away, to the point that she started calling me curd lady and serving me a separate, very ladylike serving of curd and treacle without even asking if I wanted it, because she knew I did want it. I had to write a whole manuscript and then throw it away in order to arrive at being able to do Sorrow and Bliss. It was going badly the entire time and was going to ultimately fail – I never catch the scent had a good day with it – for some of one now I am wildly reason, I regressed and I just started There are fruit called feijoas. They offended… I don’t know eating Arnott’s Ginger Nuts. If I even grow wild in people’s gardens [in when I’ll be able to eat catch the scent of one now I am wildly New Zealand]. I used to eat them offended, the association is so strong. until I was honestly quite ill and when a Ginger Nut again. I don’t know when I’ll be able to eat I go back, I try to time it with feijoa a Ginger Nut again. I hope soon, season… They’re really tart – they’ve because they are delicious and got kind of a floury texture, and perfect, but not right now. It’s too soon. they’re quite fleshy. It sounds utterly disgusting, but I promise if you love a sour flavour they’re just amazing. I’m desperate to get to London again. I miss all my Everyone in New Zealand will be able to tell you about friends. I’ve missed seeing the book come out there, feijoas. Maybe that’s the test of a real New Zealander; which was a tiny private tragedy. When I lived there that it’s like a password. was my ambition professionally, and I waited a little while to do it by having children first. And then the fact that I came here [Australia] in Year 12 and then I went to Sorrow and Bliss is set there, and the fact that it’s had Sydney University and I met Kate Gibbs – Margaret its biggest success there, it was sad to miss it… I’m dying Fulton’s granddaughter – and we became best friends to make up for every single lunch I didn’t get to have. and remain best friends to this day. I went to her house I’m going to be chain lunching it all around London, for dinner and tasted, for the first time, the splendour of when I can finally go! Hokkien noodles. I remember thinking that I had never eaten anything so delicious and exotic in my entire life, It’s incredible when someone like Gillian Anderson and she finds it hilarious that it was a basic staple for them endorses your novel, or Ann Patchett talks about it that I found fit to go home and tell my mother about. on a podcast, or Olivia Wilde reads it on a superyacht. But you can’t manufacture those moments, and there’s really no way to even metabolise them. But the ones that connect with your own story, and your personal experience or desires or aspirations or disappointments – I think they’re the ones that are glorious.  Sorrow and Bliss (Fourth Estate, $33) by Meg Mason is on sale now. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 25
MARLON MOTLOP Kylie Kwong celebrates the individuals helping to grow a stronger community. This month, we meet Marlon Motlop, proud Larrakia man and farm manager of Indigenous food producer The Native Co. I deeply admire Marlon Motlop for his talent as a professional sportsperson, musician, singer, songwriter and Indigenous grower and farmer. Marlon embodies and practices the ancient wisdom of his First Nations heritage channelling this powerful energy and becoming an incredible role model for all. 26 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R M arlon Motlop has fond memories of growing up in Darwin, feasting on native citrus fruits such as lemon aspen and ocean-fishing for barramundi and mud crabs off the northern coastline. It was these small adventures that sparked a quiet interest in native foods for Motlop, but it wasn’t until later in life that it became a fully-fledged passion. The former AFL player, who enjoyed a five-year tenure kicking goals for Port Adelaide Football Club, is now farm manager at The Native Co – a family-run company that supplies restaurants with high-quality, native Australian ingredients.
WORDS GEORGIE MEREDITH (MAIN) & KYLIE KWONG (INTRO). PHOTOGRAPHY MARK POKORNY (KWONG). “Damien Manno, Josef Capobianco and Daniel Motlop [my cousin] founded The Native Co after identifying a gap in the market for Australian First foods,” explains Motlop. “They wanted to fill that gap, not just with seasonal produce but with a consistent supply of Australian natives all year around.” Motlop found his way to the role after volunteering in the company’s greenhouses, an experience that brought back memories of his The Native Co has recently expanded into younger days foraging in Darwin. “It just took the New South Wales market, supplying produce me back to my childhood,” says Motlop. “I think to some of Sydney’s top dining destinations. working with native products and First foods And while their place on the menu is exciting for gives you that sense of being on Country, so Motlop, it’s their birthplace and history that really I was pretty excited about inspires him. “Every product we “Take warrigal investing some time into grow has a significant story and making this work.” greens, for instance. place of origin. It has a deep The Native Co’s growing connection to not only the They were one of space, which was established in Australian country, but First the first food to 2018 on the edge of the Barossa Nation countries within our Valley, has since doubled in size, nation,” he says. be given to British with approximately 6000 square “Take warrigal greens, for settler to help metres of land to grow an instance. They were one of the fight scurvy.” abundance of native herbs and first foods to be given to British leaves; including river mint, settlers to help fight scurvy, and saltbush, native thyme, karkalla, samphire now they’re known around the world. But their and crystal ice plant, to name a few. origins are from the east coast of Australia,” he says. “Essentially we have a hydroponic water “It’s such a small plant, but it plays such a big system set up and everything is fed organically; part in Australian history and the documents we don’t use any pesticides inside the hot houses,” of settlement, with even more significance for says Motlop. “We have up to 16 different species the people of east coast Australia.” of native produce growing inside, all year round. This year, Motlop was awarded one of I’m pretty much here every day, harvesting, 12 scholarships from Nuffield Australia – an maintaining or planting.” organisation that supports primary producers to travel and study an agricultural topic of choice. Motlop hopes to use the funding to further broaden his understanding of native foods, sharing their stories and recognising them as important parts of Australia’s history. “Every product originates from somewhere, and a certain country of people has a specific cultural connection to them somewhere along the line. That’s what I’m fascinated by.”  G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 27
E H T CH T I K EN GARD EN ER Sugar snap peas These little delicacies may be the youngest vegetable we grow but they deliver an abundance of sweetness, writes SIMON RICKARD. Most vegetable varieties have ancient pedigrees. Pumpkins were domesticated in Central America around 9,000 years ago. Egyptian frescoes from 3000 BCE depict lettuces and onions. The sugar snap pea is the youngest vegetable we grow; a baby at just 50 years old. Sugar snap peas’ roots are ancient, however. We know that wild peas, native to the eastern Mediterranean, were foraged from nature since Neolithic times. The first evidence of their domestication is in Turkey, in around 7500 BC. It took a further 1500 years for them to spread westwards to Europe, and another 5000 for them to travel eastwards to Asia. These were not the shiny green nuggets we shake out of freezer bags today, however. For most of their history, peas were dried and used as a “grain”, similar to wheat and barley. “Pease pudding” was a staple in medieval Europe, commemorated in the nursery rhyme: “Pease porridge hot, pease porridge cold, pease porridge in the pot, nine days old”. Its descendants are still seen today, such as the Dutch pea and smoked sausage soup called, rather onomatopoeically, snert. It wasn’t until the 16th century that Europeans thought to eat peas fresh. It became a craze at Louis XIV’s Versailles, and the idea caught
ILLUSTRATIONS ADOBE STOCK. Grow your own Simon is a professional gardener, author and baroque bassoonist. @simon_rickard on around Europe. By the Victorian age, the British were breeding separate strains of starchy ‘marrowfat’ peas for canning (think mushy peas), and exquisitely tender baby peas for the table; the kind of peas we all know today. Meanwhile in China, pea breeding had taken a different path. There, peas were developed not to have big, tender seeds, but to have crisp, edible pods. This was the snow pea, or mangetout (“eat-all”) as the French dubbed it when they were introduced to Europe in the 1880s. Snow peas found their way to the USA, perhaps with Chinese gold diggers during the Californian gold rush. They found the mild, maritime climate of the Pacific Northwest to their liking, and Oregon became a centre of snow pea production. It was here, at Oregon State University that Calvin Lamborn began trying to breed a better snow pea in the 1950s. Snow pea pods are very prone to buckling, making them difficult to pack and transport efficiently. Lamborn attempted to breed a snow pea with thicker, non-buckling pods. By complete chance, he got something quite different. Whereas snow peas are at their sweetest and most tender before the seeds begin to swell, his new pea variety was at its best when the seeds reached maximum size. Its pods were smaller than those of a snow pea, but they remained crisp and juicy even as the seeds developed their highest sugar levels. Lamborn realised he was onto something, and the first sugar snap peas were released to the world in the 1970s. Growing sugar snap peas is simple. The plants like cool soil and mild weather. In most parts of Australia and New Zealand, they can be sown from autumn right through until early spring. I sow mine in September, so I can harvest them now, over the summer holidays. Peas like alkaline soil, so check the pH and apply lime if necessary. They don’t need particularly fertile soil, however they do need perfect drainage. Soak the seeds in water overnight before sowing 2-3cm deep. Dwarf varieties such as ‘Sugar Bon’ are self supporting, but climbing varieties such as ‘Cascadia’ require support. Bean poles won’t do. Peas climb by means of fine, wiry tendrils, so they need strings, chicken wire or traditional “pea sticks”to give them purchase. A deep mulch will help to keep the soil cool. Those things attended to, it’s simply a matter of waiting three months for this youngest and most delectable of all vegetables to bear its crop.  It wasn’t until the 16th century that Europeans thought to eat peas fresh. It became a craze at Louis XIV’s Versailles, and the idea caught on around Europe. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 29
South Tasmania The wine produced in southern Tasmania has an ethereal quality that speaks to the nuances of the sub-region, writes SAMANTHA PAYNE. S Samantha is a sommelier, writer and wine consultant. @sl_payne 30 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R omething interesting is happening with the way we’re starting to discuss Tasmania as it relates to wine. “The sceptics would say Tasmania is all one GI, but it’s very easy to refute that when you see the wines coming out of all the different regions,” says winemaker Peter “Dredgey” Dredge. As he refers to it, GI stands for Geographical Indicator, a fancy (and legal) way of describing where a wine is made. Discussions around GIs often take place over time when the broader wine narrative of place pushes against the nuance of a sub-region. We’ve seen a similar push-pull tension when talking about GIs in Central Otago in New Zealand’s South Island. Similarly, winemakers have the option of labelling wines under the umbrella of one static region or a specific sub-region. Under his label, Dr Edge wines, Dredge has created a series of pinot noir, chardonnay and riesling releases that celebrate the different expressions of the northern, southern and eastern regions of Tasmania. The wines are all made in the same way to highlight their unique qualities. “I’m a big believer that 95 per cent of people just want to
S Wine country A SO UT H TA NI MA Coal River Valley Derwent Valley PHOTOGRAPHY ALANA LANDSBERRY. STYLING LAUREN DE SOUSA. The Palawa people first arrived in Tasmania 40,000 years ago. These ancestors of the Aboriginal Tasmanians were cut off from the mainland by rising sea levels circa 6000 BC. The South East Tribe was one of nine tribes whose country ranged from Storm Bay and the D’Entrecasteaux Channel to South Cape, New Norfolk and the Huon Valley. For the Muwinina people, the area around present-day Hobart was their country called nipaluna. IA drink my wine and not think about it, but for those who are curious, I mention the region on the labels so people can look into it,” explains Dredge. No one knows the legacy of southern Tasmanian wine better than Mardi Ellis, daughter of Gerald Ellis, who founded Meadowbank Wines in 1976. She is now the torchbearer of some of the family’s phenomenal vineyards under the guidance of her father, together with winemaker Dredge. A sustainable, family-first philosophy focusing on “stewardship of the land” drives the winery and the region’s success with more than 80 per cent of the family’s 1987, 1997 and 2007 plantings going into some of Tasmania’s best-known wines, such as Arras. “The Agricultural Society of Tasmania told Dad that ‘grapes would never grow here’ and now he plants more sites every 10 years,” says Ellis. So what draws winemakers to the south? Kiwi Samantha Connew asked herself this question in 2016, launching her brand Stargazer in southern Tasmania’s Coal River Valley. “It was a process of elimination,” she explains. “I needed to be down south because of the lower rainfall; and it’s cooler, making it suitable for organic management and suited the three grape varieties I wanted to grow.” Connew and Dredge agree that wines from the south have an almost “ethereal” quality. Connew describes it as “an intensity of flavour still with a light touch”, this is compared with wines from the east which are “slightly more muscular and have incredible savoury and graphite-like tannins”. “We should absolutely be championing the sub-regionality of Tasmania, but we don’t need to have registered GIs to be able to talk about the nuances of these sites,” she says. “I want people to understand we’re not one homogenous blob but we’ve only got 200 hectares of vines in the ground; what’s the point of splitting everyone up and drawing up boundaries?” ● SOUTH T AS AN Port Arthur TE OF M Bruny Island A TA S Hobart 2019 Pooley ‘Cooinda Vale’ Chardonnay, Coal River Valley, $65 There are many examples of outstanding chardonnay from southern Tasmania, but this single-vineyard drop from the Pooley family is exceptional. Perfumed pears meet oyster shell salinity with a tightly wound acidity that is the perfect side to sunshine and prawns. pooleywines.com.au 2021 Meadowbank Gamay, Derwent Valley, $45 There’s a reason why this wine has a cult following; it’s a textbook example of a “crunchy, chilled red”. The combination of established vines (from 1987) and newer 2015 plantings create a depth of flavour rarely seen in this variety. meadowbank.com.au 2019 Hughes & Hughes Riveaux Road Vermouth, D’Entrecasteaux Channel, $45 This bitter-sweet vermouth is made with pinot noir and syrah from the Derwent Valley and the D’Entrecasteaux Channel, and aromatised with locally sourced wormwood, boronia, native pepperberry and lavender tea tree. It is then sweetened with Bruny Island honey for good measure; serve on ice with a sprig of rosemary. mewstonewines.com.au 2021 Stargazer Riesling, Coal River Valley, $35 From what Connew calls a classic Coal River Valley vintage, this wine showcases beautiful aromatics with juicy citrus characters (unusual for the region) alongside fresh Granny Smith flavours and a sherbert-like acidity. stargazerwine.com.au 2020 Tolpuddle Pinot Noir, Coal River Valley, $93 The vineyard was established in 1988 but it wasn’t until 2011, through the magnificent vision of Martin Shaw and Michael Hill Smith MW (of Shaw and Smith fame), that we have been able to uncover the true potential of this site. A magnificent example of pinot noir bursting with aromatic raspberry and sour cherry flavours. tolpuddlevineyard.com G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 31
Cocktail hour For weekly cocktail inspiration, follow us on Instagram @gourmettraveller TOMM Y’S MARGARITA 3 LAS TO 32 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R Y TH Q UI Pour 60ml tequila, 30ml fresh lime juice and 10-15ml agave syrup into a cocktail shaker. Shake ingredients and pour into a rocks glass filled with ice. TR REE TE The original Tommy’s Tequila Fortaleza Reposado This buttery, citrus-forward tequila is produced from estate-grown agave in the aptly named town of Tequila in Mexico. $155 for 750ml drnks.com Arquitecto Blanco Tequila Made from sustainable agave that’s double distilled in copper, it’s clean and crisp with a subtle kick of pepper. $89 for 700ml winonawine.com La Gritona Reposado Tequila Soft and distinctive, this 100% blue agave tequila offers a vegetal flavour with a smooth, round finish. $105 for 700ml danmurphys.com.au WORDS GEORGIE MEREDITH. PHOTOGRAPHY ALANA LANDSBERRY. STYLING HANNAH BLACKMORE. F loral, sharp, sweet and sour, the Tommy’s Margarita has become a modern icon in the world of classic cocktails. Built from just a few staple ingredients, it’s simple enough to pull off at home, but must always be made with 100 per cent agave tequila and never mixto tequila, which has corn or cane sugar added prior to fermentation. A riff on the classic Margarita (which comprises tequila, triple sec and lime), the Tommy’s was first concocted in the late-1980s. “The inventor Julio Bermejo, who named the cocktail after his family’s San Francisco restaurant, wanted to create something that expressed the nuances of tequila and agave without any distraction of the salt,” says Liber Osorio, co-founder and director of Milpa Collective in Sydney. “By replacing the triple sec with agave syrup, it’s basically a Margarita made entirely from Mexican ingredients. The agave softens the flavour and makes it really smooth.” This seductive drink is a delicate balancing act of flavours, and served on the rocks, unlike its original counterpart, which is frequently blended with ice. “It’s smooth, sweet, strong and the ultimate expression of tequila in a cocktail,” says Liber. “The perfect, simple summer drink.”
A G o u r m e t Tr a v e l l e r r e a d e r e v e n t TICKETS ON SALE NOW THE MENU Rēwena potato bread, Lewis Road Creamery butter, Marlborough sea salt Kiwi G&T (Little Biddy Gin - Classic, West Coast & East Imperial Yuzu Tonic) A TA S T E O F AOTEAROA Join Gourmet Traveller editor Joanna Hunkin along with Tourism New Zealand and New Zealand Trade and Enterprise for an evening of wining and dining, as we explore New Zealand’s regions and celebrate the country’s extraordinary produce at one of Sydney’s most acclaimed new openings, Lana. From Cape Reinga in the far North Island to Bluff in the deep South Island, a world of fresh produce and fine wine awaits gourmet travellers in Aotearoa New Zealand. In Aotearoa, there’s a special connection to both the land and sea; a relationship founded on care and respect. When combined with lush, green pastures, fertile soil and cool, clear waters, the results are outstanding. Whether it’s to plan your next visit, or simply to enjoy a taste of New Zealand with friends, join us for a special culinary journey as we highlight New Zealand’s unique producers, winemakers and regions. This bespoke event will take place at Lana, an exquisite new fine-dining restaurant located in Sydney’s historic Hinchcliff House, developed by acclaimed New Zealand restaurateur Scott Brown. Lana head chef Alex Wong will share an exclusive six-course menu with diners, showcasing some of New Zealand’s most prized ingredients, paired with a selection of fine wines. Be the first to experience a taste of Aotearoa New Zealand and whet your appetite for future journeys ahead. VENUE: Lana (Hinchcliff House), 5-7 Young St, Sydney NSW 2000 DATE: Wednesday, 16 February 2022 TIME: 6.30pm PRICE: $130 per person, featuring a six-course bespoke Lana menu, highlighting New Zealand produce with matching apéritifs and wines TO BOOK: email rsvpgt@aremedia.com.au or visit gtreaderdinner.eventbrite.com.au Snack Sanford scampi, horopito pepper, finger lime, shiso leaf Ara Select Blocks Organic Sauvignon Blanc, Marlborough Entrée Smoked Ōra King salmon, kawakawa, green apple, wakame Palliser Estate Riesling, Martinborough Mid-Course Cloudy Bay Clams, potato & leek ravioli, pikopiko, bottarga Greystone Chardonnay, North Canterbury Main Silere Alpine Origin Merino Lamb, macadamia & puha pesto, sheep’s milk yoghurt Akarua Pinot Noir, Central Otago Antipodes Sparkling Water, Whakatāne Dessert Hokey pokey, preserved feijoa, Mānuka honey, salted caramel Batched Premium Cocktail Brought to you by Tourism New Zealand and New Zealand Trade and Enterprise
ADVERTISING FEATURE SAVOR the NEW Competition is a known driver of innovation, but there’s more to Auckland’s dining scene than sharp knives and shiny fit-outs. As the city’s chefs redefine contemporary New Zealand cuisine it makes for dynamic dining in this Pacific city. With an impressive line-up of restaurants, Savor Group is at the forefront of the city’s hospitality scene. AMANO BRITOMART When Amano opened in 2016, it proved a game-changer for Auckland dining. Taking its cues from the rustic sensibilities of Italy, and building on them with punchy flavours, it sated appetites for hand-crafted contemporary cuisine. Located in a former dockside warehouse in the harbour precinct of Britomart, the setting also raises the bar, with the interiors of this warehouse-style space transformed by multi-award-winning architect Jack McKinney. With heritage in its bones and provenance respected on the plate, Amano continues to bring the best of everything to the table. Executive chef Andrew Hanson only works with in-season produce, amplifying flavours at their best, and it’s a joy to watch him and the team AZABU M I S S I O N B AY Before Azabu came to Mission Bay, it wowed in Ponsonby, where it has earned a dedicated following for exquisitely presented JapanesePeruvian cuisine and immaculate cocktails. Whereas the Ponsonby restaurant is a very internal affair, Mission Bay offers up a sublime location. Looking through pōhutukawa trees to the beach and iconic volcanic cone of Rangitoto Island beyond, it’s a quintessential coastal setting just east of the city. The restaurant opens up to this spectacular outlook in an indoors-meets-outdoors design by Herbst Architects, renowned for their sensitive residential work on coastal sites. The Rogu Gin courtyard is at the centre of the pavilion-style restaurant, which is connected to the historic, stone Mission House. Not that the missionaries could have conceived of Nikkei-style tostadas, dumplings, tempura and sashimi being served on these grounds. But they’d be unlikely to disapprove of the impeccable quality of the food, which at work in the open kitchen. Amano (from the Italian “a mano” – by hand) is a haven of hospitality that starts the day with freshly baked pastries and a line out the door for morning take-out. For those not scurrying back to a desk, the better option is to take a seat, have a pastry and coffee or something more substantial from the breakfast menu. As an all-day eatery, the segue into lunch and dinner is an easy one in this space of generous proportions and heart. 66-68 Tyler St, Britomart amano.nz draws on premium local produce such as scampi, kingfish and lamb. (Lamb Chuleta with a smoky aubergine and coriander puree is a signature.) Artfully presented with Japanese aesthetics and the Peruvian zest for colour, don’t forget to look up from the plate and enjoy the sea view. 44 Tamaki Drive, Mission Bay savor.co.nz
OSTRO BRITOMART Maybe it’s the sparkling harbour view and the buzzing atmosphere, but there’s a celebratory air about Ostro. The light-filled dining room and generous bar have a magnetism that makes you want to drink Champagne, eat oysters and devour freshly caught crayfish. The outlook is just as compelling: an entire wall of glass looks out on to the action of Waitematā Harbour, with views across to Devonport. It gets even better when those glass doors concertina open and the connection to the sea becomes almost tangible. While the view is unique to Auckland, Ostro has an international edge. This shines through in haute-bistro fare which celebrates the best local produce. From the raw bar’s local oyster selection, through to toasted crayfish brioche with horokaka, lemon curd and basil, and Cloudy Bay clams with seaweed, chilli, chives and karengo, the kitchen deftly honours uniquely New Zealand ingredients. Ostro is located in the historic Seafarers building in Britomart, which makes it a natural choice for after-work drinks , but its one-of-akind setting makes it equally appealing for a celebratory long lunch. 52 Tyler St, Britomart savor.co.nz Q&A L U C I E N L AW RESTAURATEUR, FOUNDER OF SAVOR GROUP Your family has a background in restaurants – tell us about that. My father came to New Zealand from China when he was four and his family worked as market gardeners. Dad set up Mandarin, the first fully licensed restaurant in Hamilton. It was very much family-run and I have fond memories of Sundays spent prepping for the week – Dad butchering, my grandparents making dumplings and a fantastic shared dinner at the end. NON SOLO PIZZA PA R N E L L Twenty-five years is a long time in a relatively youthful city, and an eternity in hospitality, so it’s fair to say that Non Solo Pizza is more than an institution – it’s part of Auckland’s fabric. More affectionately known as NSP, this stalwart in the inner-city suburb of Parnell has never strayed from its roots – and herein lies its success and longevity. Serving classic pizza and pasta, and more robust secondi in the way of Tuscan T-bone and roasted pork belly with duck-fat roasted potatoes and salsa verde, this local legend stays true to its heritage but is always current and relevant. The outstanding food and hospitality experience at NSP keeps you coming back because it is so consistently on point. At the heart of the eatery is the leafy courtyard, with a I’ve-been-transportedto-Tuscany feel. It’s where regulars come to refine the art of the long lunch – be that on a weekday or lazy Sunday – working their way through the menu, then culminating in a crescendo of asiago, gorgonzola and taleggio, accompanied with moscato. While the wine list more than represents New Zealand’s top-tier wineries, it respectfully honours Italian heavyweights, too, with an impressive offering of Super Tuscan and Barolo. 1052/259 Parnell Rd, Parnell nsp.co.nz You started out in advertising working at Saatchi & Saatchi in London before returning to your first love – hospitality. How does one inform the other? Advertising teaches you to look for creativity in different places and within your team. Finding new ideas is crucial for developing a creative culture, and that applies to any great restaurant. What makes a great restaurant? People don’t go to restaurants because they are hungry; they go because they want an experience, whether that’s for the amazing craft of cooking, or something bold and fun. What are your views on the Auckland food scene? When I opened Ebisu 10 years ago, the central city was just beginning to come to life. But it has really come of age in the past five years. While everyone is doing something different, the one thing I believe we’re all doing is championing New Zealand produce and without doubt we’re blessed with some of the world’s best.
