Going to Sydney soon for a few weeks on business (and they're trying to get me to relocate there... we'll see about that). Where should I eat besides Quay and Tetsuya's?

Sydney, Today
#1
Posted 05 April 2014 - 01:44 AM
Man about town.
#2
Posted 05 April 2014 - 02:31 AM
#3
Posted 20 April 2014 - 05:10 AM
Man about town.
#4
Posted 20 April 2014 - 11:13 AM
"This is a battle of who blinks first, and we've cut off our eyelids"
#5
Posted 20 April 2014 - 11:55 PM

Man about town.
#6
Posted 21 April 2014 - 01:11 PM
Everything I tried was well-made. Hot & sour soup, basically the platonic ideal. The soup dumplings were small compared to versions I've had elsewhere. The wrappers were very delicate, but somehow managed to not break. They were excellent. A chicken schnitzel with egg fried rice, also good. Worth a trip.
Man about town.
#7
Posted 23 April 2014 - 10:12 PM
Stitch is a basement-level prohibition-themed "speakeasy". It's kind of funny that other countries that never had prohibition have prohibition-themed bars. Anyway, nice atmosphere (lots of old sewing machines everywhere), decent enough drinks (for about $19 each - the going rate in Sydney), but this place definitely could not compare with the best in NYC.
Felix is a French brasserie owned by the same restaurant group that owns some other very popular places like Mr Chow and Palmer and Co. It looks a lot like Balthazar outside with the red awnings, but the similarities largely end there. King crab legs ($20 each) were fine, and served with an excellent condiment that was sort of like Russian dressing. The main, barramundi with pea & lardon salad, was maybe a little overdone. First time I've had barramundi - it's sort of like cod, but not as good (I thought it had a more assertive fishy flavor). Profiteroles for dessert hit the spot.
Man about town.
#8
Posted 25 April 2014 - 06:20 AM
Man about town.
#9
Posted 25 April 2014 - 11:58 AM
Would the surcharge be to offset their increased labour costs?
#10
Posted 25 April 2014 - 02:14 PM
But almost everywhere is happy with no-corkage BYO, right?
#11
Posted 26 April 2014 - 01:12 AM
But almost everywhere is happy with no-corkage BYO, right?
I don't think that's true anymore.
There are also a lot of bars that levy a 10% surcharge on weekends!
Man about town.
#12
Posted 26 April 2014 - 05:30 AM
Mr Wong's is a very popular big box Cantonese restaurant located in a back alley off Bridge Street in the CBD. It's the rare big box restaurant where the food is pretty good.
It's not easy to find. It's located in the back of a building on Bridge Street and you can barely see it from the sidewalk. The sign is tiny and stenciled onto the side of the building. The place is pretty big - seats 240 I think. They're known for their dim sum (not served at dinner except as a sampler), roast duck, and mud crab. I didn't try any of the above (but I may go back for the duck) - I ordered a snow crab salad ($19), steamed fish ($33 - blue cod I think), a bowl of rice, a martini and a manhattan (both very good).
Portions are rather dainty, but I wasn't terribly hungry anyway, hence the light order. Everything was well made. The crab salad was mixed with greens and also topped with salmon roe (or something that looked like it). The steamed fish was similar to any steamed fish you might get in Chinatown, but with a clearly much better fish and a way more flavorful sauce - this sauce was more oily (in a good way) and salty (also in a good way ) than your typical watery soy sauce and scallion-type sauce.
The food's very good, but pricey. You can easily spend $100-$200 (or more!) per person (plus a $7 fee for holiday service and a 1% credit card fee).
They also have mud crabs and spiny lobsters available from the tank for the "market price". If you have to ask the market price, you can't afford it. Prices for these live crustaceans like lobsters and crabs are punishingly expensive - not just at Mr Wong's, but anywhere in Sydney. The mud crab was around 130 $AUD per kilo (average specimen about 800g), the spiny lobster was over 200 $AUD per kilo. One lobster in Sydney costs more than the Le Bernardin chef's tasting menu - which often includes lobster.
Man about town.
#13
Posted 26 April 2014 - 09:44 PM
I