REVIEW JANUARY Oncore by Clare Smyth, Sydney p Dining out This month, we review the best waterside dining across the country, including Rickys in Noosa and Stokehouse in St Kilda. 40
UI CK LOO K Q Review RICKYS RIVER BAR & RESTAURANT 2 Quamby Pl, Noosa Heads, Qld rickys.com.au CHEF Scott Klimisch OPENING HOURS Wed-Sun noon-late PRICE GUIDE $$ BOOKINGS Essential. H Noosa Heads, Qld YO U ’ R E S O F I N E Stately Noosa stayer Rickys is in sparklingly good form – bigger and better than ever – sailing towards its second decade, writes FIONA DONNELLY. C From left: relaxed riverside dining at Rickys; spanner crab spaghettini. EFRE E R S H T VERDICT Worth splashing out at this golden oldie. oastal but not coasting. The catchphrase perfectly sums up this Noosa riverfront destination. Can you think of another venue that 15 years on from plating its first spanner crab spaghettini, would still have enough oomph to daringly take over the tenancy next door and double in size? I’ll wait. Of course, this feat has been somewhat easier for Rickys – its owner is joint landlord for both tenancies. But it’s still a huge vote of confidence. More importantly for diners, knocking through into sadly now shuttered Japanese eatery Wasabi, means Rickys has doubled its waterfront tables. And whether you’re here for sunset cocktails and dinner, or lingering over a long sun-splashed lunch, you’ll want to relish those cooling breezes and bask in the river’s reflected glitter and dappled light. The new addition feels seamless. This room has always been more about the mesmeric ebb and flow of the river alongside, than fussy design. Interiors are classic – fresh white walls, plenty of polished timbers, white linen-topped tables, white molded chairs with well-plumped cushions and of course, floor-to-ceiling glass to maximise views. It’s unstudied yet stylish – a look that’s come to epitomise Noosa. It’s also an aesthetic in sync with the food offering, which puts the best of local centre-plate. A starter of snappily fresh spring greens is a tasty case in point. Al dente asparagus spears arrive draped casually over a fat blob of milky ricotta. The whey cheese, lightly accented by lemon myrtle, has a vivid pool of green mint oil at its centre. Tucked beneath are more greens – broad beans and zucchini coins – resting in a slick of the subtly flavoured mint oil. A scatter of nutty dukkah with toasted sunflower seeds and pine nuts adds texture and there’s a pretty garnish – coriander and borage flowers for extra verve. Chef Scott Klimisch (ex-Locale, Noosa) came aboard at Rickys in August. You can feel the influence of earlier stints at Melbourne’s Cutler & Co and Bistro Guillaume. His spanner crab spaghettini is a cracker. This version of the signature dish is rich and garlicky and packs a whack of chilli heat and just a smidge of parsley to complement the sweet oceanic brine of the crab. All you need is a squeeze of the lemon that sits alongside. There are just a handful of mains to choose from. Spanish mackerel, caught locally, leans classic French on the plate, scoring a creamy celeriac purée with steamed mussels and leek. Duck breast is likewise old-school, flesh blush pink and paired with Jerusalem artichoke purée, purple kale and a mandarin jus for cohesion. These days the drinks list may be accessed via a QR code, but it retains the breadth and depth Rickys is known for. By the glass or half bottle, say, you can either keep things simple with a $14 Godello from Spain, or splash out with a 2005 Grand Cru Chardonnay for $540. Service remains assured, not the easiest feat in a tourist town, but clearly management makes this a priority. It’s fitting Rickys owners’ side project Maravista Farm gets a shoutout on the menu. This 250-hectare hinterland property supplies honey and a growing share of the plant-based component of Rickys’ menu. In return, restaurant waste goes to Maravista for composting. The transition towards a closed-loop system yet another indication of how this institution is pushing to stay fresh and keep its appeal evergreen.  G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 37
HE CLASS I C T Review St Kilda, Vic HOUSE RULES raw tuna flavoured with brown butter and truffle. Also worth your time is a glorious spiced corn tart, a pretty thing filled with corn custard and topped with puffed sorghum for crunch and lime zest for tang. A hand-chopped beef tartare is successfully flavoured with an oyster emulsion and crowned with slivers of pickled green tomato while a uncomplicated plating. It’s a perfect side dish of lightly pickled asparagus match for the room’s pared back style spears (apple cider and juniper are part that channels idealised beachside of the pickling equation) partnered with dining with its blushing sun-kissed buffalo curd turned pale purple with the colours, the sand-coloured timber addition of mountain pepperberry floors and soft pink light fittings evoking comes close to stealing the show. nostalgic memories of summers The long-time Stokehouse dessert (and sunburns) past. The Bombe has been retired for less The fish and chips, still up there at bombastic sweet stuff like superb $42, is both excellent and generous. house-made gelato that’s flavoured The fish, perhaps dusky flathead, is seasonally (go the cherry if it’s there) coated in an airy and commendably and a vanilla slice with caramelised crisp batter that comes with block-like puff and a passionfruit sauce. triple-cooked chips and a Wine list and service, always particularly compelling houseClockwise from left: executive Stokehouse strong points, made tartare sauce with lemon chef Jason have emerged from lockdown juice and capers given starring Staudt; carrots unscathed and the view, of roles. cooked over the fire; dining with course, is delicious as ever. Spend some time with the a view. Opposite: The direction in the kitchen has snack menu, particularly if the Port Phillip Bay made the always persuasive tuna belly bites are present, snapper and package even more so.  teeny little numbers filled with spiced corn tart. T here’s never been a good reason not to go to Stokehouse. View-deprived Melburnians have been packing the joint for years to perch above the boardwalk and stare thirstily at beach and bay, swarmed and glittering in summer or hazy watercolour grey in winter. At times it can feel like a clubhouse for the buffed, filled and botoxed, but Stokehouse still projects a particular relaxed, Aussie egalitarian vibe, remarkable in a place that serves some of the most expensive fish and chips in town. But it was always worth considering because of the view. With chef Jason Staudt in the kitchen, however, what’s outside the window needs to do less of the heavy lifting. Staudt’s food is clean-edged and sure-footed with a penchant for excellent ingredients and pretty but 38 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R PHOTOGRAPHY PETE DILLON (PORTRAIT, DISH) & KRISTOFFER PAULSEN (INTERIORS). Chef Jason Staudt’s dishes are the perfect match for this beachfront icon, writes MICHAEL HARDEN.
Q CK LOO K UI STOKEHOUSE 30 Jacka Boulevard, St Kilda, Vic stokehouse.com.au CHEF Jason Staudt OPENING HOURS Mon-Sun noon-late PRICE GUIDE $$$ BOOKINGS Essential. VERDICT With chef Jason Staudt in the kitchen, the food at Stokehouse now rivals the view.
NEWCOM C OR E VALU E S Chef Clare Smyth puts her signature stamp and personal touch on Crown’s finest jewel, writes KARLIE VERKERK. C 40 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R Smyth’s Northern Irish heritage and mod-Brit culinary sensibilities within a fresh Australian context. Set inside a casino-slash-hotel, Oncore could easily have fallen into the trite and deeply impersonal trap. But it hasn’t. Smyth – despite not being able to travel to Sydney until February 2022 – has undeniably put her stamp on everything. In some cases, literally – many of the plates are decorated with her fingerprints. The menu features a range of Core signatures made with local ingredients. There’s the “potato and roe”, which heroes a humble spud from the NSW Southern Highlands. Topped with trout and herring roe and doused in a sinful seaweed beurre blanc, it’s where ocean and earth meet in perfect harmony. The same could be said for the “beef and oyster”, which is a play on K yndi Lauper’s Girls Just Want to Have Fun plays softly as a selection of skilfully assembled snacks hits the smooth, leather-topped table. It’s not a track you’d expect to hear at a fine diner, but then again, this is no ordinary fine diner. This is Oncore: acclaimed UK chef Clare Smyth’s long-awaited Australian restaurant – and follow-up to her three-Michelin-starred Core in London. Located on level 26 of Crown Sydney’s Barangaroo tower, with 180-degree views of the iconic harbour, it’s fair to say she is taking things up a notch. Oncore is everything you’d expect from a polished fine diner, and more. Punctuated with playful (hear the best-of-the-’90s playlist curated by Smyth herself) and whimsical touches (see the smoke, the moss, the edible oyster shells), it successfully showcases a classic Victorian steak and oyster pie, sans pastry. In the open kitchen, a team of accomplished chefs is led by Alan Stuart (Core, Restaurant Gordon Ramsay). And while the food is technically faultless and precise, it is also engaging and inventive. Take the “Core apple” dessert, for example – the restaurant’s take on a toffee apple, featuring Lobo apple brandy from the Adelaide Hills. Or the “Core-teser”, a towering textural treat inspired by the CK LOO much-loved UI flavours of ONCORE BY a Malteser. CLARE SMYTH Oncore may Level 26, be the grandest Crown Sydney, Barangaroo, NSW opening of 2021, crownsydney.com.au but with Smyth’s CHEFS Clare Smyth toe-tapping and Alan Stuart playlist, whimsical OPENING HOURS flourishes and Fri-Sun noon-3pm; Wed-Sun 6pm-11pm personal touches it’s memorable PRICE GUIDE $$$$ for many other BOOKINGS Essential. reasons. After all, VERDICT Fine dining done with girls just want to a fun and personal flair. have fun.  PHOTOGRAPHY TOM ASTERIADES (SMYTH). Sydney, NSW Q E ER TH Clockwise: views of Sydney Harbour; chef Clare Smyth; beef and oyster.
Review Q UI CK LOO K KUTI SHACK Main Beach Carpark, Beach Rd, Goolwa Beach, SA kutishack.com CHEFS Brendan Roach and Rhys Badcock OPENING HOURS Thur-Sun 8am-4pm; Fri-Sat 8am-8pm. PRICE GUIDE $ BOOKINGS Recommended. STINA Goolwa Beach, SA VERDICT Simple, authentic seaside charm. N TH T IO E DE LOV E SH ACK A beachside diner delivers top-notch pipis and a pitch-perfect coastal vibe, writes KATIE SPAIN. PHOTOGRAPHY JACQUI WAY. F or many South Australians, foraging for pipis at Goolwa Beach is a quintessential part of childhood beach holidays. Bare feet are wriggled in the wet sand until the pale clams appear (as if by magic) and are scooped up and carted off in buckets, shells clinking all the way home. Here, chefs Brendan Roach and Rhys Badcock put pipis on a pedestal, serving them with a view of the beach from which they came. It’s a big team effort. Kuti means pipi in the local Ngarrindjeri language and the tasty morsels are harvested by Ngarrindjeriowned KutiCo and processed by Goolwa PipiCo, which backs onto the little seaside eatery and is a pipi cellar door of sorts. Take-home packs can be snapped up for $20 per kilogram. Dining in is an immersive experience. The recently renovated, modern shack-like building is nestled between Goolwa Surf Lifesaving Club and the sea, and the sandy carpark heaves with action. Surfers gather to swap wave reports and surf life savers arrive for their shift in the sun. Inside, a casual, open plan dining space offers rugged coastal views. Waitstaff are as local as the seafood on the plate. Co-owner Vanessa Button leads the way through share plates and more substantial dishes. A bowl of pipis swimming in XO sauce is a must. The salty, punchy broth is best slurped direct from heart-shaped shells and mopped up with chunks of sourdough. Messy but fun. Pipi linguini is another crowd favourite. Boston Bay speck, garlic, lashings of lemon butter and parmesan complement the clam’s sweet, nutty flesh. Crisp, fried whitebait with dill mayo is delightfully all crunch and punch, while Coffin Bay oysters are served on Left: grilled Coorong mulloway with warrigal pesto and almond couscous at Kuti Shack. Below: chef Brendan Roach with the catch of the day. a custom ceramic oyster plate made by Button. Classic fish and chips is presented with a twist; Coopers battered SA gummy shark fillet is laced with a gentle medley of spice. Daily specials are scrawled on butcher’s paper and the seafoodaverse, vegetarians and children are well looked after. During school holidays, opening hours extend to every day except Wednesday. The predominantly South Australian wine list is small but carefully curated to complement seafood and casual beach vibes. A token French fizz, Riverland cocktail, and South Australian beer and cider are also available. The small team’s respect for the local environment and its traditional owners is tangible. Simple but meaningful aesthetics add to the laid-back charm. Woven light shades and traditional pipi catchers hang from the ceiling (the work of Ngarrindjeri elder Ellen Trevorrow), while the bright mural on the building’s exterior is a depiction of the nearby Coorong by artist Cedric Varcoe. It’s all pitch perfect. There’s little need for cosmetic distractions when Mother Nature is the jaw-dropping star.  G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 41
A G o ur m e t Tr av e lle r p r o m o t i o n ENJOY IT WITH… a refreshing cocktail like this zingy cranberry and apple iced tea punch. Scan the QR code below for the recipe. SUMMER REFRESHER As the weather warms up, sweet glazed prawns and a fresh salad are the perfect combo Cranberry chilli prawns with rice noodle salad SERVES 4 PREP AND COOK TIME 1 HOUR 30 MINS 16 whole green prawns, peeled, tails intact 1 tsp sesame oil 200g thick rice noodles 2 eschalot, thinly sliced 150g punnet cherry tomatoes, halved 1 Lebanese cucumber, halved and thinly sliced 1 cup mixed Asian herbs (coriander, basil, mint) ¼cup (35g) Ocean Spray® Craisins® 50% Less Sugar, chopped Lime wedges, to serve marinade & DRESSING ½cup (160g) Ocean Spray® Whole Cranberry Sauce ¼cup (60ml) soy sauce Juice and rind of 2 limes 1 tbsp honey ¼tsp chilli flakes 1 MARINADE & DRESSING Add the cranberry sauce, soy sauce, lime rind and juice, honey and chilli flakes in a jug. Season with salt and pepper and mix to combine. Set marinade mixture aside. Place prawns in a large bowl and combine with ¼ cup marinade. Refrigerate for 1 hour to marinate. Reserve remaining mixture for dressing. 2 Preheat chargrill or barbeque over high heat. Skewer each prawn lengthways with a wooden skewer. Drizzle with sesame oil. Place on the chargrill and cook for 2–3 minutes each side, or until charred and caramelised. 3 Meanwhile, cook the noodles in boiling salted water for 3 minutes, or until tender. Drain and refresh. Place in a large bowl. Add the eschalot, tomatoes, cucumber, half the herbs and half the dressing and gently toss to combine. 4 Place prawns and noodle salad on a platter. Top noodle salad with remaining herbs and sprinkle with Craisins®. Drizzle with remaining dressing. Serve with lime wedges. SUSTAINABLY GROWN Ocean Spray® Whole Cranberry Sauce RRP $3.60; Craisins® 50% Less Sugar RRP $4; Light Cranberry Classic™ RRP $4.65 For more inspiring recipes visit oceanspray.com.au
JANUARY EVERYDAY From weeknight suppers to simple entertaining, these everyday recipes keep things fresh, fast and simple. VEGETARIAN GLUTEN FREE DAIRY FREE Photography ALICIA TAYLOR Styling STEVE PEARCE Recipes & food preparation JESSICA BROOK
Farinata with blistered tomatoes and chilli chickpeas SERVES 2 // PREP TIME 10 MINS // COOK 25 MINS (PLUS RESTING) 250 gm canned chickpeas, rinsed, drained, pat dry 100 ml olive oil, plus extra to shallow fry ½ tsp paprika 1 long red chilli, thinly sliced 250 gm vine-ripened cherry tomatoes 1 avocado, peeled, stone removed, cut into wedges 1 cup loosely packed watercress Lemon wedges, to serve FARINATA BATTER 100 250 1 2 gm chickpea flour ml cold water tbsp olive oil tbsp finely chopped flat-leaf parsley and rosemary 1 To make farinata batter, blend all ingredients with 1 tsp salt in a blender until smooth. Transfer to a jug, cover and set aside at room temperature to rest (30 minutes). 2 Heat 1cm oil in a large, deep frying pan over medium-high heat. Add chickpeas and stir continuously until crisp and golden (2-3 minutes). Add paprika and chilli, and stir until fragrant (1 minute). Remove with a slotted spoon into a bowl and season to taste. 3 Preheat grill to high. Add 1½ tbsp oil to a 25cm heavy-based oven-proof frying pan (ideally cast iron) and place on a low shelf in the oven to heat (5 minutes). 4 Meanwhile, place tomatoes on a tray, drizzle with 1 tbsp oil and season; place under grill and cook until starting to blister (5 minutes). Remove and set aside. 5 When frying pan for farinata is very hot, carefully add half of the batter, swirl to cover base and place under grill. Cook until edges are starting to crisp and golden (6 minutes). Transfer to a plate and repeat with remaining batter, adding extra oil to the pan. 6 Serve farinata topped with avocado, tomatoes, chickpeas and watercress, with lemon wedges on the side. Note Farinata is a crisp chickpea-flour crepe popular in some areas of Italy. SERVING SUGGESTION Add poached or fried eggs for a delicious and nutritious weekend breakfast. 44 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
Everyday MAKE IN ADVANCE Make a large batch of empanadas and freeze, uncooked, for easy entertaining. Chicken empanadas with mojo verde SERVES 4-6 (MAKES 18) // PREP TIME 30 MINS // COOK 20 MINS 1 1 2 1 400 1 1 ½ 6 60 6 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil onion, finely chopped garlic cloves, crushed tbsp dried oregano gm chicken thigh mince long green chilli, finely chopped hard-boiled egg, peeled, roughly chopped cup firmly packed flat-leaf parsley, finely chopped white anchovies, finely chopped gm (½ cup) pitted Sicilian olives, finely chopped sheets store-bought shortcrust pastry Vegetable oil, for deep-frying MOJO VERDE 1 long green chilli, chopped ½ cup each loosely packed flat-leaf parsley and coriander 50 gm green pitted Sicilian olives 60 ml (¼ cup) each white wine vinegar and extra-virgin olive oil 1 Heat oil in a large, non-stick frying pan over high heat. Add onion, garlic and oregano and cook, stirring, until golden (2-3 minutes). Add mince and cook, breaking up any lumps, until starting to colour (5 minutes). 2 Remove from heat, add chilli, egg, parsley, anchovies and olives; mix to combine. Season to taste and cool. 3 To make mojo verde, combine all ingredients in a small blender and blend until smooth; season to taste. 4 Using an 11cm-round cutter, cut 4 rounds from each pastry sheet. Place 1½ tbsp of mixture in the centre of each round. Fold to enclose, pinch edges and pleat to seal. 5 Heat vegetable oil in a deep saucepan to 180˚C. Deep-fry empanadas in batches until golden and crisp (4-5 minutes). Remove with a slotted spoon and drain on paper towel. Serve with mojo verde. ➤ G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 45
Grilled Balmain bugs with charred grapes and ouzo SERVES 4-6 // PREP TIME 15 MINS // COOK 20 MINS (PLUS RESTING) 60 ml (¼ cup) extra-virgin olive oil, plus extra to brush 8 medium Balmain or Moreton Bay bugs, cleaned, halved 2 tbsp finely chopped oregano 1 tbsp finely chopped dill 1⁄2 small white onion, finely chopped 2 tbsp each ouzo and red wine vinegar 1 tbsp honey 380 gm red grapes Baby Greek basil and toasted za’atar flatbread, to serve 1 Preheat a lightly greased chargrill pan or barbecue to high. Brush cut side of bugs with oil and season. Grill, cut side down, until meat is lightly charred and edges start to pull away from the shell (4 minutes). Turn and cook until meat is just tender (3 minutes). 2 Meanwhile, to make dressing, combine oil, oregano, dill, onion, ouzo, vinegar and honey in a small bowl and season to taste. Brush half of the dressing over bugs, then cover loosely and set aside. 3 Toss grapes in oil, place on chargrill and cook, turning occasionally, until lightly blistered (4 minutes). 4 Transfer bugs and grapes to a large platter, then spoon over remaining dressing and scatter over baby Greek basil. Serve with flatbread. SWAP IT OUT You can substitute the Balmain bugs with butterflied prawns. 46 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
Everyday Saganaki with watermelon, and cucumber salad SERVES 2 // PREP TIME 10 MINS // COOK 5 MINS 2 60 60 2 250 300 250 1 ¼ 1 small pita bread ml (¼ cup) extra-virgin olive oil ml (¼ cup) Sherry vinegar tsp sumac gm kefalograviera cheese (see note), cut into 1.5cm-thick slices gm seedless watermelon, rind removed, roughly chopped gm baby cucumbers, cut into wedges small red onion, thinly sliced cup baby mint leaves tbsp honey, to serve 1 Preheat oven to 200˚C. Brush pita with 1 tsp oil, place on a baking tray and bake until golden and crisp (2-3 minutes). 2 To make dressing, place 2 tsp oil, vinegar and sumac in a small bowl; season to taste and whisk to combine. 3 Heat remaining oil in a large nonstick frying pan over high heat. Add cheese and fry, turning once, until golden (1-2 minutes each side). 4 Toss watermelon, cucumber, onion and mint in a bowl with 1 tbsp of the dressing. Drizzle honey over cheese and serve with salad, crisp pita and extra dressing on the side. Note Kefalograviera, a hard sheep’s milk cheese, is available from select delicatessens. If unavailable, substitute kefalotiri or haloumi. ➤ G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 47
Everyday Italian antipasti salad with sopressa dressing SERVES 2 // PREP TIME 10 MINS // COOK 5 MINS 60 60 ½ 60 150 1 1 2 80 250 48 ml (¼ cup) extra-virgin olive oil gm sopressa, finely chopped tsp fennel seeds, crushed ml (¼ cup) red wine vinegar gm heirloom tomatoes, sliced small trevisio radicchio, leaves separated cup loosely packed basil leaves store-bought marinated artichoke hearts, cut into wedges gm mixed pitted olives, halved gm buffalo mozzarella, thickly sliced Focaccia, to serve G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 1 Heat oil in a small frying pan over medium heat. Add sopressa and cook, stirring, until golden and crisp (4 minutes). Remove from heat then add fennel seeds and vinegar; season to taste and stir to combine. Set aside to cool. 2 Arrange tomatoes, radicchio and basil on a platter. Top with olives, artichokes and mozzarella, then spoon over sopressa dressing. Serve with focaccia. ON THE SIDE To make this salad more substantial, pair with seared tuna or char-grilled chicken.
Peri peri pork belly skewers with paprika potatoes SERVES 4-6 // PREP TIME 15 MINS // COOK 15 MINS (PLUS MARINATING, RESTING) 4 cloves garlic, crushed 240 gm roasted capsicum, chopped Finely grated rind and juice of 1 lemon 1 tsp chilli flakes 2 tsp each smoked paprika and caster sugar 2 tbsp red wine vinegar 60 ml (¼ cup) extra-virgin olive oil 1 kg pork belly, rind removed, cut into 2.5cm pieces 140 gm (½ cup) Greek yoghurt Baby cos leaves, pickled chillies and baby lemon balm, to serve PAPRIKA POTATOES ¼ tsp each chilli flakes and caster sugar 1 tsp each smoked paprika and smoked sea salt flakes (see note) 300 gm store-bought potato chips 1 To make peri peri sauce, combine garlic, capsicum, lemon rind and juice, chilli flakes, paprika, sugar and vinegar in a small food processor and process until smooth; season to taste. Place pork in a large bowl. Add half of the marinade, toss to combine and set aside for 30 minutes. 2 Preheat a lightly greased chargrill pan or barbecue to medium-high heat. Thread pork onto 12 metal skewers and brush with oil. Grill skewers, turning occasionally and basting with marinade, until lightly charred and cooked through (5-6 minutes); cover loosely and set aside to rest (5 minutes). 3 Meanwhile, to make potato seasoning, combine chilli flakes, sugar, paprika and smoked salt in a small bowl. Place potato chips in a large bowl, sprinkle with seasoning and toss to combine. 4 Transfer skewers to a platter and top with lemon balm. Serve with yoghurt, baby cos, pickled chillies and chips. Note Smoked sea salt flakes are available from select supermarkets. ➤ MIX IT UP This marinade works just as well with chicken or quail, says Kell Devitt from Devitt Wholesale Meats. If time permits, marinade the meat overnight. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 49
Everyday Blackberry swirl ice-cream with Cinzano apricots SERVES 4-6 // PREP TIME 15 MINS // COOK 15 MINS (PLUS FREEZING) 110 250 1 395 250 1 ¼ 600 6 80 90 gm (½ cup) caster sugar gm frozen blackberries tbsp lemon juice gm sweetened condensed milk gm mascarpone vanilla bean, split, seeds scraped, pod reserved tsp Himalayan pink salt flakes ml thickened cream firm apricots, halved, stone removed ml (1⁄3 cup) Cinzano Bianco gm (¼ cup) honey 1 Place a 2 litre-capacity loaf tin in freezer. Combine sugar, blackberries, and lemon juice in a small saucepan over high heat. Cook, stirring occasionally, until syrupy (10 minutes); transfer to a bowl and refrigerate until cold. 2 To make ice-cream, place condensed milk, mascarpone, vanilla seeds and salt in a large bowl and whisk to combine. 3 Place cream in the bowl of an electric mixer and whisk until stiff peaks. Fold mascarpone mixture into cream, then pour half of the mixture into chilled tin; add half of the blackberry mixture and swirl. Pour over remaining cream mixture followed by blackberry mixture and swirl. Freeze for 4 hours, or until frozen. 4 For apricots, heat a large non-stick frying pan over high heat. Add apricots, cut side down, and cook until golden and caramelised (2 minutes). Carefully remove apricots from pan, then add Cinzano, honey and reserved vanilla pod; bring to a simmer. Return apricots to pan, cut side up, and simmer until tender (2 minutes). Serve with ice-cream.  We use meat from Devitt Wholesale Meats and fresh seafood from Fishtales in the GT Test Kitchen and in all our photo shoots.
Taste The Wild Just like wine has terroir, the taste of the environment in the grape, so too every Australian Wild Prawn has merroir, the taste of the wild ocean and rugged, remote place of origin. Meet the hardworking people who catch your Australian Wild Prawns and discover the region and species right for your style of cooking. Scan to discover your species australianwildprawns.com.au You get more with Australian Wild Prawns
Hortopita Packed with bitter greens, herbs and salty cheese, this savoury Greek pie makes for the perfect light meal.
Masterclass I t’s an idyllic scene: people of all ages, small knives in hand, foraging for wild greens – “horta” – on rugged Greek cliffsides. The various deeply coloured leaves, bitter and delicious, are breezily thrown together with feta and herbs to fill crisp golden pastry. Just like its much-loved spinach-only relative spanakopita, this savoury pie is perfect shared warm from the oven or packed up for an alfresco picnic. Pastry substitute If you’re pressed for time, substitute the olive oil pastry for golden fillo. Brush the pastry layers with melted butter before layering into a round pie tin or rectangular baking dish; fill with greens then top with a few more layers of fillo. 1 5 4 RECIPE DOMINIC SMITH. PHOTOGRAPHY ALICIA TAYLOR. STYLING AMANDA CHEBATTE. Step by step 1 For olive oil pastry, process 400gm plain flour and a large pinch of salt in a food processor to combine to rough breadcrumbs; add egg and pulse until just combined. With motor running, gradually add 80ml extra-virgin olive oil and 100ml cold water and process until dough just comes together; turn onto a work surface and knead until smooth. Halve dough, wrap each piece in plastic wrap and refrigerate for 2 hours to rest. 2 Preheat oven to 200°C. Blanch 250gm mixed bitter greens (see tip) until tender (2 minutes). Drain, refresh, then squeeze out as much water as possible in a sieve. Wrap in a clean tea towel and squeeze out remaining water. Finely chop greens then transfer to a bowl along with 200gm crumbled feta, and 2 tbsp each finely chopped flat-leaf parsley and dill; refrigerate until required. 3 Meanwhile, heat 2 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil in a frying pan over high heat. Add 4 thinly sliced spring onions and 4 finely chopped garlic cloves; cook, stirring occasionally, until softened and starting to colour (5 minutes). Add to greens mixture and stir to combine. Season to taste and set aside to cool to room temperature. 4 To roll pastry, working quickly with one half of the dough (keep remainder refrigerated), roll on a lightly floured surface to a 33cm round. Transfer to an oiled baking tray, top evenly with greens mixture, leaving a 3cm border around the edge. Roll remaining pastry to a 33cm round. Brush around the edge of base pastry with egg wash, then top with second pastry round. 5 To seal edges, curl up sides, pinching edges to seal. Make a small incision in the top of the pie to allow steam to escape. Brush with egg wash, then bake until golden and cooked through (25-30 minutes). Serve with lemon wedges.  Ingredient tips We used a mixture of silverbeet, kale and English spinach; remove thick stems before blanching. This a great way to use up any leftover greens in your fridge. You can also use frozen spinach; simply defrost then squeeze to remove excess moisture. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 53
When passionate chefs and Aussie pig farmers come together, magic happens! Sharing skills, knowledge and passion, they bring joy to all things pork. They are PorkStars. Left to right Chef Ben Sinfield – Banh Xeo Bar, Anne-Maria & Frank Vigliante – Taluca Park Free Range, Chef Mike Eggert - Totti’s porkstar.com.au
Anatomy of a dish Fattoush THE ALLIUMS AND HERBS Thinly sliced spring onions, which offer a grassy heat, add a little oomph alongside freshly crushed garlic. A generous handful of herbs – specifically mint and parsley – is also required, while a sprinkle of tangy sumac gives the dish its Mediterranean flavour. A virtuous mix of crunchy vegetables and toasted pita, this Mediterranean salad sings of summer. WORDS GEORGIE MEREDITH. PHOTOGRAPHY JOHN PAUL URIZAR. STYLING AMANDA CHEBATTE. O ne of Jerusalem’s most heroed plates, fattoush, sits on a throne above all other salads, and rightfully so. A fragrant jumble of crisp vegetables, golden pita and a flourish of sumac, all drizzled with lemon and olive oil, it’s an ode to the Mediterranean and the region’s long, hot summers. Deriving from the traditional Egyptian and Levantine fatteh (pita, topped with basically anything you like), this dish is almost as common in Jerusalem as hummus. In his cookbook, Jerusalem, chef and author Yotam Ottolenghi says: “Wherever you go in the city, at any time of the day, a Jerusalemite is most likely to have a plate of chopped vegetables – tomato, cucumber and onion, dressed in olive and lemon juice – served next to whatever else they are having.” Different variations feature tweaks in ingredients, but here we deep-dive into an original. Find one Pomegranate and purslane make an appearance in the fattoush at Sydney’s Nour restaurant, while pumpkin and chickpeas are the star of the show at Melbourne’s Rumi. THE VEGETABLES The summery mix of vegetables that make up this salad work together in harmony; cool, crunchy cucumbers are complemented by sweet tomatoes and spicy radishes, all of which are chopped into chunky pieces. Lettuce is optional, but if you do decide to use it, gem or cos are the way to go. THE DRESSING Lemon and good-quality olive oil are the staples here, but a little cider or vinegar for tang doesn’t go astray either. Some recipes have their own variations, like Ottolenghi’s, which calls for yoghurt and milk to make a creamy dressing. THE BREAD Golden shards of grilled or fried leftover pita are the textural element that make this salad so special. Add at the last minute for a crunchier result, or mix through the vegetables before dressing for softer, chewier fragments. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 55
56 OIL AND VINEGAR TINNED FISH SNACKS Whether you’re cooking with it or simply drizzling over a plentiful salad or classic hummus, a quality bottle of olive oil is an absolute necessity. Choose from grassy and fruity, or pungent and peppery drops, depending on your palate. Vinegar, such as balsamic, is another Mediterranean pantry essential, used to add zing to dressings or to flavour marinades. In Spain and Portugal, tinned fish is a way of life. You can find anchovies and sardines, as well as clams and octopus, on pintxos bar and restaurant menus alike. These shelf-stored treats are perfect for impressing impromptu guests; simply peel back the tin and serve with fresh, crusty bread (and a glass of chilled wine). Pulling together a Mediterranean mezze platter? In addition to cheese and salumi, you will need a selection of crisp, carby vessels. These patatas fritas, or potato chips, are a heavenly scoop for taramasalata. While taralli (breadstick-like biscuits hailing from southern Italy) are excellent paired with tapenade or tzatziki. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R WORDS GEORGIE MEREDITH. PHOTOGRAPHY ALANA LANDSBERRY. STYLING HANNAH BLACKMORE. MEDITERRANEAN PA N T RY
From Spain and Italy, to Morocco and Turkey, the Med encompasses 21 different countries, each of which meets the sapphire blue coastline of the famous sea. Here, we hero a few essential ingredients from across the region. Find these products at: The Culinary Club, Continental Taralli Biscuits, Pariya, Ocello, Simon Johnson, The Essential Ingredient. PICKLED VEG GRAINS SPICES Pickled and marinated vegetables, such as artichokes, olives, capers and turnips, are an easy way to boost flavour. Try throwing in some Kalamata olives with pan-fried fish, or stirring a handful of capers through a tomato-based pasta sauce. They bring extra salt, tang and texture when tossed through salads. Grains are more than just an add-on in Mediterranean cooking, they’re the star of the show. Bomba rice, the hero ingredient of Spain’s national dish, paella, is a prime example. Orzo and barley are the perfect addition to soups, while farro and couscous make great bases for hearty salads. Any good dish needs an element of spice, and in the Med, they’ve got almost every kind covered. Our favourites are smoked paprika, which can be used as a seasoning for patatas bravas; and sumac – your go-to when flavouring a fresh and crunchy fattoush salad (see p55). Of course, sea salt flakes play a key role, too. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 57
Eastern rock lobster p 60 THE LIFE AQUATIC We ask the experts to give us a crash course in all things crustacean this summer, including the most common varieties found in Australian waters and what to look for when you hit the fish markets. Words JORDAN KRETCHMER Photography JOHN PAUL URIZAR Styling AMANDA CHEBATTE MEET THE EXPERTS ROCK LOBSTERS John Susman Seafood expert, author and owner of Fishtales 58 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R Anthony Yotis and Laura Di Florio Yotis Owners of The Fishmonger’s Son, Melbourne When buying lobster, make sure it has all its feelers and legs intact, and make sure it’s not blowing bubbles. “When the fishmonger picks it out of the tanks, it should be lively and its tail springy,” says John Susman. Put it under ice once you get it, which will put it to sleep before you dispatch it, and results in softer, juicier meat. You can also buy good quality cooked rock lobster. “Just make sure it smells fresh and sweet, with no notes of ammonia,” says Susman. When you’re buying a lobster, you also want to get the most out of it. “It’s not just about the meat. Use the shells wisely to make a stock, sauce or bisque… Also spend a bit of time picking the meat out of the legs, because that’s delicious.”
Blue swimmer crab p 61 CRABS Balmain bug p 62 BUGS Slipper or bay lobsters – which we colloquially call bugs – are a by-product of the prawn trawling fisheries. “Currently, there’s a shortage of bugs,” says Susman. “You see a lot of this species out of Indonesia and the Philippines, and it’s hard to pick where they are from, so always ask the question of the fishmonger.” Closely related to rock lobster, these guys don’t survive well out of water and are mostly available cooked or frozen. Crabs are mostly caught in pots commercially, and are sustainably harvested and managed, with minimal impact on the environment and no bycatch. With all crabs, the shells should be vibrant in colour and have a fresh sea aroma. Like all crustacea, as they grow they drop their shell, and the soft-shell process begins. At the moment all soft-shell crab comes from Southeast Asia, mostly out of fisheries that have questionable sustainability credentials. Generally they are quite small and are juveniles removed from the biomass. Instead, opt for locally caught crabs where possible. When refreshing a frozen lobster or crab, mix a brine – 30 to 50 grams of salt per litre – then add ice to make a brine slurry. Add the crustaceans and leave for 10 to 15 minutes. “Because it’s salty, and the animal is salty, there will be no osmotic transfer. People say to put it in the fridge overnight, but that can promote oxidation. With a really cold, salty solution, that will protect the animal from the salt coming out of it, or the fresh water going into it,” explains Susman. ➤ G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 59
SOUTHERN ROCK LOBSTER You will often see these in the tanks of Chinatown restaurants. “Like the eastern rock lobster, it’s beautiful to cook because of its fat content... and has a really good, crisp texture.” Like any lobster, it should be cooked in generously salted water. “The measurement I use is 30 grams of salt per litre of water,” says Susman. 60 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R EASTERN ROCK LOBSTER WESTERN ROCK LOBSTER TROPICAL ROCK LOBSTER Found along the New South Wales, Tasmanian and South Australian coast lines, this rock lobster hides in holes and crevices around reefs. It is rarely exported and tends to have a firmer texture than other lobsters. “It has a really deep flavour profile – lobster is characterised by being rich and sweet, and the eastern rock lobster has mouth-filling notes of umami,” says Susman. “It’s beautiful to cook because of its fat content. Often called crays by Western Australians, this rock lobster is only found along the Western Australian coast, and is caught in baited pots. Until two years ago, almost all of the harvest went to China. “It’s a fast-growing species and has a natural sweetness to it. It can overcook quite quickly, but a lot also come to market ready-cooked,” says Susman. “On the east coast we haven’t always seen a lot live, but now they are becoming more prevalent.” Marked by its peacock-like spots, this rock lobster is typically hand-harvested, traditionally by Indigenous fishermen in the Torres Strait, and is also found in Far North Queensland and northern Western Australia. “It tends to be great for sashimi, because it has those high sweet notes,” says Susman. Being from warmer waters, it has a lower fat content than other lobsters, making it more challenging to cook.
SPANNER CRAB “You can buy these live and New South Wales has had quite a good season, and spanners are readily available,” says Susman. You can also seek out good frozen raw meat, ideal for pasta or risotto. While cooked spanner crab meat is perfect for cold entrées or salads. “It has shellfish-like flavour, and is by far the best crab meat,” adds Laura Di Florio Yotis. MUD CRAB “The price of mud crabs has gone up recently because the quota of mud crabs has been reduced significantly in Queensland, which is the principal region of production for muddies,” says Susman. They are feisty critters and should be stored covered in a damp cloth. BLUE SWIMMER CRAB These crabs are harvested live, but die quickly once they are out of the water. “Frozen is a really good way to buy blue swimmers,” says Susman. Fisheries plan their harvest around catching and preserving the integrity by freezing. The process occurs at around -60°, capturing the quality of the crab at the time. A domestic freezer at home is around -4° to -8°, and therefore shouldn’t be used to store crab for prolonged periods. If you want to serve cold blue swimmer crab, such as in a salad or canapé, buy it precooked. ➤ G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 61
MORETON BAY BUG BALMAIN BUG Spending most of its life in sandy and muddy seabeds, Moreton Bay bugs are generally more consistent in their flavour. “They tend to be more lobsterlike,” says Susman. To seek out locally caught bugs, try Australian Bay Lobster Producers, which is a small facility dedicated to sustainable land-based aquaculture. Gaining the colloquial name as a nod to the Sydney waterfront suburb of Balmain, these guys tend to spend most of their lives in the seagrasses. “They can be incredibly sweet, through to smelling of garlic weed,” says Susman. “The less you do to these things, the better, so you can really get to understand the flavour profile of them,” says Anthony Yotis. Moreton Bay bug Balmain bug Moreton Bay bugs have narrower bodies and wider set eyes, while Balmain bugs have extra segmentation on their upper body. 62 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
SCAMPI YABBY (NOT PICTURED) MARRON These delicate crustaceans are found in deep cold waters off New Zealand and Western Australia and are available frozen. “These things oxidise very quickly. Because they come from very deep water, when they are exposed to oxygen, the meat disintegrates quickly,” says Susman. When buying, they should be consumed or cooked soon after purchase, and never refrozen. “Generally they have a milder and more delicate flavour than bugs and lobster, as they feed on other crustaceans and small fish,” says Laura. These guys are sustainable, farmed and can be found in freshwater dams, but are often hard to find commercially. “They take on the qualities of the water they live in, and so you have to purge them,” says Laura. “They burrow into banks, resulting in a bit more of an earthy taste.” It’s best to buy these guys live, or better yet go yabby pulling. Yabbies can also last up to a week out of the water. “They can crawl around so be careful to store them accordingly,” adds Laura. “Marron has a beautiful flavour and texture,” says Anthony. More delicate than yabbies, they are the largest of the different types of freshwater crays and are sustainably farmed in South Australia and Western Australia. These rare creatures are hard to come by in markets, and are best bought live. “If someone’s really hankering for a marron, my advice is for them to contact their favourite restaurant and ask them for their fishmonger’s details because they are rarely found in retail settings,” says Susman.  G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 63
APPOINTMENT EATING To ensure you have a flavourpacked 2022, LEE TRAN LAM rounds up 22 of the most intriguing new dining experiences to mark in your diary. 64 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
1 Nagesh Seethiah cooks scallops in ghee over charcoal and serves them with fermented green mango at Manzé, Melbourne’s first Mauritian wine bar. His menu reflects the island’s Asian, French and African influences. Enjoy prawn samosas, lamb with masala and vegan vindaye with Mauritian beer, spiced rum or something great from Moira Tithra’s wine list, which showcases underrepresented producers. manze.com.au 2 PHOTOGRAPHY TRENT VAN DER JAGT (CASA MERIDA) & PARKER BLAIN (GREENHOUSE). Sommelier Bridget Raffal cofounded Women and Revolution to promote female winemakers. Plot a trip and visit one of her recommended producers: Irina Santiago-Brown (Inkwell Wines, McLaren Vale, South Australia), who creates bright, minimalintervention drops; Shashi Singh (Avani, Mornington Peninsula, Victoria), who “makes beautiful shiraz”; Charlotte Hardy (Charlotte Dalton, Port Elliot, South Australia), “her barrel-fermented semillon is a particular favourite of mine”; or Tessa Brown (Vignerons Schmölzer & Brown, Beechworth, Victoria), who runs the winery with Jeremy Schmölzer – “they are producing some of Australia’s best riesling.” womenandrevolution.com.au From far left: Arkhé’s bar seating; a Yucatán spread at Casa Merida; snacks at Arkhé; Future Food System in Melbourne. 4 3 3 At Arkhé in Adelaide, Jake Kellie’s menu is fire-focused: even the sorbet is made from grilled strawberries. It’s served tableside with fizzy elderflower kombucha and elderflower cultured cream. The dessert is inspired by the wild flowers Kellie would see in the Adelaide Hills. arkhe.com.au 4 Chefs Jo Barrett and Matt Stone have left Future Food System to join Byron Bay’s Harvest team, but Joost Bakker’s ambitious Melbourne house (which generates its own food) is still open. Tour the mushroom wall, rooftop garden and other sustainable features. There are planned chef collaborations, too. futurefoodsystem.com ➤
5 7 6 8 With dishes such as emu tartare with anise myrtle and burnt barbed-wire grass panna cotta with native raspberry, Three Little Birds chef Chris Jordan tells stories of his Indigenous culture via pop-up events. Catch him at Brisbane’s Gallery of Modern Art or Home of the Arts in Surfers Paradise. 3littlebirdsevents.com At Sydney’s new Paski Vineria Popolare, chef Enrico Tomelleri serves variations on tortellini (in brodo, alla panna) and other Italian classics (trofie with pesto). Giorgio De Maria and Mattia Dicati offer drinks by unique producers, such as unconventional wine from a monastery north of Rome, or vermouth by an Italian chemist who studied old archived recipes. paski.com.au At Aura’s Hobart rooftop, Joey Astorga highlights local ingredients and the power of flavours developing with age: there’s bottlebrush sorbet, created from fermented flowers and strawberry vinegar; and potato bread served with macadamia cream and chickpea miso. aurahobart.com.au Don’t dismiss The Rocks as a Sydney tourist trap: Placemaking NSW’s creative director Joanna Savill is revitalising the area with new venues. There’s the 101 George St pop-up from the Swillhouse team, and Frank Mac’s – a gin joint with more than 100 juniper blends worth toasting. therocks.com Hickson Distillery in the Rocks. Below right: from left, Mattia Dicati, Giorgio De Maria and Enrico Tomelleri of Paski Vineria Popolare. The tea selection features ma lao mit from elevated Chinese forests so hard to access, legend has it that monkeys were taught to gather the tea leaves. 8 66 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R PHOTOGRAPHY NIKKI TO (PASKI). 6
9 Maurice Terzini and Joseph Vargetto’s new Cucina Povera restaurant in Melbourne captures the resourceful way Italian-Australian immigrants would turn garages into second kitchens, where preserves, sauces, wines and sausages were produced. It follows on from Terzini’s recently launched Belongil Beach Italian Food in Byron Bay, which also celebrates his European roots. 13 Clockwise from left: premium tea and Cantonese dishes; and bold interiors at Uncle Su restaurant on the Gold Coast; a sustainable cocktail at Re Bar. 10 10 Perth’s Ethos Deli + Dining Room is undergoing changes: the current space will become a wine room featuring no-waste cocktails (made from apple-core brandy and banana-skin liqueur), while Melissa Palinkas and Susan Whelan open a new deli location. Sydney’s Re Bar expands its sustainable playbook with its Never Wasted menu, turning Gelato Messina’s pandan pulp, Artificer’s coffee chaff and leftovers from other venues into inventive cocktails. ethosdeli.com.au; wearere.com.au 11 At Melbourne’s Mamé Cocoa, Santiago Cuyugan presents Japanese-style nama chocolate with yuzu, black sesame and sake flavours. “I would love to make a Filipino line-up to tap into my heritage,” he says. His dream? Mamé Cocoa sweets infused with ube, kalamansi or dark chocolate grown in the Philippines. mamecocoa.com 12 OzHarvest is bringing Massimo Bottura’s Refettorio concept to Sydney. Chef Jez Wick will turn rescued and donated food into menu magic: think smoked mushroom and shallot croquettes with burnt onion cream, or bread and butter caramels with pecans and burnt butter waffles. The eatery will also offer free meals to people facing food insecurity. ozharvest.org 13 The Star’s Uncle Su restaurant on the Gold Coast offers premium tea served the traditional ceremonial way. Executive chef Song Yao Su’s selection features aged Pu’er from Yunnan, a green tea with 1200-year-old heritage, and ma lao mit from elevated Chinese forests so hard to access, legend has it that monkeys were taught to gather the tea leaves. star.com.au/goldcoast ➤ G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 67
14 At Arimia in Western Australia’s Margaret River region, chef Evan Hayter uses soaked leaves from the estate’s “peppy” trees to fuel a fire pit and cover kangaroo as it’s cooked. This Indigenous practice finishes meat evenly and gives it a peppermint flavour. “Our latest use for these leaves is for producing our own version of katsuobushi using green lip abalone and crayfish,” he says. He shaves it over crayfish cappelletti, like the bonito flakes they’re meant to imitate. arimia.com.au 15 At Sydney’s Ante bar, Matt Young will pour good drops from his Black Market Sake stock, “including the last remaining bottles of some seriously amazing sake that I’ve hoarded for this exact reason,” he says. Like hard-to-get Yorokobi Gaijin sake, which Young has aged for seven years. The menu, by award-winning chef Jemma Whiteman, travels beyond Japan’s borders. ante.bar 16 At Tres a Cinco and Grainshaker’s pop-up bar in Melbourne, you’ll find drinks by award-winning bartender Jenna Hemworth (like her take on an Agua de Valencia) and food by Sarai Castilla. The chef’s menu leans on her Mexican background, but has local twists, like the aguachile that stars Australian kingfish instead of the typical prawns. tresacinco.com.au 17 After years of foraging, chef Kane Pollard realised Australia’s climate wasn’t defined by summer, autumn, winter and spring. With Indigenous entrepreneur Daniel Motlop, who named his distillery after the Larrakia belief in seven seasons, the duo will showcase wild meats, native yams and other foraged ingredients, paired with Motlop’s native spirits, at Adelaide’s Tasting Australia festival. tastingaustralia.com.au 18 FYI for fans of Perth’s Si Paradiso: Sunnyboy is the team’s new seafood-celebrating venue. The menu is by Paul Bentley, the location is by the coast and the opening is due in April. 68 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R Clockwise from from above: a new cocktail and refreshed menu and interiors at Sokyo. 19
21 PHOTOGRAPHY ASHLEY LUDKIN (SMITH & DAUGHTERS) & TRENT VAN DER JAGT (CASA MERIDA & SANTA CATARINA). 19 The interiors of The Star Sydney’s Sokyo have been refreshed, and so has the menu. Chase Kojima presents a designer version of a baked potato – prepared with a bacon-infused crème fraÎche, chive oil, diced ponzu jelly and Ibérico ham. He also pays tribute to his heritage with tuna tartare and crispy rice. “I like to plate this dish to reflect the colours and look of the Japanese flag,” he says. star.com.au/sydney 20 At Shannon Martinez’s new Smith & Daughters and Smith & Deli complex, explore the expectationdefying vegan food she’s known for, including a plant-based mortadella that’s taken two years to nail, inspired by the Chinese noodle-making method of kneading dough under water. smithanddaughters.com 22 Ingredients thrive at Margaret River’s Glenarty Road: native plum pines, Red Centre limes, Queen Anne peaches and ice-cream beans are all grown here. Chef Jess Widmer also makes good use of its 120 macadamia trees, transforming the nuts into purées and desserts. Visitors can enjoy them, cracked fresh, on tours. glenartyroad.com.au  21 Sydney’s Milpa Collective is mapping Mexican cuisine via its eateries, from Sonora (representing the country’s north-west) and beyond. Recently, it’s opened venues that zero in on specific regions: Casa Merida covers Yucatán, Santa Catarina has a Oaxacan outlook, and Londres 126 is dedicated to Mexico City. milpa-collective.com.au From top: a Yucatán spread at Casa Merida; a pisco, blackberry and lime cocktail at Santa Catarina; char-grilled brussels sprouts at Smith & Daughters. 20 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 69
TAKE one FIG Lemons and olive oil, bitter wild greens and sweet figs – Greece’s vegetable-forward cooking tradition is finding a new audience in Australia, writes NADIA BAILEY. W hen Fofi Gourlas was a teenager, her parents gave her a nickname: hortofaga, or “weedeater”. It was a gently jibing, affectionate term. In Greek, the word refers to the idea of a certain bovine-slowness at the dinner table, as well as a love of eating greens. Growing up in suburban Sydney in the 1970s, Gourlas has happy memories of weekend expeditions to the Blue Mountains to forage for wild dandelions with her mother. Less pleasant are the memories of her classmates’ horrified reactions when they clocked what was in her lunchbox – which was invariably fragrant with the typical Greek flavours of garlic, oregano and parsley. “As soon as I unwrapped it, it just reeked,” she says. “I always felt really embarrassed.” She soon convinced her mother to pack her a more socially acceptable lunch: Vegemite sandwiches, made with white bread. But within the Greek community, things were different. When her parents arrived in Australia in the late 1950s, they brought their food traditions with them – a diet rich in vegetables, in legumes, in the dark leafy greens that Gourlas loved so much. Fish was eaten once or twice a week, red meat more rarely. Every Saturday, she would go with her father to the markets and come home with vegetables by the box: artichokes, green beans, tomatoes. Her mother would make prasorizo – a risotto-like dish sweet with caramelised leeks and aromatic with dill and parsley – hulking pastitsio and pies filled with salty feta and foraged greens. When Gourlas went vegetarian at 16, her mother’s cooking barely had to change. It is this home-style, vegetable-forward way of cooking that Gourlas has captured in her book Artichokes and Village Greens; a style that will be familiar to anyone who has grown up in the Greek diaspora. “It’s the typical Mediterranean way,” says Gourlas. “In Greece, the focus is on eating a mainly plant-based diet.” Not that this would be necessarily apparent from what you tend to find on offer at Greek restaurants in Australia, 70 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
PHOTOGRAPHY ALAN BENSON (ARTICHOKES AND VILLAGE GREENS, CRU AGENCY, $34.99) & LEAN TIMMS (IKARIA). where the grill reigns supreme; with souvlaki, gyros and lamb shoulder at the centre of menus. In the Australian consciousness, Greek cuisine has become synonymous with the meat platter. How did this happen? Gourlas attributes it to the fact that meat was something of a luxury in post-war Greece. “When Greek migrants came to Australia, back around the time when my parents did, that generation felt deprived following the war and the depression in Greece,” she explains. Plant-based cooking was associated with poverty back home, and in the new country, meat was cheap and plentiful. The desire to both assimilate and adapt to Australian tastes meant that eating habits changed both in the homes and restaurants of Greek migrants. This kind of evolution makes sense. But it also meant the diaspora dining scene sometimes failed to represent the depth and variety of the cuisine, offering up a version that was much more skewed towards a carnivorous diet than it ever was in Greece. In fact, eschewing animal products is baked into the country’s history. In the Greek Orthodox tradition, the Lenten fasting cycle forbids the consumption of meat, milk products, cheese, eggs and fish across almost six months of the year. “During fast days, it’s essentially a vegan diet,” explains Gourlas. This means that even though you’re fasting, you’re still eating well. Lunch on a fast day might involve tomatoes stuffed with rice, vegetables and fresh herbs rather than the traditional Athenian mincemeat, plates of horta brightened ➤ In the Australian consciousness, Greek cuisine has become synonymous with the meat platter. How did this happen? Fofi Gourlas Clockwise from left: Fofi Gourlas, author of Artichokes and Village Greens; spanakopita; cheese tart with rocket, fig, blue cheese and date salad. Opposite: the fishing village of Armenistis in Ikaria. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 71
Australia’s climate is well suited to producing the building blocks of Mediterranean cooking, and ingredients are abundantly available. 72 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R PHOTOGRAPHY LEAN TIMMS (IKARIA: FOOD AND LIFE IN THE BLUE ZONE, HARDIE GRANT, $45) . Meni Valle with lemon juice, bite-sized dolmades and soufico, a symphony of vegetables baked generously in olive oil; and all this accompanied by a glass of red wine. Like Gourlas, author and food educator Meni Valle grew up observing Lenten fasts – in her family, this meant that every Wednesday and Friday they went without meat and other animal products. “I didn’t think of it as a religious thing,” she says. “I just thought this was the way we ate.” Valle sees the traditional Greek diet as not only economical, but also particularly holistic. “There’s a whole category of plant-based Greek cooking called lathera,” she explains. “Lathi is the Greek word for oil, so lathera are dishes cooked in oil.” The vegetables are rich in fibre and antioxidants, while the olive oil imparts healthy fats and allows the body to absorb fat-soluble nutrients. “In summer, you’d make lathera with things like green beans, zucchini, tomato; in winter, you might use cauliflower and okra; and in spring, artichokes, broad beans and peas. And lots of olive oil – you don’t put a teaspoon or a tablespoon, you’re going to put a good glug of it in there,” she says. “Do not be scared of olive oil.” Though her family hails from Northern Greece, Valle’s interest in the Greek plant-based tradition was sparked when she visited Ikaria. The North Aegean island is one of the world’s fabled Blue Zones, a term conceived by researchers Michel Poulain and Gianni Pes to describe specific areas where people tend to live exceptionally long lives and have significantly lower rates of chronic disease. Along with Sardinia in Italy, Okinawa in Japan, Loma Linda in California and Costa Rica’s isolated Nicoya Peninsula, Ikaria is a region where the locals have maintained a lifestyle that combines a vegetable-led diet, gentle daily activity and a robust sense of community. Though the Ikarian diet isn’t wholly vegetarian, Valle notes that when meat or fish is eaten, it’s usually as a side to a vegetable dish rather than the main meal. “You would have meat maybe once or twice a week,” says Valle. “A bit of fish, a bit of chicken.”
Clockwise from far left: kolokithai pita (zucchini pie); a seaside house on the way to Nas; alfresco taverna dining at the port of Evdilos. Opposite, clockwise from top left: Ikaria cookbook author, Meni Valle; fried barbounia (red mullet); the fishing village of Gialiskari. Unlike mainland cooking, which is richer and heavier, Ikarian food tends to be lean and pared down, with an emphasis on vegetable and bean dishes, pickles, olive oil and herbs. Valle’s book, Ikaria: Food and Life in the Blue Zone, captures the simplicity and beauty of the region’s cooking, spanning familiar beats like moussaka and yemista through to lesser known dishes like kolokithopita (a Greek pumpkin pie with filo pastry) and volvoi toursi (pickled hyacinth bulbs). The beautiful thing about this way of eating is that it requires a small list of ingredients and only simple cooking techniques to put together a meal. A plate of vegetables baked in olive oil. Earthy beans flecked with herbs. Crisp fritters served with tzatziki. Bread, salty cheese, wine. In Australia, our climate is well suited to producing the building blocks of Mediterranean cooking, and its raw ingredients – from garden to grove to field – are abundantly available. At a time when Australian tastes are evolving alongside a consciousness of the environmental impacts of meat consumption, Gourlas and Valle’s books both lay out paths that show how eating responsibly and eating well are perfectly compatible. As for Gourlas, it’s been a long time since she’s been teased for her eating habits. “I went to a park with a friend and we cut wild dandelions, and had them for dinner,” she laughs. “Now lots of friends ask me to take them foraging.” ● G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 73
Interviews GEORGIE MEREDITH 74 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R GUY GROSSI, Grossi Florentino, Vic For me, there are two standouts that I just can’t wait to visit. The first is Dario Cecchini – the butcher of Panzano in Chianti, Tuscany. His food doesn’t just speak of heritage, region and tradition, it shouts it from the rooftops. Dario has a number of spots that show off the amazing bounty from the local Chianina cattle; one is his family’s macelleria, where you can enjoy meatballs made from lean meat, served rare and skewered with local rosemary. The other is the restaurant Officina, where you can have a quintessential bistecca alla Fiorentina experience, which involves a perfectly grilled T-bone weighing more than a kilo. The second destination has to be Uliassi, Mauro Uliassi’s amazing beachside dining room in Senigallia. It is a true temple of gastronomy that flexes the bounty of the sea, teamed with a contemporary take on local Italian. Dishes like his pasta with octopus, lard and rosemary always stand out, as do of course the new creations. The whole experience puts you at ease, whether you’re eating on the patio where you can literally touch the sand and smell the ocean, or inside the elegant dining room. This is an experience you won’t forget. PHOTOGRAPHY CHRIS MINERVA/GETTY IMAGES (TUSCANY). BACK ON THE MENU Dream no longer – overseas dining is back on the cards. Here are the spots chefs and restaurateurs are yearning to revisit, from Italian seaside trattorias to road-side snacks in Vietnam.
Clockwise from above: cooking over fire at Asador Etxebarri in Spain; a quiet Tokyo laneway; outside Asador Etxebarri. Opposite: a village in Tuscany. JORDAN TOFT, Mimi’s, NSW Asador Etxebarri is probably one of my favourite restaurants out there. It’s off the beaten track, outside of San Sebastián and Bilbao, in a beautiful farming and mountain region about 40 minutes away from the coast. It started out as a little asador in the middle of town where the locals would go and drink cider and have tapas and pintxos. And now it’s grown over the last two decades. When I went in 2008 it was low-key, all wooden tables, but they were still serving white truffle and purple congo potatoes. They’re really famous for simple food, particularly their aged cattle that they select, age and cook over wood and charcoal. I’ve been back a few times since. It’s where I found inspiration for that style of cooking – over fire, simply done, produce as king and equally pared back. PHOTOGRAPHY OSCAR OLIVA POZA (ASADOR ETXEBARRI EXTERIOR), MARIANO HERRERA (ASADOR ETXEBARRI DISH), CON POULOS (TOFT), NIKKI TO (MEAD) & ALEXANDER WESTERMANN/GETTY IMAGES (TOKYO). RHIANN MEAD, Bennelong, NSW “It’s off the beaten track, outside of San Sebastián and Bilbao, in a beautiful farming and mountain region about 40 minutes away from the coast.” I can’t wait to visit Sansan in Tokyo again. It’s a small izakaya hidden away on a quiet street just a few minutes walk from Shibuya station. It’s the kind of place a tourist could easily pass by without noticing, but when I first visited I was lucky enough to be with a friend who lived locally. The owners come from Fukui, and their aim is to showcase dishes that represent the incredible produce from the area. The sake is also strictly from the Fukui prefecture and one of the best examples of sakes I’ve ever had in my life. When we went, we shared dozens of small plates – fresh and tempura vegetables, soba noodles, corn soup, sashimi, boiled octopus, shellfish and grilled meats. The sashimi was absolutely a highlight, it was incredibly fresh and tasted like tangerine. I asked if the chef had used citrus to season the sashimi, and my friend translated a beautiful story from the owner, who explained that the fish was sourced from Tsuruga Bay where they feed off the fruit that falls from the tangerine trees growing on the shoreline. The flavour that came through was incredible. ➤ G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 75
BIANCA MARCHI, Same Same, Qld JORDAN THEODOROS, ex-Peel St, SA It’s not so much a specific overseas restaurant that I am looking forward to revisiting or trying out for the first time, but more about going back to places where I have fabulous food memories. I lived and worked in Myanmar in the late ’90s and still reminisce about the time we holidayed on the east coast – we ate the most perfectly grilled whole grouper with hand-cut chips while drinking long necks of ice-cold Mandalay beer in a shanty makeshift restaurant on Ngapali Beach. All for less than $3 per head! I would love to get back to Thailand and Indonesia and feast on street food from sunrise until late at night. Be it risking a raw pork larb laced with scuds and sawtooth coriander in Chiang Mai, a som tum on the run in Bangkok, or the rich and diverse array of Padang food in the backstreets of Bali and Lombok. 76 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R ANGELA SCLAVOS, Essa, Qld With borders reopening and travel back on the cards, London is on the top of my list. It’s a place I have always wanted to visit. Among the many amazing restaurants on offer, the one that has me most excited is Sessions Arts Club in Clerkenwell. I love the allure of entering through the hidden red door covered in foliage, and riding the elevator up to the fourth floor to be transported to another world. It combines my love of art and food in a casual yet elevated way. Everything on the menu by Florence Knight sounds incredible, especially the crab croquettes and the sea bream. Clockwise from left: sunrise on the water in Indonesia; the Piazza del Duomo in Milan; pork belly, fennel and orange; and the interiors at Sessions Arts Club. PHOTOGRAPHY STEVE TURVEY (BOAT), ROSS HELEN/GETTY IMAGES (MILAN) & PHNX AGENCY (SCLAVOS). I was born in Milan and grew up there, so I’m dying to go back to an old favourite: Trattoria Milanese. It’s one of the most famous traditional trattoria from that area. It reminds me of home – I grew up eating there, every birthday celebration was there, I just love it. I took my partner Ty there about seven years ago and it was just such a special experience for the both of us. The most famous dish on the menu is cotoletta Milanese, it’s like an Italian schnitzel. I also can’t wait to go back to a bakery called Sissi. It’s this tiny little coffee shop that makes all its pastries in-house. They’re famous for their brioche, which is made fresh and filled to order, so you can get fresh cream or chocolate. It’s pretty incredible. I haven’t been back for three years so I really hope we can.
SAM YOUNG, private chef, NSW I left Hong Kong 20 years ago when I was 13 years old, so it’s kind of become a holiday destination for me now. I always look forward to going back. I love that you can have really cheap street food or snacks, but you can also look forward to three-Michelin-starred restaurants. When I go back, I always eat a bowl of wonton mee – the way they make the noodles in Hong Kong, and the produce over there, is always really excellent. The other dish that I always eat is roast goose, specifically from this restaurant called Yat Lok. Eating goose in Australia isn’t huge but it’s big in Hong Kong culture, and a proper barbecue shop is hard to find in Sydney. London’s Big Ben. Above: outdoor dining in Hong Kong. Right: a colourful building in Vietnam. PHOTOGRAPHY CHRISTOPHER WISE (HONG KONG), SYLVAIN SONNET/GETTY IMAGES (LONDON) & JESSE HUNNIFORD (YATES). JAMIE YATES, Pigeon Whole Bakers, Tas COSKUN UYSAL, Tulum, Vic I’d love to go back to London, an all time favourite of mine. There’s a new Turkish restaurant that’s just opened there called Zahter. Esra Muslu is the owner and chef – she has a great reputation for her inventive cooking with fresh vegetables in olive oil. I love her zucchini flowers stuffed with spiced rice and cooked in an olive-oil broth. My other destination would be Kadeau in Copenhagen; it was the sheer warmth of the welcome I received a couple of years ago that has stuck with me. In an open kitchen, chefs and staff took such care to explain the dishes they served to guests, and one sensational dessert in particular lives in my memory: a smoked yoghurt ice-cream with burnt butter and roasted quince. I’m craving those side of the road, tent-type family eateries in Vietnam. When I was there, I never really knew what I was going to get. I’d just walk up, hold up one finger to imply one order (because I couldn’t speak Vietnamese, clearly) and they’d bring it over. Those soul-filled, nurturing meals like co‚m gà, bún bò huê÷ or any phò‚. Riding your scooter along a deserted road and pulling over at someone’s home to slurp down a bowl – it’s quaint, it’s real and it’s incredibly personal. In that moment the food is everything. You’re hot and sticky, just like the food. Viet cuisine is so fresh and moreish, I’m never sick of it.  G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 77
AFTERNOON DELIGHT Styling LAUREN DE SOUSA Photography ALANA LANDSBERRY 78 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
Is there anything better than a summer afternoon spent reading? Yes: a summer afternoon spent reading – with a drink in hand. HANNAH-ROSE YEE curates the best books for hot afternoons. A thing I will never tire of talking about, or writing about, or shouting at someone at the pub over a plate of chips and an ice-cold beer about, is a summer read. Hot days and a big, chunky tome to crack open and swim around in go together perfectly for me. Like Elizabeth and Mr Darcy in Pride and Prejudice (a great summer read). Like Inspector Adam Dalgliesh and crime solving in any of PD James’s murder mysteries (fantastic summer reads). Like Tina Brown and gossiping about the royals in The Diana Chronicles – which might just be the best summer read of them all, if you care about the royal family, or insider newspaper tidbits, or even the broader landscape of celebrity culture in the ’80s and ’90s, which, naturally, I very much do. I love reading and I love a good book. But I love reading a good book even more when the weather is warm, the days are long and I have nothing but time to marinate in both. It’s the kind of indulgence that summer is made for: achievable, yet deeply satisfying. So go on – indulge. ➤ G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 79
NON F IC TION TASTE: MY LIFE THROUGH FOOD STANLEY TUCCI (FIG TREE, $45) Moreish and gin-soaked and gossipy – like the very best long summer lunch – Stanley Tucci’s memoir Taste is an absolute delight. First of all, the man can write. More importantly, he can cook. Within these pages you’ll find recipes for pasta alla Norma, slow-cooked ragù and the perfect martini, as well as stories to accompany them regaled with vim and vigour. Tucci generously includes his wedding menu in the book, too, a delicious insight into his relationship with second wife Felicity Blunt – yes, Emily’s sister – complete with five desserts and pasta served at one in the morning. Heaven. PAIR WITH: An ice-cold Martini, of course. With olives. MY UNAPOLOGETIC DIARIES JOAN COLLINS (W&N, $49.99) The clue is in the title: these are Dame Joan Collins’ unabashed writings from the year 1989 right up until 2009. Collins has been a diarist since adolescence and you can tell; her entries are spirited, dishy and succinct. Cameos from Princess Diana, Rupert Everett and Elizabeth Taylor will keep you entertained, but it’s Collins’ sparkling memory and eye for a good anecdote that is the real drawcard here. PAIR WITH: An Angelo Azurro – aka a Blue Angel. The height of ’80s decadence. THEROUX THE KEYHOLE LOUIS THEROUX (MACMILLAN, $34.99) If you’ve ever wanted a window into the fascinating mind of one of the most fascinating minds, this is it. The multihyphenate Louis Theroux – journalist, documentarian, podcaster, author and beyond – turns the questions on himself in this new release, pondering his life in lockdown, his relationship with his wife and children and his career highs (and lows). PAIR WITH: A mind expanding concoction of ice cold Absinthe. 80 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
NON F IC TION MANIFESTO BERNARDINE EVARISTO (HAMISH HAMILTON, $35) Booker Prize-winning writer Bernardine Evaristo is a literary treasure, and Manifesto is her latest feat. A thrilling collection of essays that takes an unflinching look at her experience as a Black female author and the racism and sexism she has faced along her path to phenomenal success. PAIR WITH: Charlotte Dalton 2021 A Change is Gonna Come Pinot Noir. THE HOUSE OF GUCCI SARA GAY FORDEN (HARPER COLLINS, $22.99) You’ve seen the film. You’ve watched Lady Gaga and Adam Driver camp it up onscreen. Now read the unbelievable true story of the scandalous 1995 murder of Maurizio Gucci, scion of one of the world’s most recognisable fashion families. This impeccably researched book by journalist Sara Gay Forden served as the source material for the Lady Gaga film, but trust us, the full saga is even wilder. Beach reading doesn’t get better than this. PAIR WITH: The most on-trend drink of summer, yuzushu. STOLEN FOCUS JOHANN HARI (BLOOMSBURY, $32.99) Bestselling author Johann Hari has a unique gift for examining a subject everyone is talking about and unpicking it at the seams. He did so with anxiety and depression in his 2018 book Lost Connections and he’s doing it again this month with Stolen Focus, an investigation into our inability to pay attention to anything. It’s not just the fault of the pandemic or mobile phones, says Hari, but our diet, pollution, the fact that we don’t read enough and our constant switching of gears both at work and at home. This is a fascinating read, released just in time for a new year. PAIR WITH: A detoxifying cold brew of green tea and fresh mint. ➤ G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 81
CTIO FI READ S N COOPER NOT OUT JUSTIN SMITH (MICHAEL JOSEPH, $32.99) It’s summer, and who doesn’t love a story about small country towns, cricket and the triumph of an underdog? This charming novel follows Sergeant Roy Cooper, an otherwise unimpressive man who has never been dismissed in all his years batting for his local cricket club. When a big city sports columnist catches wind of his prowess, he just might find himself representing the nation at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. PAIR WITH: A jug of Pimm’s and dry, of course. We prefer ours with cucumber, mint and plenty of ice. WAHALA NIKKI MAY (DOUBLEDAY, $32.99) Three best friends, all mixed race women in London in their mid-30s, navigate the chasm between expectation and reality. Three big personalities. One shocking twist. Wahala is a ride of a read, sharp like a knife and full of insight into female friendship. A hugely buzzy book that you’ll want to pack in your bag for a weekend away. PAIR WITH: A Chapman, Nigeria’s signature drink. THE LAST WOMAN IN THE WORLD INGA SIMPSON (HACHETTE AUSTRALIA, $32.99) The Miles Franklin- and Stella Prize-longlisted novelist Inga Simpson has crafted a finelytuned thriller in The Last Woman in the World. Pacey and unputdownable, the story centres on a woman living in isolation in the Australian Outback asked to welcome a stranger and her sick baby into her home. A true nail-biter. PAIR WITH: An ice cold Australian lager. 82 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
A GREAT HOPE JESSICA STANLEY FI N READ Set against the backdrop of our postKevin07 political landscape, A Great Hope is an epic and engrossing read about John Clare, a charismatic trade union leader whose mysterious death unravels the fabric of his family’s lives. Debut author Jessica Stanley weaves her characters and their perspectives together with ease; from Sophie, John’s forthright blogger daughter, to his pristine Melburnian wife Grace, and Tessa, his brilliant colleague. An Australian saga to sink your teeth into. On sale February 22. PAIR WITH: A lip-puckeringly dry sauvignon blanc. Classic 07 vibes. S CTIO (PICADOR, $32.99) A THREE DOG PROBLEM S.J. BENNETT (ZAFFRE, $29.99) This cosy murder mystery series imagines Queen Elizabeth II as a Miss Marple-esque super sleuth – and Buckingham Palace as a den of murderous iniquity. Soothing, smart and just a little bit silly, A Three Dog Problem involves a body in a swimming pool, a palace in disarray and a nonagenarian monarch with a knack for crime-solving. What more could you possibly want? PAIR WITH: The Queen’s signature tipple: gin and Dubonnet. LOVE AND OTHER PUZZLES KIMBERLEY ALLSOPP (HARPER COLLINS, $29.99) A good romantic comedy is hard to find, but Love and Other Puzzles is all that and more. Meet Rory, a planner and list-maker and go-getter doing everything right, who can’t understand why it all feels wrong. So, for a week, she decides to make decisions based on clues in the New York Times crossword puzzle. This Australian novel is warm and witty and wise – the kind of book you’ll want to spend all weekend in bed with. On sale February 2. PAIR WITH: Something sparkly and pink.  G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 83
SUBSCRIBE FOR YOUR CHANCE TO WIN $100 INSTANTLY! See if you’re an instant winner when you subscribe. Subscriber benefits 12 issues of Gourmet Traveller from $69.99 Save 42% Free home delivery and follow the instructions upon confirmation *This prize will be awarded as a $100 Visa or Mastercard gift card. Order online at magshop.com.au/xmas28 or call 136 116
Great Gift Ideas Yes, I would like to subscribe to Gourmet Traveller PAY M E N T O P T I O N S ( A u s t r a l i a n r a t e s) I wish to subscribe for (tick one only) Me Gift ■ ■ 1 year print (12 issues) $69.99 SAVE 42% (GMTC_12_6999_A) *auto renewal credit card ■ ■ 1 year print (12 issues) $74.99 SAVE 37% (GMTA_12_7499) *Upfront payment ■ I already subscribe. Please extend my subscription with the offer selected above. For overseas rates, visit magshop.com.au/xmas28 M Y D E TA I L S Mrs/Ms/Miss/Mr Address Postcode Telephone ( The Australian Women’s Weekly Home Beautiful 12 issues from $74.99 SAVE UP TO 20% 12 issues from $69.99 SAVE UP TO 34% ) Email G I F T R E C I P I E N T D E TA I L S Mrs/Ms/Miss/Mr Address Postcode Telephone ( ) Email PAY M E N T D E TA I L S Cheque/money order for $________ is enclosed payable to Magshop or charge my ■ Visa ■ MasterCard ■ Amex ■■■■ ■■■■ ■■■■ ■■■■ Cardholder’s name (please print) Woman’s Day marie claire 26 issues from $74.99 SAVE UP TO 45% 12 issues from $64.99 SAVE UP TO 40% Cardholder’s signature Expiry date / PLEASE PHOTOCOPY THIS ORDER FORM FOR ADDITIONAL SUBSCRIPTIONS HURRY! OFFER ENDS JANUARY 31, 2022. SUBSCRIBING IS EASY 136 116 and quote M21XGMT, Monday to Friday 8am–6pm AEDT. Overseas dial +61 2 8667 5100 magshop.com.au/xmas28 New Idea Australian House & Garden 26 issues from $74.99 SAVE UP TO 45% 12 issues from $69.99 SAVE UP TO 34% and quote M21XGMT Send original or copy of this coupon (no stamp required) to: Magshop Reply Paid 5252 Sydney, NSW, 2000 *Savings based on Gourmet Traveller cover price of $9.99. Subscription price may be subject to automatic renewal. Aus. res. 18+ only. Starts 25/10/21 12:01am AEDT. Ends 31/1/22 11:59pm AEDT or once 42,000 valid entries are received (whichever is first to occur). Limit 1 entry per eligible transaction/receipt. Keep receipt as proof of purchase. Every 21st valid entry wins, subject to entry cap. Instant Win Prizes: Up to 2,000 x $100 Visa or MasterCard gift cards. Promoter: Are Media Pty Limited ABN 18 053 273 546, 54 Park St, Sydney NSW 2000. See magshop.com.au/xmas28 for Terms and Conditions. NSW Authority No. TP/00018. Permit Nos: ACT TP 21/0172 & SA T21/1548. By including your email address, Gourmet Traveller will keep you informed of offers and updates from our publisher, Are Media Pty Limited, and specially selected partners. Please tick if you’d prefer to not receive offers and updates from: ■ Are Media Pty Limited ■ Our specially selected partners Our Privacy Policy can be found at aremedia.com.au/privacy and includes important information about our collection, use and disclosure of your personal information (including the provision of targeted advertising based on your online activities). It explains that if you do not provide us with information we have requested from you, we may not be able to provide you with the goods and services you require. It also explains how you can access or seek correction of your personal information, how you can complain about a breach of the Australian Privacy Principles and how we will deal with a complaint of that nature.
We would love you to join Our fun online community brings like-minded people together to give their opinions on both our brands and our partners. By being part of the community, you will have the opportunity to: • Help shape your favourite magazines and websites • Share your opinion on interesting topics like homes and homewares, fashion, health and beauty • Give feedback on leading brands • See member’s only content in our exclusive member hub • Have the chance to win by completing surveys and taking part in fun activities Scan the QR code to join now! Join now at theinsiderscommunity.com.au
FOOD JANUARY La Vita è Dolce by Letitia Clark PHOTOGRAPHY CHARLOTTE BLAND. p 106 The sweet life Hellenika’s modern Greek feast, light and bright Mediterranean recipes, and Letitia Clark’s Italian-inspired desserts. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 87
GRECIAN 88 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R ODYSSEY
Recipes SIMON GLOFTIS Food preparation REBECCA LYALL Words FIONA DONNELLY Photography CHRIS COURT Styling VIVIEN WALSH Brisbane’s Hellenika takes us on an Aegean adventure with a modern spin on authentic Greek flavours. Opa!
Chicken souvlaki SERVES 4-6 AS A MAIN // PREP TIME 15 MINS // COOK 20 MINS (PLUS MARINATING, RESTING) “We use free-range, skin-on and bone-out chicken thighs, and marinate them for at least a day,” says Simon Gloftis. “The onion paste acts as a tenderiser as well as being there for flavour.” D reaming of nabbing a lazy Mediterranean-style breakfast by the pool next time you’re in Brisbane? How about fat slices of oozy soft-boiled egg, scattered with salty bottarga, sitting on a bed of taramasalata on toast? Or as it’s described on Hellenika’s menu – eggs with eggs with eggs. It’s just one of the signature dishes served at the Sunshine State's top Greek eatery. More than a decade after the opening of the first Hellenika on the Gold Coast – it’s now at the Calile Hotel – Hellenika has grown into something more elaborate. But the estiatorio’s warm taverna heart still beats strongly. For owner Simon Gloftis it’s all about respecting family traditions by using the best produce he can find. “I’m able to put the food I want on our menu. It’s authentic Greek food – the food I had in my grandmother’s house. Okay, sometimes it’s tweaked a little,” he laughs. Known for an almost forensic approach to searching the best producers, Gloftis says using the tastiest ingredients is non-negotiable, particularly when crafting clean dishes that don’t rely on forceful spices or sauces. “Produce is the whole ball game. You can’t shortcut it. You can’t half-arse it,” he says. One reason Hellenika’s Greek salad is so memorable is because Gloftis buys the entire plum tomato harvest from Noosa Reds. The fish section of the menu, printed daily, reads like a primer on the value of establishing strong contacts with suppliers. Gloftis, who also co-owns SK Steak & Oyster, is old-school. “Restaurants come and go but Hellenika hasn’t because I won’t allow trends to dictate my menu.” Respect for tradition informs everything at Hellenika and you can taste that regard in these recipes. Just don’t cut corners when selecting the ingredients. 48 James St, Fortitude Valley, Qld, hellenika.com.au 90 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R onions, coarsely chopped tbsp smoked paprika tsp dried Greek oregano ml lemon juice ml extra-virgin olive oil, plus extra for drizzling 1.5 kg chicken thigh fillets, trimmed Lemon wedges and tzatziki or natural Greek yoghurt, mixed micro herbs and shaved baby cucumbers, to serve 1 Place onions in a blender with paprika, oregano, lemon juice and olive oil, season to taste and blend until smooth and combined. Transfer to a large bowl with chicken, season to taste and mix until combined. Cover and refrigerate to marinate for 12 hours or overnight. 2 Preheat a lightly greased barbecue or char-grill pan to high, barbecue chicken, turning frequently, until charred and cooked through (15-20 minutes). Rest for 1 minute before serving. 3 To serve, transfer to a platter, drizzle with extra olive oil and serve with lemon wedges, cucumber, herbs and tzatziki or yoghurt on the side. ➤ PHOTOGRAPHY SEAN FENNESSY (INTERIOR). Simon Gloftis 2 2 2 15 50
Chicken Pink and green plates from Mud Australia, used throughout. All other props stylist’s own. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 91
John Dory Palissade chair from Hay. All other props stylist’s own. 92 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
CORFU BIANCO John Dory with potato, onions and lemon SERVES 4-6 AS A MAIN // PREP TIME 30 MINS // COOK 40 MINS (PLUS STANDING) “This is a perfect year-round dish, especially in the Australian climate,” says Gloftis. “It’s hearty enough for the cooler months but the colours are so beautiful, it just looks like summer on a plate.” 350 ml extra-virgin olive oil 6 small Desiree potatoes (150gm each), peeled, cut into 1cm-thick slices 8 garlic cloves, thinly sliced 2 white onions, thinly sliced 12 spring onions, white and light green part cut into 1cm pieces 300 ml white wine ¼ cup each loosely packed flat-leaf parsley and dill leaves, coarsely chopped, plus extra, to serve 100 ml lemon juice 500 ml fish stock 6 skinless John Dory fillets (150gm each), pin-boned Lemon wedges, to serve 1 Heat oil in a large deep-sided frying pan or flameproof dish over medium heat. Add potatoes and cook, stirring gently, keeping the shape of the potatoes until translucent (10 minutes). 2 Scatter over garlic, onions and spring onions to cook, stirring gently until onions are translucent with no colour (5 minutes). Add wine and reduce by half (10 minutes). Stir in herbs with lemon juice and 500ml stock, bring to a simmer and season to taste. Cook potatoes until they begin to soften and edges start to brown (5 minutes). 3 Carefully remove half the potatoes with a slotted spoon. Place fish over remaining potato mixture, return potatoes and spread evenly and cook until fish is just cooked through (6-7 minutes); season to taste. Stand for 5 minutes before serving. Liquid should be thick like honey – if not, mash some potatoes and gently stir. 4 To serve, divide potato and fish between plates and spoon over some sauce. Scatter with extra chopped herbs and serve with lemon wedges. Note If John Dory isn’t available, substitute small snapper, barramundi or any other seasonally available small firm white fish. Greek salad SERVES 6-8 AS A SIDE // PREP TIME 15 MINS (PLUS MARINATING) “I take a lot of pride in our Greek salad – it’s probably the most expensive in Australia (currently $32) but it’s worth it,” says Gloftis. “The dried oregano is rubbed by hand. In fact, it’s nearly a full-time job for someone one day a week because we sell so many salads.” 6 baby red radishes, trimmed, halved 150 gm pitted Kalamata olives in brine, drained (see note) 1 large red onion, cut into 3cm pieces (see note) 2 green capsicum (200gm), halved lengthways, seeded, cut into batons 300 gm telegraph cucumber, peeled, halved lengthways, cut into 3cm pieces 600 gm vine-ripened tomatoes, cut into 3cm pieces 6 Greek golden peppers in brine (15gm each), drained (see note) ½ cup loosely packed dill sprigs 1 tbsp red wine vinegar 100 ml extra-virgin olive oil, plus extra for drizzling 250 gm barrel-aged feta, drained, cut into 2cm pieces 10 gm dried Greek oregano, crushed 1 Place radishes, olives, onion, capsicum, cucumber, tomatoes, golden peppers and dill in a large bowl. Pour over vinegar, season to taste and toss to combine. Stand for 10 minutes for flavours to develop. 2 Transfer mixture to a large serving bowl and drizzle with olive oil. Top with feta, scatter with dried oregano and drizzle with extra olive oil. Note It is important to have all ingredients at room temperature to take the fridge chill off them. Hellenika uses white onion and a mix of Kalamata and Mammoth olives. Greek golden peppers are available from Greek grocers and specialty food shops. ➤ G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 93
PIPERIES Char-grilled peppers SERVES 4-6 AS MEZEDES // PREP TIME 5 MINS // COOK 15 MINS (PLUS COOLING) “When I was a kid at every meal there would always be a block of feta cheese, a bowl of olives and these peppers,” says Gloftis. “The trick is to burn the skin, peel it off while it’s still warm and salt quite generously. Then let the peppers sit in olive oil. That’s where the gold is – when you dunk bread into the pepper juices.” 6 small mixed bullhorn peppers (120gm each), pierced 80 ml extra-virgin olive oil Micro parsley leaves, to serve 1 Preheat a lightly greased barbecue or char-grill pan to high. To cook peppers, grill, turning frequently until charred, softened and cooked through (12-15 minutes). 2 Transfer to a heatproof bowl, cover with foil and stand at room temperature for 1 hour for skins to loosen. Remove skins, taking care not to break peppers; and discard. Make a small incision in side of each pepper and carefully scrape out seeds; discard seeds. 3 To serve, transfer to a serving plate, scatter with micro parsley leaves and drizzle with extra olive oil. 94 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
Silverbeet and veal dolmades with tzatziki SERVES 6-8 AS MEZEDES // PREP TIME 30 MINS // COOK 1 HR 5 MINS (PLUS COOLING) “Our dolmades are a bit more substantial than most Greek dolmades. They’re bigger and we use silverbeet to wrap them instead of vine leaves,” says Gloftis. Ari Onassis MAKES 1 // PREP TIME 5 MINS “This is a beautifully refreshing summer cocktail. It really is the perfect combination of old-school and innovation,” says Gloftis. 60 30 30 1 2 ml Mastiha liqueur (see note) ml St Germain Elderflower liqueur ml Hendrick’s gin tbsp lemon juice cucumber sticks, to garnish Ice cubes, to shake 1 Place all ingredients into a cocktail shaker with ice; shake until well combined and chilled. Double strain into a coupe or martini glass and serve with fresh cucumber sticks. Makes 100ml. Note Mastiha (or mastika) is a sweet pine-scented Greek liqueur made by distilling the resin from the mastic tree, native to Chios. 125 ml extra-virgin olive oil, plus extra for drizzling 2 onions, finely chopped 75 gm speck, rind removed, finely chopped 150 gm medium grain white rice 1.2 litres chicken stock 1 00 ml lemon juice 2 tbsp each finely chopped flat-leaf parsley and dill 3 tsp smoked paprika 1 kg veal mince 3 bunches silverbeet, leaves picked, stalks removed, plus extra leaves, for lining pan (about 38 leaves) Tzatziki, to serve 1 Place a large heavy-based saucepan with 80ml oil over medium-high heat. Add onions and speck and cook, stirring occasionally until onion has softened and has no colour (4-5 minutes). Add rice and stir until coated in oil (1-2 minute). Stir in 200ml stock and 50ml lemon juice and cook stirring until liquid is absorbed (6-8 minutes) the rice will be par-cooked at this point. Stir in herbs and transfer to a large oven tray and spread out; refrigerate to cool completely. 2 Meanwhile, bring a saucepan three-quarters full of water to the boil. Blanch silverbeet leaves, in 3 batches, until just wilted (30 seconds); refresh in iced water, then drain and pat dry. Cut out centre white stalk from each leaf leaving only green leaf. 3 To roll dolmades, remove rice mixture from fridge and transfer to a large bowl. Add paprika, 2 tsp sea salt flakes and 1 tsp cracked black pepper along with raw mince; mix until combined. Roll mixture into 40gm balls and place on lined oven trays. Makes 38 balls. Working with one silverbeet leaf at a time, place a leaf on a work surface then place a ball in the centre; fold in sides and roll firmly to enclose. Repeat. 4 To cook dolmades, line base of a large saucepan (40cm-diameter) with extra leaves and tightly pack dolmades into saucepan in a single layer; add remaining stock, lemon juice and oil then weight down with a heatproof plate. Bring to the boil, then simmer over low heat until rice is cooked (40-45 minutes). Transfer dolmades to a shallow dish, drizzle with extra olive oil and cool slightly. 5 To serve, transfer dolmades onto a platter, drizzle with extra oil and serve with tzatziki on the side. ➤ G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 95
HTAPODI Grilled octopus SERVES 4-6 AS MEZEDES // PREP TIME 10 MINS // COOK 15 MINS (PLUS DRYING) “When I first started using South Australian octopus I had to fly down and meet the fishermen because they wouldn’t give me any. It took me four or five months to convince them to do it. It’s the best octopus out there!” says Gloftis. Begin this recipe a day ahead. 1.2 2 2 60 kg octopus, cleaned, tenderised tbsp lemon juice tsp dried Greek oregano ml (¼ cup) extra-virgin olive oil, plus extra to serve Charred sourdough, charred lemon cheeks and micro parsley, to serve 1 To prepare octopus, cut tentacles into individual lengths. Place on a wire rack over an oven tray and leave to dry out in fridge for 24 hours. 2 Preheat oven to 220˚C. Grease and line 2 large oven trays with baking paper. To cook octopus, place on prepared tray with 2-3cm space between each tentacle and roast until reddish in colour and moderately firm to touch (10 minutes). Remove from oven, return to wire rack, and stand in fridge until cooled completely and drained from any cooking juices. 3 To make dressing, place lemon juice, oregano and oil in a bowl, season to taste and whisk to combine. 4 Preheat a lightly greased barbecue or char-grill pan to high. Char-grill tentacles until all juices and liquid have evaporated and tentacles are charred (6-8 minutes). Roughly cut into pieces. Place in a bowl with half the dressing, season to taste and toss to combine. Transfer to a plate drizzle over remaining dressing, scatter with micro parsley and serve with charred sourdough and lemon cheeks. Note Ask your fishmonger to clean and tenderise the octopus. GALAKTOBOUREKO Baked filo custard with orange syrup SERVES 6-8 // PREP TIME 20 MINS // COOK 1 HR 10 MINS (PLUS COOLING) “I love eating this one cold from the fridge. But really, it’s best eaten straight off the bench about an hour after it’s finished cooking,” says Gloftis. 270 18 1.2 1 400 3 65 85 gm butter, coarsely chopped sheets filo pastry litres milk tbsp vanilla bean paste gm caster sugar eggs, lightly beaten gm cornflour gm plain flour ORANGE SYRUP 200 gm caster sugar 2 small oranges, thinly sliced 1 Place butter in a saucepan over low heat and skim occasionally until milk solids separate and butter is clarified (10-12 minutes). Strain through a fine sieve lined with muslin (discard solids) and keep warm. 2 Brush a 5cm-deep, 24cm x 30cm baking tray with clarified butter, trim filo 96 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R to size, then line base of tray with 4 sheets of filo, brushing sheets with clarified butter as you layer them. 3 To make custard, bring milk and vanilla paste to the boil in a saucepan over medium heat. In a large bowl, whisk the sugar and eggs together, then mix in the flours, until combined. Gradually stir in half of the warmed milk until smooth and combined; then gradually stir in remaining milk mixture. Transfer to a large clean non-stick heavy based saucepan and place over medium heat. Cook, whisking continuously until ribbon stage (when beaters are lifted, batter falls from beaters like a ribbon) and thickened; be careful not to scramble eggs (8-10 minutes). 4 Preheat oven to 165˚C. Pour in batter mixture, smooth top, then top with remaining filo sheets, brushing each with butter. Brush top with butter and lightly score top in a rectangle pattern; bake until pastry is golden (40-45 minutes). 5 Meanwhile, to make orange syrup, combine sugar and 100ml water in a small saucepan over medium heat and stir until sugar has dissolved (5 minutes). Add orange and bring to a simmer; cook until slightly reduced (8-10 minutes). Cool to room temperature. 6 Stand galaktoboureko on a wire rack in tray for 1 hour. Pour over half syrup. Refrigerate for 2-3 hours before cutting to serve. To cut, run a sharp knife along the edge of the pastry. Following the rectangular pattern, slice into desired size portions. Use a pallet knife to lift out. Serve drizzled with extra syrup. 
G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 97
A WAY Eat like you’re on holiday with light and bright recipes from this new book, Food from the Mediterranean. Food photography ALICIA TAYLOR Travel photography HANNAH BLACKMORE Styling OLIVIA BLACKMORE
OF LIFE Grilled sardines with agrodolce dressing p 104 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 99
Green shakshuka with Brussels sprouts, olives and labne SERVES 4 // PREP & COOK TIME 30 MINS Sicilian green olives and labne give this classic North African and Middle Eastern dish a Mediterranean twist, making it perfect for breakfast, lunch or tea. 80 300 1 2 150 125 8 60 ml (⅓ cup) extra-virgin olive oil gm small Brussels sprouts, halved medium leek (350gm), thinly sliced cloves garlic, crushed gm kale, coarsely chopped ml (½ cup) vegetable stock eggs gm (¼ cup) pitted Sicilian green olives, chopped ¼ cup chopped flat-leaf parsley 2 tsp finely grated lemon rind 125 gm (½ cup) labne 100 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 1 Preheat grill to high. 2 Heat 2 tbsp of the oil in a large heavy-based ovenproof frying pan over medium heat. Add Brussels sprouts and cook, stirring, until browned and almost tender (3-4 minutes). Add leek, garlic and kale; cook, stirring occasionally, until vegetables soften (5 minutes). Stir in stock and bring to a simmer. 3 Using the back of a spoon, make eight shallow indents in the mixture. Break 1 egg into each hollow. Place pan under hot grill for 6-8 minutes or until egg whites are set and yolks remain runny, or until cooked to your liking. 4 Meanwhile, combine olives, parsley, lemon rind and remaining oil in a small bowl; season to taste. 5 Serve shakshuka topped with labne and olive mixture. ➤
G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 101
102 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
Saffron and lemon rice with fried onion SERVES 4 // PREP & COOK TIME 1 HR 15 MINS The addition of saffron imparts a beautiful golden colour to the rice while adding a sweet-earthy flavour. A delicious vegetarian meal in its own right, this dish also makes a lovely side with grilled or barbecued meat or fish. ½ 2 300 560 80 200 ½ ¼ 40 tsp saffron threads medium lemons gm (1½ cups) white basmati rice ml (2¼ cups) chicken or vegetable stock ml (⅓ cup) olive oil gm pickling onions (about 5), thinly sliced (see note) cup flat-leaf parsley leaves, coarsely chopped cup fresh dill, coarsely chopped gm (½ cup) flaked almonds, toasted 1 Combine saffron and 2 tsp boiling water in a small cup. Set aside for 10 minutes. 2 Cut 1 lemon into 5mm slices. Finely grate the rind from the remaining lemon, then squeeze; you will need 1 tbsp rind and 2 tbsp juice. 3 Rinse rice in a sieve under cold running water until water runs clear. Add rice, saffron mixture and stock to a medium saucepan over high heat; bring to the boil. Place lemon slices on rice. Place lid on pan, reduce heat to low; simmer for 12 minutes. Remove pan from heat; stand, covered, for 10 minutes. Fluff rice with a fork. 4 Meanwhile, heat oil in a frying pan over medium-high heat; cook onions, stirring, until golden and crisp (7 minutes). Drain onions on paper towel. 5 Transfer rice to a large bowl with lemon rind and juice. Add half the onions, half the combined herbs and half the almonds; season and stir gently to combine. Serve rice topped with remaining onions, combined herbs and almonds. Note Pickling onions look like brown onions but are about half the size and slightly sweeter. ➤ G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 103
Smoky eggplant with sumac onions SERVES 4 // PREP & COOK TIME 45 MINS (PLUS COOLING) Sumac brings a sharp citrus flavour to dishes and is an essential ingredient in Mediterranean cuisine, used in cooking and as a condiment. 1 2 1 3 190 1 1 2 small red onion, very thinly sliced tbsp lemon juice tsp sumac medium eggplants (600gm) gm (⅔ cup) Greek yoghurt tbsp tahini clove garlic, crushed tbsp extra-virgin olive oil Toasted bread, to serve 1 Heat a chargrill pan or barbecue to high. Combine onion, 1 tbsp of the lemon juice and ½ tsp of the sumac in a small bowl; set aside. 2 Prick eggplants all over with a fork. Cook eggplants on the chargrill pan or barbecue, turning occasionally, until skin is charred and flesh is very tender (30 minutes). Place eggplants in a large sieve over a large bowl; drain. Cool. 3 Meanwhile, combine yoghurt, tahini, garlic and remaining lemon juice in a small bowl. Season to taste. 4 Remove and discard skin from eggplants, keeping tops intact. Halve flesh and arrange on a serving plate. Season well. Drizzle eggplant with oil. Spoon yoghurt sauce over eggplant; top with sumac onions and remaining sumac. Serve with toasted bread. 104 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R Grilled sardines with agrodolce dressing SERVES 4 // PREP & COOK TIME 25 MINS This agrodolce (sweet and sour) Italian recipe uses currants and grapes for sweetness and vinegar for a sour note. Pictured p99 80 1 170 2 60 50 750 1 ml (⅓ cup) extra-virgin olive oil medium red onion, halved, thinly sliced gm (1 cup) red grapes, halved if large tbsp currants ml (¼ cup) red wine vinegar gm (⅓ cup) pine nuts, toasted gm fresh sardines, cleaned tbsp chopped thyme Chopped flat-leaf parsley, to serve 1 Heat 60ml (¼ cup) oil in a large, deep frying pan over medium-high heat; add onion and cook until softened (4 minutes). Add grapes and currants; cook for 1 minute. Add vinegar; simmer for a further minute or until slightly reduced. Stir in pine nuts. 2 Rub sardines with remaining oil; season and sprinkle with thyme. Heat a chargrill pan or barbecue to high; cook sardines until lightly charred (2 minutes). Turn and cook for a further minute or until cooked through. 3 Serve sardines with agrodolce dressing, topped with parsley.
Baby snapper in crazy water SERVES 4 // PREP & COOK TIME 35 MINS The key to this dish is a well-flavoured “acqua pazza” or crazy water, where tomatoes and chilli are added to make the water “crazy”. 2 5 1 1 ¼ 2 2 ½ 2 kg ripe tomatoes, coarsely chopped cloves garlic, 1 chopped, 4 thinly sliced cup basil leaves tsp caster sugar cup (60ml) extra-virgin olive oil baby snapper (600gm each), cleaned long red chillies, finely chopped cup (125ml) dry white wine baby fennel bulbs, thinly sliced, fronds reserved 400 gm mixed cherry and grape tomatoes 4 thyme sprigs ½ cup marjoram leaves Chargrilled sourdough, to serve 1 Blend chopped tomatoes, chopped garlic, basil, sugar and 1 tsp sea salt flakes in a blender until smooth. Pour into a large fine sieve over a large bowl; push liquid through sieve using a ladle. 2 Heat oil in a large heavy-based saucepan over medium heat; cook fish for 4 minutes on each side or until golden. Transfer to a plate. 3 Cook sliced garlic and chilli in same pan until softened and starting to colour (4 minutes). Add wine; cook for 1 minute or until evaporated. Add fennel, mixed tomatoes, herbs and 1 litre (4 cups) of the tomato liquid; season to taste. Bring to the boil and return fish to pan. Reduce heat to low and cook, covered, for 10 minutes. Remove lid and cook for a further 5 minutes or until fish is just cooked through. Season to taste and serve with chargrilled sourdough. ● This extract from Food from the Mediterranean by The Australian Women’s Weekly Test Kitchen (Are Media Books; $34.99) has been reproduced with minor GT style edits. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 105
Sun-kissed Roast stuffed peaches with almond crumble p 109 Photography CHARLOTTE BLAND
sweetness GUTTER CREDIT In her second cookbook, La Vita è Dolce, food writer and pastry chef LETITIA CLARK indulges in the desserts of Italy. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 107
Letitia Clark A steaming bowl of pasta is a very fine thing, but it’s the gelato eaten in the dappled sunshine a few hours later that really delights, and in a different way too, because it is a treat. The knowledge that it is something special, a little luxury, an indulgence, not just sustenance, makes the pleasure even more poignant. This is because, unlike the majority of savoury Italian dishes, the focus is not on harking back to times of poverty and ‘la cucina povera’, but instead a celebration of the arrival of sugar in Italy, introduced by the Arabs. Italians have a sweet tooth to rival my own, and while Italian sweets are sometimes internationally overlooked, there are enough cakes, biscuits and pastries to keep even the sweetest tooth content. The variety is extraordinary, and of course, as with all Italian food, each region has its own specialty. Whether made at home, bought in a pasticceria or eaten in a bar, in Italy, a little something sweet is eaten every day. It could be a heaped spoonful of sugar in the early morning or post-lunch espresso, or a cookie or slice of cake for breakfast: there are always opportunities for a moment of sweetness. 108 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
Roast stuffed peaches with almond crumble SERVES 8 “Towards the end of summer, Italian peaches swell to the size of small melons, and the gradation of colours on their skin rivals the most exquisite painting: blush pink, speckles of gold and scarlet dimples, saffron yellow,” says Letitia Clark. Pictured p187 80 30 1 30 30 gm amaretti biscuits gm whole almonds tbsp demerara sugar gm butter gm (¼ cup) 00 or plain flour Pinch of salt Zest of ½ a lemon 4 firm but fragrant peaches, halved, stone removed Amaretto (optional), for drizzling Mascarpone, to serve 1 Preheat oven to 170°C. 2 Place amaretti biscuits, almonds, sugar, butter, flour, salt and lemon zest in a blender and pulse until a rough crumble. Take walnut-sized pieces of mixture in your hand and squeeze, forming 8 rough balls. Press each ball into the hole of each peach half to create a false stone. 3 Place peaches in a baking dish and sprinkle over Amaretto. Transfer to oven and bake until peaches are tender and slightly shrivelled (1 hour). 4 Allow to cool slightly, then serve with mascarpone. Sparkling lemon sorbetto in lemons MAKES 1 LITRE (4 CUPS), ENOUGH TO FILL AROUND 6 LEMONS “Lemon sorbetto, or simply sorbetto as it is known in Sardinia, was originally made from just three ingredients: water, sugar and lemon,” says Clark. “Most bars and trattorias will have a large machine constantly churning a slushy lemon sorbetto mix to be sold in little Champagne flutes with a straw at the end of a meal.” 250 ml (1 cup) lemon juice (roughly the juice of 8 small lemons), plus the zest of 1 lemon 280 gm (1¼ cups) white sugar 100 ml water 200 ml fizzy water (preferably a salty brand like San Pellegrino) 1 If you wish to serve the sorbetto inside lemons, cut off 1cm from the bottom of the fruits to create a flat surface for them to stand upright. Cut the top off (a larger 2-3cm here to create a hat) and reserve as a lid. Scoop out the flesh as if preparing a Halloween pumpkin and squeeze flesh through a sieve to obtain juice for the sorbetto. Freeze lemon shells before using; they look much more effective slightly frosty, and will keep sorbetto colder for longer. 2 Place lemon zest in a small saucepan. Add sugar and still water and bring to the boil. Simmer for 3-5 minutes until syrupy. 3 Strain syrup through a fine sieve into a bowl (discard zest). Stir in lemon juice and fizzy water then transfer to an ice-cream machine and churn. 4 Serve in hollowed-out lemons. ➤ G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 109
Ricotta, pear and hazelnut layer cake SERVES 8-10 “This classic southern Italian cake originated in the late 1990s in Minori, created by the renowned pastry chef, Sal de Riso for his eponymous pastry shop,” says Clark. “It is a beauty to look at and to eat, and is impossibly chic without requiring too much effort.” FOR THE CAKE 170 gm hazelnuts 100 gm butter, melted, plus extra for greasing 3 eggs 150 gm (⅔ cup) white sugar 70 gm 00 or plain flour Pinch of salt FOR THE RICOTTA FILLING 600 gm ricotta 150 gm (⅔ cup) white sugar 300 ml (1¼ cups) cream FOR THE PEARS 300 gm pears (4-5 small pears), peeled and cored 50 gm (¼ cup) white sugar Zest and juice of 1 lemon 100 ml (scant ½ cup) water Half a vanilla bean or a few drops of vanilla extract 1 Preheat oven to 170°C. Spread hazelnuts on a baking tray and toast in the oven until light brown (10 minutes). Set aside to cool. Increase oven temperature up to 180°C. 2 To make the cake, grease and line a 23cm spring-form cake tin. Place eggs and sugar in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment and mix 110 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R on medium speed until pale, fluffy and tripled in volume (3 minutes). 3 Grind hazelnuts to a fine powder in a food processor then fold through egg mixture, along with flour and salt. Fold in melted butter then pour batter into prepared tin. 4 Bake in oven until risen and golden (20-30 minutes). Remove from the oven and set aside to cool. Once cool, remove from tin and slice in half horizontally. 5 For the filling, beat ricotta and sugar until completely smooth (2-3 minutes). 6 In a separate bowl, whip cream to firm peaks; then fold through ricotta mixture. 7 Cut pears into 2.5cm pieces and place in a small saucepan with sugar, lemon zest, water and vanilla bean or extract. Bring to a gentle simmer over low heat and poach pears very gently until tender and translucent (10 minutes). Remove from heat and stir in lemon juice. Strain through a sieve, catching syrup in a bowl to use later. Discard zest and vanilla bean. 8 Paint exposed sponge layers with syrup using a pastry brush. Place the bottom half of the cake on the base of the spring-form cake tin with the ring around it, to help you build your cake and keep the sides contained. 9 Stir cooled pear pieces into ricotta mixture, then spread mixture on top of the sponge in the tin. Place the other sponge half on top (fitting it into the cake tin) and press down gently. 10 Transfer cake to fridge and leave to set for a few hours, ideally overnight. 11 Release cake from tin and transfer to a serving plate. Sprinkle with icing sugar before slicing and serving. Note You can decorate the cake with some extra hazelnuts and/or a slice of candied pear. ➤
“This classic southern Italian cake is a beauty to look at and to eat, and is impossibly chic without requiring too much effort.” G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 111
1 Preheat oven to 180°C. 2 Using a pastry brush, grease a 23cm cake tin with melted butter (you can use a bundt or a standard round tin). 3 Place all remaining cake ingredients in a blender and blend to a smooth batter. 4 Pour batter into cake tin and spread evenly. Bake until risen and golden (40-45 minutes). Set aside to cool. 5 Meanwhile, to make syrup, combine sugar and lemon juice in a small saucepan and simmer over low heat until syrupy (3 minutes). Pour syrup over cake and leave to cool completely before turning it out onto a serving plate. 6 To make glaze, place icing sugar in a bowl. Add 2 tbsp of the lemon juice and mix thoroughly, adding more juice depending on your desired texture. 7 Drizzle glaze over cake before slicing and serving. Almond, ricotta, olive oil and lemon drizzle cake SERVES 8-10 “This is based around one of my favourite classic English cakes, the saintly lemon drizzle,” says Clark. “Like lemon drizzle, this cake is moist, citrusy and extremely satisfying to make and eat.” FOR THE CAKE 250 200 100 150 2 200 112 Melted butter, for greasing gm ricotta ml (scant 1 cup) olive oil gm (1 cup) ground almonds gm (1¼ cups) 00 or plain flour tsp baking powder gm white sugar Pinch of salt G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 4 eggs Zest of 3 small lemons FOR THE SYRUP 70 gm (⅓ cup) white sugar Juice of 3 small lemons FOR THE GLAZE 250 gm (2 cups) pure icing sugar 2-3 tbsp lemon juice This extract from La Vita è Dolce by Letitia Clark (Hardie Grant, $50) has been reproduced with minor GT style edits.
Perfect pure panna cotta MAKES 6 “The simplest, purest panna cotta, flavoured only with vanilla, and with a perfect wobble,” says Clark. 400 100 50 1 2 Flavourless oil, for greasing ml cream ml milk gm (¼ cup) white sugar vanilla bean, split leaves gelatine (3-4gm) 1 Using a pastry brush, lightly grease 6 ramekin-size or espresso cup-size moulds with oil. 2 Combine half the cream with milk, sugar and vanilla bean in a saucepan over medium heat and bring to a scald. You will see small bubbles appearing at the edge of the pan when it is ready. Remove from heat. 3 Soak gelatine in a bowl of cold water to soften. Squeeze as much moisture as you can from the gelatine then add to hot cream mixture and stir to dissolve. Add remaining cream to mixture, then strain through a sieve into a jug, removing vanilla bean. 4 Pour panna cotta mixture into prepared moulds, transfer to the fridge and leave to set for at least 4 hours. Remove from fridge around 15 minutes before serving to take the chill off. 5 To serve, turn out panna cottas from their moulds onto serving plates.  G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 113
GET THE DIGITAL EDITION OF 12 DIGITAL ISSUES FOR ONLY $19.99 SAVE 62% Visit magshop.com.au/p/gtd or call 136 116 and quote X221GTD Savings based on single-issue digital edition price of $5.99. Offer available until 31st December 2022. If you do not want your information provided to any organisation not associated with this promotion, please indicate this clearly when you subscribe. For terms and conditions visit magshop.com.au/gtd and for our Privacy Notice visit aremedia.com.au/privacy/ Apple, the Apple logo and iPad are trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries. Subscription auto-renews every 12 months at $19.99 unless cancelled.
TRAVEL JANUARY Coastal cruising The art of Mediterranean living, exploring McLaren Vale, a chef ’s guide to Istanbul, luxury new openings around The Med, and how to cruise like an Italian. Milos, Greece 128 PHOTOGRAPHY VANGELIS PATERAKS. p G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 115
The art of… Mediterranean living This summer is about living the good life, and la dolce vita has never tasted sweeter, says ANNA HART. 116 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
The art of travel ILLUSTRATIONS GETTY IMAGES. T Anna is a travel and lifestyle journalist, and author of the travel memoir Departures. @annadothart he word “Mediterranean” is one of education in good living. I returned from Athens those transcendental words that we vowing to drizzle pine-scented honey over crumbly see, taste and feel the moment we hear triangles of white cheese forevermore. Spanish tapas it. Immediately evocative of grassy, has been so ubiquitous that it’s almost difficult to aromatic olive oil, unctuous chunks of broken find a restaurant that doesn’t have “small plates” bread, the scent of lemons, the sweet sensation as a menu heading. The Italian ritual of aperitivo of sunshine and salt on bare skin, it’s useful – Spritzes and snacks at sundown – is surely one shorthand for a way of eating, and a way of living, of the boldest, practically neon, signs of a civilised that we all aspire to. nation. The Mediterranean is essentially a finishing And yet despite its enviable global brand school for bon vivants, every nation offering its own recognition, the word buckles under pressure. dense curriculum on how to extract the most Some 20 sovereign nations are technically classed as pleasure possible from food, and from life. Mediterranean, a wide variety of One of the core tenets of cultures with distinct cuisines, Mediterranean dining is that The Mediterranean is from Albania to Syria. Ever what we do with food, we do in essentially a finishing since the British cookery writer our lives, and therefore passion school for bon vivants, Elizabeth David first described and pleasure should suffuse a unified Mediterranean cuisine every dish. Every plate is every nation offering in her 1950 recipe book A Book a platform upon which we its own dense of Mediterranean Food, chefs and perform our beliefs about curriculum on how writers have tried to pin down ourselves. Feed yourself like the strong yet slippery image she royalty, and you’ll feel like to extract the most conjured up. But neither the pleasure possible from royalty… and this has nothing criteria of a trinity of “olive, to do with how much money food, and from life. wheat and grape”, nor physical you spend. It took me a long contact with the Mediterranean time to realise this, something Sea, quite nails it. Portugal doesn’t have a coastline the Italians have known for aeons, but the penny in the Med, and yet Portuguese cuisine is finally dropped for me, in Rome. This is why the unmistakably Mediterranean in character. Italians excel in producing affordable “peasant food” David herself writes of “those blessed lands of that is fit for kings. But when in Rome, I fed myself sun and sea and olive trees”. It’s the word “blessed” like a queen. I ate platefuls of ricotta-stuffed ravioli, that is most telling. Mediterranean eating, and I snacked on fried artichokes, I fuelled myself around Mediterranean living, is all about abundance. An the Pantheon on a potent café granita. I fed myself abundance of flavours, an abundance of pleasure, like a queen, and by the end of the weekend, I felt an abundance of satisfaction. Mediterranean food like a queen. For the first time in a very long time. is about feeling blessed – every dish a delicious Rome’s robust Mediterraneanism certainly delight, every mealtime a harvest celebration, every worked its magic on me, and I would heartily day a holiday. And so we shouldn’t be surprised recommend a course of Mediterraneanism to that our tastebuds are clamouring for any lockdown-wearied traveller. Mediterranean flavours. We’ve been through Some of the most Mediterranean travel two years of periodic bouts of pleasure scarcity, experiences I’ve ever had have been in Northern a rationing of the pleasure we take, not just from California, New Zealand’s North Island, Australia’s our plates, but from people and pastimes and places Barossa Valley and Stellenbosch in South Africa. we love. Of course we’re hungry for salted sardines, They share some geological decorations, true, but croquettes, slow-roasted tomatoes and artichokes… more importantly, these are magical Mediterranean and the abundance that underpins it all. destinations where life feels abundant, easy and My first international trip, after a decidedly pleasurable. The Mediterranean that inhabits un-Mediterranean lockdown in London, was to our imaginations is not a geographic reality, it’s Rome. I wasn’t going to mess around with any a philosophy, a manifesto for good living, that weaker representatives; I knew I wanted to hurl is right for now. It’s an intoxicating daydream myself headlong into la dolce vita. of endless summers, freshly harvested produce, When I visit a classic Mediterranean destination, gatherings of family and friends and the sybaritic such as Italy, France, Spain or Greece, I expect an pleasures of coastal life, salt and sunshine.  G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 117
COASTAL VINES A taste of the Mediterranean with a distinctly Aussie twist awaits at McLaren Vale. SUSAN GOUGH HENLY discovers the best places to dine, drink and play in South Australia’s greenest wine region. Photography DUY DASH
The sprawling gardens and vines at Coriole Vineyard. O n the Fleurieu Peninsula, just 40 kilometres south of Adelaide, McLaren Vale is an undulating, vineyard-latticed valley meandering down through a horseshoe of hills to a pristine coastline rimmed by aquamarine waters. Moderated by sea breezes and enlivened by immoderate winemakers and assorted other characters, it embodies a sweet spot of nurtured nature, what might even be called a Mediterranean state of mind, done in a distinctly Aussie way. “Gulf St Vincent sure resembles the Mediterranean, only we have better sand,” says Mark Lloyd of Coriole Vineyards. His son, Peter, adds, “We’ve certainly taken some cues from the Old World but, with our ease and openness, we’ve developed our own home-grown style.” A magnet for Italian immigrants after World War II, McLaren Vale became one of Australia’s first areas to grow olives and almonds. Today, it’s Australia’s “greenest” wine region, with the country’s highest number of certified biodynamic and organic vineyards. There are more than 80, mainly family-owned, cellar doors while the Saturday Willunga Farmers Market champions hyper-local gourmet goodies from the land and sea. “It’s our community larder,” says Salopian Inn restaurateur and chef Karena Armstrong. “We’re hugely blessed where we live,” says winemaker Stephen Pannell, “I try to create wines that suit our soils, climate and way of life – wines that I want to drink with the food we grow and eat here. We live in a country we wish was cooler but is only getting hotter. I’ve been experimenting with Italian, Greek, Spanish and Portuguese varieties to make wines that reflect our sense of place.” “We may be a casual bunch, but we’ve become passionate about coming together as a community to protect this beautiful bit of land,” says Armstrong. “We’re surrounded by vineyards framed by olive groves and it only takes five minutes to get to the beach. People come here to relax and swim and just be. That’s why we all love it so much.” ➤ G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 119
Clockwise from left: chef Tom Tilbury in the garden at Coriole; petit four at Gather at Coriole; Hiramasa kingfish at Salopian Inn; oyster pearl, buttermilk and sunrise lime at Maxwell Restaurant. Feast on Tom Tilbury’s thoughtful dishes of bright, interesting ingredients that deliver the purest of flavours. E AT Salopian Inn Former Icebergs Dining Room and Bar and Billy Kwong chef Karena Armstrong is at the helm of the eclectic Salopian Inn, a McLaren Vale institution. Her sublime dumplings and pork buns go down a treat with a cocktail or two from the 190-strong gin list from around the world and Australia. The mains offer riffs on ethically sourced local meats with organic kitchen garden veggies along with wines from their beautifully curated list. Corner Main and McMurtrie Rds, McLaren Vale, salopian.com.au Maxwell Restaurant Michelin-trained Fabian Lehmann delivers delicate morsels in an inspired dégustation menu at McLaren Vale’s high-end dining venue. There’ll be house-baked sourdough from local stone-milled spelt flour and dishes that celebrate the estate’s own limestone-cave-grown mushrooms, while the new spring menu delivers gems like trout with pickled carrot ribbons and homegrown horseradish. Olivers Rd, McLaren Vale, maxwellwines.com.au Gather at Coriole Sit in front of a roaring fire under the grapevinedraped pergola or in the shade of the mulberry tree with sweeping views of vineyards stretching all the way to the sea and feast on Tom Tilbury’s thoughtful dishes of bright, interesting ingredients that deliver the purest of flavours. Hello kangaroo, karkalla coastal succulents, muntries and hay emulsion. There are marinated Coriole olives and Kris Lloyd Artisan cheeses, 120 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R too. It all works perfectly with their foodfriendly Italian varieties. 79 Chaffeys Rd, McLaren Vale, coriole.com Little Wolf Osteria at Mitolo Wines Chef Vincenzo La Montagna keeps it authentic and delicious at this airy modern Italian restaurant fashioned out of shipping containers with gorgeous views to the Willunga Range. Think the finest salumi, blue swimmer crab spaghettini, big steaks char-grilled over the hearth and an abundance of salads perfect for sharing over a long lunch. 141 McMurtrie Rd, McLaren Vale, mitolowines.com.au Victory Hotel This legendary gastro pub is always pumping. Head to the cellar to choose your wine from publican Doug Govan’s extraordinary, wellpriced global collection. Rub shoulders with the locals over a burger and a juicy grenache or some Coopers’ beer-battered King George whiting with a McLaren Vale fiano. Main South Rd, Sellicks Hill, victoryhotel.com.au
Below: the Cube at d’Arenberg. Right: vines in McLaren Vale. d’Arry’s Verandah at d’Arenberg Set in the original homestead, stalwart d’Arry’s Verandah showcases locally sourced products spiced with flavours from around the globe. The service is excellent and the outlook stunning. The lobster bisque is arguably more famous than The Cube. Enjoy simpler lunch fare at Eat@Polly’s in the quirky building home to d’Arenberg’s cellar door (after you’ve checked out the wine sensory room and Alternate Realities Museum). Osborn Rd, McLaren Vale, darenberg.com.au The Currant Shed Anything by chef Wayne Leeson and the team at this top-notch lunch spot is memorable. Dishes are driven by what is in season (and what they can harvest from their kitchen garden) but an all-year round highlight is the entrée of pork, peanut, chilli and bean sprouts. The six-course chef’s selection (with paired wine) is the way to go. 104 Ingoldby Rd, McLaren Flat, currantshed.com.au Pizzateca Classic Napoli-style thin-crust, wood-fired pizza, antipasti, and char-grilled lamb are made with love by the Mitolo family for Aussie families to devour at tables on the grass under the gum trees. 319 Chalk Hill Rd, McLaren Vale, pizza-teca.com The Little Rickshaw & Pearl In nearby Aldinga, two newcomers are drawing rave reviews from the locals. In a pint-sized rustic tin shed, The Little Rickshaw charms with sparkling fresh Southeast Asian delicacies, while beachside Pearl channels a Greek Island taverna vibe with its sustainable offerings of calamari, whiting, school prawns and mussels. thelittlerickshaw.com.au, pearlaldingabeach.com.au Star of Greece There are few better places to be in the world than on the deck of the Star of Greece feasting on a plate of local squid, a glass of McLaren Vale rosé in hand, looking at the translucent waters lapping the sandy shore. It’s the next best thing to having open borders and a boat in the Aegean. 1 Esplanade, Port Willunga, starofgreece.com.au ➤
Chalk Hill Collective does an enterprising job of blending wine, spirits and food in one stylish, relaxed locale complete with views.
Clockwise from left: the main bar at Swell Brewing Co; the dining room at Maxwell Restaurant; the tasting room at d’Arenberg. Opposite: a distiller at Settlers Spirits; Chalk Hill Collective. PHOTOGRAPHY MEAGHAN COLES (CHALK HILL COLLECTIVE). DRINK Renowned for grenache, shiraz, and cabernet sauvignon, McLaren Vale is increasingly winning accolades for its Mediterranean varieties such as sangiovese, fiano, tempranillo, nero d’avola, montepulciano, vermentino, piquepoul, nebbiolo, and barbera. With an irreverent bunch of winemakers at the helm, it also wins the award for some of the quirkiest wine names in the business: April’s Dance Sparkling, Little Demon Fiano, Derelict Vineyard Grenache, Monkey Bum Shiraz, and The Mongrel Sangiovese set the tone. Check out iconic wineries such as Wirra Wirra whose late founder Greg Trott was McLaren Vale’s mischievous vinous Pied Piper; d’Arenberg whose quirky art-filled Cube embodies its moniker of “the art of being different”; and classy Coriole, Australia’s Italian varieties’ trailblazer. Other must-visits include Gemtree to get the lowdown on biodynamic winemaking and explore its eco trail; Primo Estate, which offers olive oil, Grana Padano, and wine tastings; SC Pannell to sample an appealing array of Mediterranean varietals; Maxwell Wines with its passion for mead and mazes; Italian champions Serafino, Mitolo, and Vigna Bottin; Hither & Yon, South Australia’s first certified carbon neutral winery; and other gems such as Shingleback, Samuel’s Gorge, Yangarra Estate, Samson Tall, and Bec Hardy Wines. The rising popularity of alternative varieties and the wine community’s welcoming nature attracts adventurous new blood to the region. Among them, emerging brands such as Silent Noise, Sherrah Wines, Lino Ramble, Varney Wines, Brash Higgins and Aphelion Wine. And in a trifecta, the Chalk Hill Collective does an enterprising job of blending wine, spirits and food in one stylish, relaxed locale complete with breathtaking vistas. Taste Chalk Hill and Alpha Crucis wines, sample a range of awardwinning gins at Never Never Distilling Co and feast on northern Italian-style pizzas and other street food at Cucina di Strada. Don’t stop there. Craft breweries such as Swell Brewing Co, South Coast, Kick Back Brewing, Shifty Lizard, Vale Brewing and Goodieson Brewery are must-visits as are Settlers Spirits and McCarthy’s Orchard Cellar Door for apple and pear cider, heirloom fruit and produce, and old-vine wine, too. ➤ G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 123
S TAY Old Chaff Mill The artfully restored stone and glass Old Chaff Mill offers two double-storey suites each with spacious bathrooms, contemporary kitchens, and living areas enriched with historic artefacts. The Millery sports a combustion heater and secluded outdoor clawfoot bath while The Granary features a Juliette balcony with views over the vineyard. Fresh local goodies for breakfast and welcome nibbles include the estate’s own shiraz and olive oil. Enjoy treatments and massages at the spa tucked into the atmospheric pond-side former dairy. It’s minutes to Silver Sands beach and a short drive to the heart of the vineyards. 371 Plains Rd, Sellicks Hill, oldchaffmill.com.au The Jetty For beach views, The Jetty looks out over Port Willunga’s stunning coast and is a stone’s throw from The Star of Greece restaurant. There are four modern apartments to choose from. Views (and sundowner locations) don’t get much better. 16 Esplanade, Port Willunga, thejettyportwillunga.com.au The artfully restored stone and glass Old Chaff Mill offers two double-storey suites enriched with historic artefacts. Hotel California Road Hotel California Road at Inkwell Wines is a luxury micro-hotel for adults only. Set in the vineyards on a private floor, each king suite features an expansive deck, soaking tub with floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the vines, a floating king bed and all the mod cons. 377 California Rd, Tatachilla, inkwellwines.com The Vineyard Retreat With six distinctive (including one fully accessible) self-contained guest houses, generously stocked with local provisions and complimentary minibars, and each with private decks, The Vineyard Retreat offers an excellent base for gourmet touring and its concierge services are perfect for those seeking insider’s guidance. Enjoy a soak in the retreat’s hot tub with panoramic views to the water. 165 Whitings Rd, Blewitt Springs, thevineyardmv.com.au  Clockwise from top left: inside The Granary’s bathroom and bedroom at the Old Chaff Mill; The Vineyard Retreat. 124 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
The Millery at the Old Chaff Mill.
A FARM-TO -TABLE CAFÉ I spend two weekends a month in Yeniköy, which is home to one of my favourite cafés: Apartıman. It’s run by four siblings. One brother is in charge of the restaurant, one sister is in charge of the morning menu and the other sister is in charge of the evening menu. They also have a farm in Kırklareli City, which is close to the Bulgarian border, that the second brother takes care of. Here, they grow ingredients for their restaurant and make amazing cheeses. FO O D F R O M H ATAY PR OVI NC E Çiya Sofrası is the restaurant that I have been visiting for the longest. Zeynep Abla, the chef and wife of owner Musa, is from my hometown. She remembers me coming to the restaurant with my mum when I was in secondary school – about 30 years ago. Whatever I was having there then, I am still having today; the quality hasn’t changed. I go there to eat seasonal home-cooking made with traditional recipes I grew up with. W H E R E IN D U STRY I NSI D E R S G O FO R KE B ABS Istanbul, Turkey From local lokantas to the best döner, chef MAKSUT AŞKAR shares his tips on where to eat and drink in Turkey’s largest city. N eolokal, chef Maksut Askar’s restaurant inside the SALT Galata museum, is one of Istanbul’s most exciting fine-diners and draws heavily on Askar’s southern Turkish heritage. Although Askar was born in Hatay – a province on Turkey’s Mediterranean coast – he has developed a strong understanding of the diversity of Anatolian cuisine. Best of all, he knows where to find these regional flavours in Istanbul. Prepare to have your Turkish food horizons broadened at these must-visit locations. 126 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R W H E R E WO RK E R S E AT AWAY FR O M H O ME In Istanbul, lokantas (cafeteria restaurants) are important. They are where working people go when home is far, because they’re the closest meal to feeling at home. This is an old tradition in Anatolia. When I’m at [my wine bar] Foxy, I go to a nearby lokanta called Nato Lokantası that’s been open since 1952. It makes daily specials, and what’s cool is that there are specific dishes made on specific days of the week, such as kadınbudu köfte (meatballs). PHOTOGRAPHY YEVGENIY11/ADOBE STOCK (ISTANBUL). A CHEF’S GUIDE TO… For kebabs, I go to one place and one place only: Adana Ocakbaşı. Most chefs and restaurateurs go there, so you know it’s a good place. I am not particularly fond of eating lamb chops or meat kebabs – I like offal, and Adana Ocakbaşı makes really good lamb testicles, hearts, liver, kidneys and sweetbreads.
A chef ’s guide CLO S E TO F I NE D I NI N G , FA R F R O M ISTA NBU L For kebabs, I go to one place and one place only: Adana Ocakbaşi. Most chefs go there, so you know it’s a good place. T HE ON LY C O CK TAI L B AR I GO TO Geyik in Cihangir is the only cocktail bar I go to. The owner is an amazing, brave woman who I admire a lot. She runs the coffee roastery and cocktail bar all on her own. She does the classics, plus her own inventions. The bar is super small with strictly outdoor seating, so everyone is on the sidewalk. For me, cocktails are divided into two categories: Negronis and the “others”. MY FAVO U R I TE DÖ N ER PHOTOGRAPHY BUKET YAŞAR (OD URLA). A V E RY T U RK I S H E X P E RI EN CE If I wanted to have a real-deal meyhane (wine bar) experience, I would go to İnciraltı Meyhanesi in Beylerbeyi on the Asian side. It offers some very old meyhane recipes, such as papaz yahnisi (priest’s stew). Now it’s bonito season, and bonito is not fatty enough to grill so it’s perfect for this dish, made with lots of onions, bay leaves, garlic, sometimes tomatoes, allspice and a bit of cinnamon. Another meyhane I go to is Asmalı Cavit in Beyoğlu. It’s got a great vibe, the tables are close to each other and it feels very local. Everyone has their favourite döner. It’s a matter of personal taste. I like tail fat and the taste of lamb. There’s this guy, Dönerci Engin, who has been making döner for 35 years. He learned it from his father and he’s from a city called Erzurum, which is famous for its döners. The herbs he uses in the meat marinade are unique and different from others. I go there at least once a week. They have the option of lavash (thin flatbread), somun (country bread) or flatbread. We don’t call it flatbread in Turkey: we call it pide or tombik, which means “chubby”. If you’re looking for something close to fine dining in Izmir, try OD Urla – they serve 500 people a night. I say “close to” because there’s no way you can do finedining and accommodate such a number. Still, what chef-owner Osman Sezener does is incredible. I love him. He works like a mad person and the crew he works with is just amazing.  Clockwise from top left: the modern interiors at OD Urla; chef Osman Sezener; sahlep ice-cream with hazelnut and pear at OD Urla; beyin tava (fried brains) at İnciraltı Meyhanesi. ME MO R I ES OF MY MOTH ER’S C O OK ING I don’t really crave sweets, but when I do it’s usually traditional desserts that my mother makes. Lades Menemen in Beyoğlu only makes egg dishes and dairy desserts, like the famous chicken custard, ekmek kadayıfı (bread pudding) and kataifi (a type of vermicelli baklava). I go there for breakfast and whenever I crave rice pudding made the way my mum makes it. They’ve been serving all-day breakfast for almost 50 years. As told to Jessica Rigg for The Local Tongue. For more chef’s guides from around the world, see thelocaltongue.com G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 127
Escape to paradise 128 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
The view from Vora in Santorini. Opposite: the pool at White Pebble Suites on Milos. A new wave of openings has hit the coastlines of the Mediterranean to redefine luxury. ANNA MCCOOE discovers the latest and greatest line-up of what we’ve been missing. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 129
L ight blue water, white-washed buildings, bronzed bodies, golden beaches. The Mediterranean is more than the glittering basin between southern Europe and North Africa; it’s an aesthetic trigger. So harmonious is the sun-bleached colour palette to the eye, that mere memories switch the brain to holiday mode, suspending the senses in a glorious state where the full spectrum of the human experience pares back to in-the-moment bliss. Ah the Med, it’s been a while. But, while Australia had our walls up, the operators in this sunseekers’ paradise have upped the ante on their luxury tourism offering. Old properties were renovated, new terroirs were claimed by prestigious hotel brands, and modernday themes of sustainability and wellness have rippled through the coastline. All the while, we hung framed pictures of umbrella-lined beach bars on our walls, cooked the region’s cuisines and longingly tracked their Covid vaccine rollout. Now that we’re ready to go, it’s time to catch up on what we’ve missed. Soho Roc House, Mykonos, Greece Between the thumping beach clubs of Paraga and Paradise beach, the members-only group’s first foray into Greece is the antidote to overtourism – if you can get in. One of the few good things to come out of 2020, the exclusive British brand took over San Giorgio hotel and legendary Scorpios beach club, just a short barefoot stroll up the beach, where Soho House and Soho Friends members staying at the hotel can skip the queue. Back at the 44-bedroom hotel, the look fuses Cycladic white plaster exteriors with bohemianchic rattan and reed and Soho-certified comforts (Shoreditch Grind espresso pods and Cowshed toiletries). The pool is lined with sun lounges, but the best dipping is directly into the Aegean via the private jetty. Bookings require a Soho House membership ($2630 annually) or Soho Friends membership (around $180 annually) which prioritises people in creative industries. From $326 per night (Soho House) and $435 per night (Soho Friends), sohohouse.com Six Senses Ibiza, Spain A waft of incense from the shamanic smoke cleansing ceremony that greets guests on arrival confirms it: altruism is the new hedonism on this Balearic island. Opening to guests in July 2021, the newly minted Six Senses outpost is embedded into the cliffs of Cala Xarraca Bay, at the quiet northern tip of Ibiza. A temple of wellness and sustainability, the resort is dotted with massage catacombs, yoga pavilions and organic gardens, which service both the spa and four in-house restaurants. The 116 guest accommodations include townhouses, pool suites and beachfront caves. All this is proclaimed in the hotel literature to provide “a meaningful setting for deep spiritual experiences rooted in the local culture”. We know this is also a soothing place to nurse an Ibiza-grade hangover. From $865 per night, sixsenses.com ➤ 130 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
PHOTOGRAPHY SOHO ROC HOUSE. The pool at Soho Roc House overlooks the Aegean Sea. Opposite, clockwise from top: spectacular ocean caves at Six Senses Ibiza; the Cycladic white façade of Soho Roc House is pure Mykonos. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 131
One&Only Portonovi, Montenegro With a 238-berth superyacht marina and helipad, Portonovi has been making a play as “the new Riviera”. One&Only’s arrival in May 2021 cements this status as a playground for the haves and have yachts. Built from scratch along 1.2 kilometres of the Adriatic Sea, the portfolio’s first European property, also marks a new era of luxury on the untapped white beaches of the former Yugoslavia. The Balkan beauty hits all the hallmarks of modern luxury: a spa and wellness program by Chenot, Michelin-starred chefs, and architecture that puts a chic new twist on the region’s old Venetian palaces. From $770 per night, oneandonlyresorts.com The Experimental, Menorca, Spain When this next-gen luxury retreat opened in 2019 it was a hot contender on every design obsessive’s bucket list – just before everything paused. Now it’s back and buzzier than ever. Built on 30 hectares in the footprint of a 19th century finca, the 43-room hotel taps into the global agrotourism trend to serve up horse riding, pottery classes and food sourced from the hotel’s own garden. And still the setting is Instagram-ready. Interior designer Dorothée Meilichzon has created a fun luxury haven in fresh pastel hues and clean, curved lines. From $291 per night, menorcaexperimental.com Domes of Corfu, Autograph Collection, Corfu, Greece New to Glyfada beach on Corfu’s west coast, Domes of Corfu is a bohemian 233-room resort, which holds the secret to a successful family holiday: it has places to be together and apart. There are four new restaurants, a spa, an adults-only pool, two more pools, Montessori-inspired crèche and kids’ clubs and teen zone. Previously known as the Louis Grand Hotel, the five-star hotel was privy to a large-scale sustainable refurb through the slowdown to reopen under Marriott’s luxe banner in September 2021. From $234 per night, marriott.com ➤ 132 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R Above: subdued interiors at The Experimental in Menorca; Right: an infinity pool at Kalesma in Mykonos. PHOTOGRAPHY KAREL BALAS (THE EXPERIMENTAL) & YIORGOS KORDAKIS (KALESMA). Kalesma, Mykonos, Greece For all the international chains colonising the coast, hot new hotel Kalesma is elevating the Mykonos luxury scene, Greek style. Opened in May 2021, this Cycladic paradise above Ornos Bay is founded on the local concept of authentic “philoxenia”, which literally means “love of the foreign” but is deeply rooted in Greek culture to express open-armed hospitality. With just two villas and 25 suites, each with its own infinity-edge pool, the hyper-local property was built on generations-old family land to include a sunset lounge and one of Greece’s most hotly anticipated restaurants, Pere Ubu. From $2022 per night, kalesmamykonos.com
PHOTOGRAPHY GEORGE FAKAROS (DOMES OF CORFU). The main pool at One&Only Portonovi in Montenegro; and a superyacht available for charter; a suite at Domes of Corfu.
Villa Igiea, Gulf of Palermo, Italy An old hotel made new, this Sicilian glamazonian nabbed the best spot on the coast in the 19th century when it was built as a private home. After a pandemic-era renovation, the palazzo reopened in June 2021 under the hotelier Rocco Forte banner. On the food and beverage front, the Florio Restaurant offers refined Sicilian fare while the Terrazza Bar Igiea and the Alicetta Pool Bar are more relaxed. From $621 per night, roccofortehotels.com Concepció by Nobis, Palma, Spain Fusing Scandi design with deep Spanish roots, this boutique hotel in a mid-16th century former soap factory is pure eye candy, designed by Swedish architects Wingårdhs. More about local flavour than beach, the 31-room boutique hotel is situated at the junction between the Old Town and hipster hood, Santa Catalina. The in-house restaurant, bar and lounge weave together locals and tourists while the guest-only pool is the place to soak up the atmosphere. From $321 per night, concepciobynobis.com 134 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
Vora, Santorini, Greece Vora is a “micro hotel” of three cave-like villas carved into the cliffs over the Aegean. Architects K Studio didn’t dare compete with the volcanic views over the caldera at sunset. Instead, muted colours and natural textures harmonise with nature. The serenity extends to the hospitality approach, which is intimate and individual and includes access to private chefs, chauffeurs, in-suite massage services and yachts for charter. The tiny haven isn’t new, it’s been operating since 2018, but 2022 will see a fourth villa complete the vision. From $1290 per night, voravillas.com White Pebble Suites, Milos, Greece The topographically blessed island of Milos has a new haven of cool for travellers seeking a sophisticated barefoot scene. Opened by Greek-Australian trio Lefka Georgantis, Helen Logas and Aphrodite Lambrou, White Pebble Suites on the waterfront of Pollonia, is the culmination of a dream. The trio engaged Athens-based KKMK Architects to pair their Antipodean expectations with a local spirit. They responded with sculptural Cycladic minimalism featuring curved cement and built-in furniture across 12 rooms. From $358 per night, whitepebblesuites.com The topographically blessed island of Milos has a new haven of cool for travellers seeking a sophisticated barefoot scene. The Rooster’s tranquil setting on Antiparos. Clockwise from top right: sun lounges by the pool at White Pebble Suites on Milos; an aerial view of its Cycladic minimalist design. Opposite: the pool and restaurant at Concepció by Nobis in Palma. The Rooster, Antiparos, Greece The antithesis of neighbouring party palaces, Antiparos is a short ferry from Paros but too far for most fly-and-flop party seekers. Therein lies its charm. At the heart of the non-action is The Rooster on Livadia Beach, which is all about slow living. The wellness resort is centred around yoga, healing rooms and farm-to-table dining with 17 individual houses, each with a private pool and Aegean views for days. From $680 per night, theroosterantiparos.com ● G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 135
CHECKING IN The Tasman, Hobart We take the guesswork out of local travel with our tips on where to stay, eat, drink and play. This month, GT heads to Tasmania. S T A Y Quick look 136 The newest addition to Hobart’s burgeoning luxury accommodation line-up is The Tasman, a boutique hotel with 152 rooms spread over three buildings spanning three centuries. The sandstone-walled St Mary’s Hospital was built in 1847 and now houses stylish suites with vaulted ceilings, a fireplace and freestanding tubs as well as the sexy cocktail bar, Mary Mary, and the light and airy Peppina restaurant. Art deco influences are evident in the rooms within the former government offices building, built in 1939, while luxurious modernity reigns in the newly built Pavilion wing. There are 270-degree views encompassing kunanyi (Mount Wellington) to the harbourfront and the River Derwent, plus a line-up of Tasmanian partners (including Lark Distillery and House of Arras) for minibar provisions. The Tasman is the first of Marriott’s Luxury Collection hotels to launch in Australia and is located within walking distance of many of Hobart’s attractions. marriott.com.au G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R Where 12 Murray St, Hobart, Tas Facilities Prices from $398 per night for a standard room. Gym Yes Restaurant/Bar Yes 24hr concierge Yes Free Wifi Yes WORDS ALIX DAVIS. PHOTOGRAPHY ALPEGOR/STOCK.ADOBE.COM. Hobart, Ta s
E X P L O R E Checking in Discover Tasmania’s stunning sea cliffs – the tallest in the southern hemisphere – with a Pennicott boat tour of the Tasman Peninsula. In addition to the breathtaking scenery, there’s the chance of spotting dolphins, seals and whales. Drive yourself to the meeting point and you can also visit Port Arthur for an imaginatively curated insight into Australia’s convict past. pennicottjourneys.com.au Clockwise from left: Aløft’s dining room; stracciatella with wood-roasted peppers at Osteria Vista; The Tasman’s Heritage Suite; the Tasman Peninsula. Opposite: Hobart Harbour. O F T O W N Spend an afternoon gazing at the bluffs of the east coast while enjoying uniquely Tasmanian cuisine at Van Bone. Hyper-local ingredients are expertly handled by chef Tim Hardy who almost exclusively uses a wood-fired oven and grill to create the 13-course set menu that focuses on sustainability as well as big flavours. The purpose-built restaurant is a thing of beauty, as are the ever-expanding kitchen gardens. vanbone.com.au E A T PHOTOGRAPHY FELIPE DARIN (ALØFT), DEARNA BOND (OSTERIA VISTA), ADAM GIBSON (THE TASMAN) & ANDREW MERRY/GETTY IMAGES (TASMAN PENINSULA). O U T BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER Start the day in-house with Peppina’s Italian-inspired breakfast grazing table featuring charcuterie, fresh fruit and a selection of ever-changing hot dishes or cross the street for baked eggs with creamed Cygnet mushrooms and house-made sourdough or a fresh pastry from the all-day menu at Daci & Daci Bakers. On a sunny day (or even if it’s not) head to Room for a Pony in North Hobart for a Chinese fried chilli omelette. Berta in the CBD offers sophisticated breakfast and lunch options in a small but bright shopfront dining room. Fill up on a Littlewood lamb roll or enjoy a sticky pork belly salad with chilli, mint and cucumber. On Fridays don’t miss whatever Analiese Gregory is cooking at Lucinda. Want to head out of town? Lunch at Osteria Vista at the Stefano Lubiana winery is a taste of Tuscany in the Derwent Valley. In-house at Peppina, chef Massimo Mele serves up sophisticated seasonal takes on the Italian classics he grew up with in Naples, including his mother’s ricotta torta. Institut Polaire, just across the road is a wine bar-cum-bistro that makes its own wine (you’ll find it in the minibar in your room) and gin as well as serving excellent bar snacks and meals. Aløft at the Brooke Street Pier offers contemporary Asian flavours in a sleek Scandi setting with water views. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 137
La dolce For an island nation, Australia’s boating culture is a far cry from anything you’ll find in Europe. But if you know where to look there are still stylish ways to get out on the water, writes ALEX CARLTON. vita PHOTOGRAPHY THOMAS JASTRAM/ADOBE STOCK. Photography PHILLIP CASTLETON 138 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
JORDAN KRETCHMER WEARS AJE BONJOUR BELTED DRESS IN PALM GREEN. S ydney’s usual mid-afternoon breeze is swaying the shoreside eucalypts and chopping the bottle-green waves as our ride pulls up at the Birchgrove jetty in the city’s inner west. Our skipper, Daniel Da Silva, expertly guides our vessel, La Dolce Vita, alongside the weathered white pylons. He looks the part in a crisp shirt and striped epaulettes. Da Silva may be pulling the levers and turning the wheel but the boat itself is the real star of the scene. La Dolce Vita is a classic Italian speedboat, complete with polished chrome accents. The 26-foot Comitti Portofino runabout was built in 2002 from a single African mahogany log and imported to Australia from its birthplace on Lake Como. Similar models, usually made by the better-known brand Riva, swept Brigitte Bardot around the Gulf of Naples in 1963’s Le Mépris, and acted as a getaway vehicle for the female leads in the 1967 caper Deadlier Than the Male. They’ve appeared in so many James Bond films they’re practically a character. Our mission today, if we “The Mediterranean choose to accept it, is to find is naturally calmer out whether we can capture a little Italian water magic than our wild on Sydney Harbour. oceans… the winds For a land that’s girt by can be brutal.” sea, Australia doesn’t seem to have the sort of boating culture we associate with Mediterranean countries. One yacht charter insider notes that Australia’s maritime and environmental regulations make things difficult; you aren’t allowed to pull up to an Australian beach and throw on a barbecue like you can around the coast of Italy, France or Greece, and our shorelines aren’t dotted with beach clubs or amenity-packed marinas waiting to welcome recreational seafarers. Plus, the Mediterranean is naturally calmer than our wild oceans. “The Whitsundays give you some sheltered islands to duck into but other than that charter yachting isn’t like it is on the Med; the winds can be brutal,” the insider shared. But perhaps that’s not a bad thing. After years of Covid lockdown, the Med is reportedly so packed with boats you can practically cross countries by leaping from deck to deck. More superyachts clogged the waterway in the 2021 European summer season than ever before. Charters were up 340 per cent, a rep from brokerage firm YachtLife Technologies told Bloomberg. In July 2021, according to the Financial Times, there were 834 superyachts bouncing round the waters of ➤ Exploring Sydney Harbour aboard Italian speedboat La Dolce Vita.
PHOTOGRAPHY STEVE BACK (FRONT OF BOAT). A day on La Dolce Vita can be punctuated with prosecco, picnics and gelato. Opposite: Shark Beach in Vaucluse. Greece, 945 in France and 1353 in Italy, which is way ahead of previous years. Our stout little ferries, cheesy harbour cruises and cringeworthy party boats are not examples of Australia putting its best boat forward, but it’s still possible to capture a little bit of European elegance on the water. As the wind whips my hair – I should’ve gone for a Sophia Loren-style headscarf – we power towards our first stop: the pretty hidden cove of Lavender Bay on Sydney’s north shore. The sheltered bay is dotted with moored sail boats and lined with everything from modern, clean-lined mansions to whitewashed wooden boathouses. We clamber ashore where an Italian picnic has been set up for us; a selection of cheeses, cured meats and prosecco, laid out by To Dine For, one of the many luxury pop-up picnic providers that have ridden the picnic craze spurred by the end of lockdown. It’s not exactly the same as charcoaling whole sardines over olive wood on a remote island in the Cyclades; but, our position beside the shimmery views of the Opera House, Harbour Bridge and Luna Park is still a waterfront view that’s the envy of the world. After, we head back on board to buzz around to Barangaroo for classic, velvet scoops at Rivareno Gelato: pistachio made with nuts from Sicily and sorbetto cioccolato, a sorbet that’s rich with bitter dark chocolate. La Dolce Vita can also be hired for restaurant transfers – for a little slice of Amalfi in Sydney, we could have chosen to pull up to a mooring outside Otto at Woolloomooloo or Ormeggio at The Spit. It’s breezy. It’s pretty. And while Covid rules and restrictions still make Europe a tricky proposition for Australians, it’s a worthy stand-in. Are we on the Riviera? No. But as far as messing around in boats go, it’s a pretty nice way to get a little taste of the sweet life. 140 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R
M ORE TO Our stout little ferries, cheesy harbour cruises and cringeworthy party boats are not examples of Australia putting its best boat forward. RE EX P LO 1. The Huon River, Tas, on Danish wooden ketch Yukon 3. The Kimberley, WA, on boutique adventure boat True North If you’re interested in boat-talk, then you’ll want to know that the Yukon is a 22-metre pole-masted gaff-rigged ketch. If you’re not, all that matters is that this is an extraordinarily beautiful sailing boat. Originally built in the town of Fredrikshavn on the Jutland peninsula, Denmark, in 1930, she underwent a loving restoration between 1997 and 2004. She now takes passengers around Tassie’s Huon Valley, including trips to Bruny Island and long lunch charters in collaboration with Fat Pig Farm. Be quick, she’s earmarked to disappear on a round-the-world voyage in mid-2022. yukon-tours.com.au The beauty of this luxury expedition ship is that, at just 50 metres and sleeping 36 passengers, she can explore untouched corners of Australia’s western wilderness that other vessels cannot. The Kimberley Waterfalls adventure begins in Broome and includes a visit to the famous Horizontal Falls. The ship navigates the Prince Regent and Hunter Rivers and guests can hunt for mud crabs, barramundi and black-lip oysters in pristine waterways away from the crowds. truenorth.com.au 2. The Murray River, SA, on houseboat The Floathouse “The Hawkesbury is a bit of a hidden gem,” says Christina James from superyacht hire group Yotspace. Their six-night Hawkesbury River voyage on the 10-guest Corroboree begins in Sydney and includes a visit to the Hawkesbury River Pearl Farm and exploration of sites of significant Indigenous heritage around Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park. And unlike other charter companies, Yotspace journeys can be booked by the cabin as well as exclusive hire. yotspace.com  PHOTOGRAPHY OLIVER STREWE/GETTY IMAGES.. This is a boat trip for those who don’t want any part of the actual boating bit. It’s a charming-yet-luxe stationary houseboat that’s moored at the river town of White Sands, an hour’s drive south-east of Adelaide. The boat sleeps two and includes a barbecue, kitchenette and a swim deck if you want to cool off in the tea-brown waters of the Murray. airbnb.com.au 4. The Hawkesbury River, NSW, on superyacht Corroboree
A G o ur m e t Tr av e lle r p r o m o t i o n Gourmet shopping They’re the flavours of the month, so put these items at the top of your wish list. 1 Harvey Norman DéLonghi Coffee Machine connects to the Coffee Link app via wifi for beverage personalisation – you can set your preferred aroma level, milk quantity and temperature, plus access new recipes. RRP $2199, harveynorman.com.au 4 Krosno’s Avant-Garde collection boasts clean lines and tapered silhouettes. This crisp, contemporary glassware range includes wine, champagne, tumbler and martini glasses. Available in sets of six from $49.95, krosno.com.au 7 Liebherr’s newest addition, the Monolith Wine Cabinet, accommodates 100 Bordeaux bottles across three individual temperature zones. It’s the perfect built-in solution for a discerning wine connoisseur. From $16,490, home.liebherr.com.au 2 Zebrano With all-embracing styles and sizes from 14 to 24, Zebrano’s collection covers a wide spectrum of looks from gorgeously gothic to feminine and flirty, in beautiful, touchable fabrics that will make your heart sing. zebrano.com.au 5 Happy Happy Foods create delicious, plant-based products that are happier for you and happier for the environment. Their premium plant-based milks complement espresso for a smoother-tasting latte. eatdrinkhappyhappy.com 8 Traeger Grills The Ironwood 885 grill uses WiFIRE technology so you can adjust your grill anytime, anywhere from the Traeger app on your phone. It starts quicker, heats up faster, and puts out better smoke. RRP $2899.95, seabreezesupply.co/our-grills 3 Abercrombie & Kent Embark on the luxury expedition cruise of a lifetime to extraordinary Antarctica, where towering icebergs and massive glaciers showcase flawless beauty. From $18,770 per person, abercrombiekent.com.au 6 Banks & Solander Discover this boutique micro-distillery hidden in the back streets of Botany, NSW. Upgrade your cocktail experience with their award-winning gins, limoncello and coffee liqueur. RRP from $60, banksandsolander.com 9 Serendipity Keep your cool with frozen delights from Serendipity, producers of super premium ice-cream and dairy-free treats in a vast range of flavours. Includes gluten-free, vegan, kosher and halal. RRP $10.50, serendipityicecream.com.au
Gourmet Traveller Marketplace FOOD, WINE & ART , n, atio s mod ing clas m o k Acc & coo ailable av ng dini ckages a p What s for dinner? zestbyronbay.com.au 0400 417 711 • 6 Henry Lawson Dr Mudgee littlecookingschoolmudgee.com.au i ng L A llo, w nn d Wi ar Botany NSW on im ce Celebrate all year round with our gourmet crackers. banksandsolander.com @banksandsolander @banks_and_solander AM 19703/21 Rosella Namok River trees blossom 2021 Acrylic on linen 105 x 85cm TO ADVERTISE 0405 745 129 I HOMESTOLOVE.COM.AU/DIRECTORY Phone: 1300 411 342 Email: hello@byronbaycrackers.com @byronbaycrackers
Gourmet Traveller Marketplace ACCOMMODATION, FOOD & CLOTHING ŀijĻį°ąó°ˀijˉzŀįŔÓŗēįˉēèˉŢČÓijĻˉ9įÓÓĂˉèēēÏijˉ°ČÏˉŕóČÓʘˉ 1800 336 153 info@clementinesleepwear.com.au clementinesleepwear.com.au Handmade ceramics from Spain Elevate your home cooking and wellbeing with the best Mediterranean olive oils; Choose from medicinal Wild Olive Oil, unfiltered extra virgin olive oil Ladi Biosas, naturally infused EVOOs, multi-awarded Early Harvest olive oil Agourelaio and many more. View our full range of high quality extra virgin olive oils at www.GrecianPurveyor.com Call us: (02) 8916 6206 I Email us: info@GrecianPurveyor.com Trophy-winning dairy and non-dairy ice creams. Made using artisan techniques & premium natural ingredients. Our range includes gluten-free, vegan and Kosher. serendipityicecream.com.au A carbon-neutral Australian premium producer. KNIFE SHOP A U S T R A L I A We stock Australia’s largest range of KNIVES, AXES, CARVING TOOLS, SHARPENING PRODUCTS & ACCESSORIES. WWW.KNIFESHOPAUSTRALIA.COM.AU SHOP 2, 7 WOLVERHAMPTON ST, STAFFORD QLD 4053 (07) 3352 4550 RETAILER ENQUIRIES WELCOME TO ADVERTISE 0405 745 129 I HOMESTOLOVE.COM.AU/DIRECTORY www.sunpots.com.au 02 4847 5052 info@sunpots.com.au
Gourmet Traveller Marketplace ACCOMMODATION & FOOD MISSION BEACH holidays Where to stay... What to do in tropical paradise Located at the Gateway to McLaren Vale with sweeping views of the Onkaparinga Gorge, Victor’s Place is a destination restaurant and the home to Varney Wines. Our menu is carefully curated by Executive Chef Chris Bone to follow the seasons, sourcing produce from small local producers who share our ethos for quality & true flavour. currong.com.au Ph: ( 07) 4088 6699 www.missionbeachholidays.com.au Celebrate & enjoy the holidays with your 15% GT discount Open for Lunch and Dinner Reservations at victorsplace.com.au victorsplace.mclarenvale (use code GT15 @ checkout) Offer ends: January 31, 2022 CYGNET COAST HOUSE TASMANIA A little free range Berkshire pig farm, butchery & deli. We create artisan smallgoods & charcuterie with ethically raised tasty pork from our farm. Visit our website for our product range & delivery locations. bundarraberkshires.com.au bundarraberkshires Stay in luxury, architect designed accommodation on a totally private and tranquil peninsular, only a few minutes drive to the village of Cygnet. coasthousetasmania.com | stay@coasthousetasmania.com | Tel 0409 446 290 A new category of drinks available exclusively at SIMON JOHNSON We are very excited about returning to Italy next year! To celebrate, we are offering Gourmet Traveller readers a 10% discount for the duration of January on all bookings for both our guided and self-guided Italian tours which are made directly through Hidden Italy. Please mention Gourmet Traveller when booking. This is not available in conjunction with any other offer. The offer ends on 31 January. Please see contact details below: Matthew Jukes is a world-famous wine taster and writer, based in the UK, and he has worked in the wine trade _hkho^k,)r^Zkl' Made from carefully developed recipes using all of his olfactory and sensory expertise, Matthew has created and blended his drinks in order to take your senses to an entirely new and soothing ÜZohnk]^lmbgZmbhg'Ma^l^alcohol-free drinks show exquisite, \hfie^q%Zg]ZkhfZmb\\aZkZ\m^kl' Woollahra 55 Queen St NSW, Alexandria 24A Ralph St NSW Northbridge Plaza Shop 25, 79 - 113 Sailors Bay Rd NSW Toorak 471 Toorak Rd VIC, Subiaco 169 Rokeby Rd WA www.hiddenitaly.com.au Instagram/Facebook @simonjohnsonprovidore Twitter @simonprovidore www.simonjohnson.com TO ADVERTISE 0405 745 129 I HOMESTOLOVE.COM.AU/DIRECTORY
HOME . FASHION . BEAUTY Splash out Breezy home buys, poolside essentials, summer skincare and eye-catching ice buckets. 146 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R PHOTOGRAPHY ALANA LANDSBERRY. STYLING HANNAH BLACKMORE. STYLE
Home AU NATUREL MERCHANDISING CLAUDIA STEPHENSON. PHOTOGRAPHY LYNDEN FOSS (INTERIORS). Strip back the colour palette and create a sense of calm with cork, linen and shapely earthenware. FROM TOP Eternal artwork by Thomas Gouws, $1400 framed, Fenton & Fenton. Italian Murano glass lamp, $3800 for set of 2, The Vault Sydney. Artie Wave coffee table in Putty, $1605, GlobeWest. Ribbed terracotta vessel, $553, Casa Shop. Felix Arc 3 seater sofa in Snow, $6340, GlobeWest. Belgian washed linen long cushion, $80, Adairs. Totem candle holders in Golden Limestone, $140 for small, $180 for large, Fenton & Fenton. Allegra lounge chair in Sand Cotton, $1560, Satara. Sun Goddess sculpture by Nadia Robertson, $85, Fenton & Fenton. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 147
3 2 1 4 13 12 5 11 10 8 7 6 1 Christie Rise and Fall pendant in Bone China, $1448, Dunlin. 2 Arlo napkins in Soft Pink, $34.95 for 4, Salt & Pepper. 3 Alayna Cream and Gold Tribal Shag rug, from $250, Miss Amara. 4 Plissé electric kettle in White, $270, Alessi Australia. 5 24-piece MetroChic cutlery set in Stainless Steel, $799, Villeroy & Boch. 6 Kalinda leather barstool, $429, The Banyan Tree. 7 Aerin Lattea Medium vase, $495, Becker Minty. 8 Cappelen Dimyr No.10 rug, from $5550, Tigmi Trading. 9 Smeg Linea 600mm White Ceramic 4-burner gas cooktop, $2290, Harvey Norman. 10 Delonghi Lattissima One White Nespresso coffee machine, $449, Winning Appliances. 11 Fiskars Norden large cook’s knife, $189, Finnish Design Shop. 12 Organic White starter set, $199, Villeroy & Boch. 13 Asko 15-Place Setting Turbo Drying built-in dishwasher in White, $1599, Harvey Norman. 148 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R MERCHANDISING CLAUDIA STEPHENSON. 9
Home COUNTRY COOL ME I P I R AT IO N HO NS PHOTOGRAPHY MAREE HOMER. Rustic farmhouse meets modern minimalism in this white, bright and welcoming kitchen. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 149
Style 7 4 6 5 8 9 St ay White Pebble Suites, Milos White hot Keep cool in lightweight fabrics in the palest shades of blue and yellow. 3 15 2 1 10 11 14 12 13 150 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R MERCHANDISING SARAH STERN. 1 Isa Boulder Fickle underwire bikini top, $193, Matches Fashion. 2 Isa Boulder Course high-rise bikini briefs, $145, Matches Fashion. 3 Artesano Pinta grosgrain-trimmed straw hat, $299, Net-a-Porter. 4 Mustique organic linen dress in Canary, $595, Bondi Born. 5 Victoria Beckham belted pleated cloqué pants, $772, Net-a-Porter. 6 Alighieri The Unwinding Answer 24kt gold-plated necklace, $799, Matches Fashion. 7 Postcard belted jumpsuit, $1350, Zimmermann. 8 Khaite Indira pleated striped jacquard bralette, $687, Net-a-Porter. 9 Johanna Ortiz The Traveller wrap skirt, $643, Net-a-Porter. 10 Hibbert linen shirt in Bright Gold, $375, Orlebar Brown. 11 Jil Sander resin hoop earrings, $845, Farfetch. 12 Bulldog Blues Vendee stripe swim shorts, $475, Orlebar Brown. 13 The Row Meera slingback sandals, $1262, Net-a-Porter. 14 Muuñ Rosa G round basket bag, $221, Matches Fashion. 15 Loewe + Paula’s Ibiza sunglasses, $578, Net-a-Porter.
Pool side Lounge in style with these chic and playful summer essentials. PHOTOGRAPHY ALANA LANDSBERRY. STYLING AND MERCHANDISING LAUREN DE SOUSA. From top: Bianca visor in Natural/ Nougat Stripe, $195, Helen Kaminski. Drawstring summer shorts in Fruttivendelo Stripe, $220, Alex and Trahanas. Donna sunglasses in Water, $385, Lucy Folk. Paddle and ball set, $155, and pool towel in Seaside Cream, $59, The Beach People. Oli V-neck one piece in Lemon, $250, Sir The Label. Oasis strap leather ring sandal in White-Tan, $225, and Romy Raffia mini tote market bag in Natural-White, $195, Aje.
Beauty GLOW UP Create a radiant, sun-kissed glow with these bronzing beauties. ED IT E INTE IGENT TH LL 2 7 3 6 4 5 6 H I T T H E S P O T Bronzer defines your features. Even those with the cheekbones of Bella Hadid will benefit from a little dimension. Our pick for gentle contouring is Trinny London’s Cheekbones in Serena, $45 (1) – start at the hairline and extend to underneath the cheeks, then a dab at the temples too. 152 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R F E E L I N G G I L T Y A healthy glow can quickly veer into disco-ball if you layer without strategy. For times you want more radiance than colour, opt for Pai’s The Impossible Glow, $59 (6). It can be used as a glowy primer when applied where highlighter would ordinarily go, sinking into skin and delivering a gorgeous sheen. B A L A N C I N G A C T The trick to a flattering base is balance. Bronzer only comes into its own once you add a hit of rosy colour to the cheeks, and a little highlighter to catch the light. As a finishing touch, swipe Chanel Baume Essentiel Multi-Use Glow Stick in Or, $71 (5) just beneath your brow, cheekbones and even down your nose. WORDS BROOKE LE POER TRENCH. PHOTOGRAPHY ALANA LANDSBERRY. STYLING HANNAH BLACKMORE. A 1 sweep of bronzer in the right shade can give your complexion an instant pick-me-up. Of course, that’s also the trickiest part of this seemingly simple transaction: the shade. Get it right, and you’re dining companions will ask which island paradise you’ve just returned from. Your skin will have a gorgeous hit of warmth (without the sun damage) and you’ll quietly glow. However, like many base steps, bronzer can easily go wrong if the shade doesn’t suit your skin tone, resulting in a muddy wash that will do little for your complexion or confidence. To find the right match, avoid any bronzer that looks too orange, as the result will be unnatural. Instead, opt for a shade that’s one or two tones darker than your skin. As for favourite formulas, we’re spoilt for choice. For day-to-night, Kosas The Sun Show Moisturising Baked Bronzer, $48 (2) is talc-free with a sheen that makes you glow, not sparkle. The formula we have spied in many pro makeup artists’ kits is Nars Bronzing Powder in Laguna, $54 (7), because it blends so beautifully. For those who love a creamy formula that melts into skin, we can’t go past Chanel’s Healthy Glow Bronzing Cream, $91 (4) with a cream-to-gel finish. And finally, when we’re flitting here are there, Milk Makeup Matte Bronzer in Baked, $31 (3) is perfect for touch-ups.
1 Screen queens A hardworking sun defender will be the MVP of your skincare lineup this summer. 2 11 8 3 6 10 9 GT team favourite 7 PHOTOGRAPHY ALANA LANDSBERRY. STYLING & MERCHANDISING HANNAH BLACKMORE. 4 5 1 A primer, moisturiser and sun defender with a hydrating collagen boost, this 4-in-1 base is sure to become your new go-to. Naked Sundays SPF 50+ Collagen Glow crème, $34.95, Mecca. 2 Professed to be the MVP for a “lazy gal’s approach to SPF”, this is the sun safety all-rounder you need. Supreme Screen, $49, Ultra Violette. 3 With bioactive ingredients from aloe vera and cane sugar, UV damaged skin is gently soothed and repaired. Hydra-repair Intensive day cream,$90, Grown Alchemist. 4 An oil-free broad spectrum SPF, charged with vitamin E and glycerin for a healthy dose of moisture. Skin Shady 50+, $42, Tbh. 5 Australian owned and made, this fragrance-free lotion calms sun-drenched skin with Kakadu plum and aloe vera. Sensitive Body Milk, $24.95, We Are Feel Good Inc. 6 Keep it sun safe and sustainable with this 100% natural sunscreen that’s reef safe, water resistant and plastic free. Sunbutter sunscreen, $29.95, Go For Zero. 7 This ultra-protective cream uses micronised zinc technology to keep skin safe against UVA and UVB. Superstar® SPF 50+, $65, Liberty Belle. 8 Paraben, fragrance and chemical free UV defence that’s perfect for sensitive skin. Dr Dennis Gross, All-Physical Daily Defense UV Shield, $76, Mecca. 9 With vitamin E for nourishment and pycnogenol to fight free radicals and restore elasticity, this weightless cream is a hard-working hero. To Save Face, $42, Mecca. 10 A super absorbent, non-greasy gel for instant relief after too many rays. I Solari After Sun cream, $55, Santa Maria Novella. 11 Prevent sun damage with this dermatologically-tested mineral sunscreen. Invisible Zinc Sheer Defence, $34, Chemist Warehouse. G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R 153
Objects of desire Chill out Clockwise from top left: Lismore Nouveau ice bucket, $439, Waterford. Serax by Marie Michielssen concrete wine cooler, $475, Becker Minty. Mario Luca Giusti Antarctica ice bucket in Frost Blue, $300, Italian Luxury Group. Georg Jensen wine cooler, $220, David Jones. Ceramic wine cooler in Sea Green and Navy, $220, Alex and Trahanas. All other props stylist’s own. 154 G O U R M E T T R AV E L L E R PHOTOGRAPHY ALANA LANDSBERRY. STYLING LAUREN DE SOUSA. MERCHANDISING GEORGIE MEREDITH. For relaxed summer entertaining, keep one of these stylish ice buckets handy and always refill the ice trays.
T H E P E R F E C T G I F T TO I N S P I R E N E W A DV E N T U R E S AVA I L A B L E T O P U R C H A S E W H E R E A L L G O O D B O O K S A R E S O L D A N D AT A R E M E D I A B O O K S . C O M . A U In partnership with Southern Crossings, tailored luxury travel experiences southern-crossings.com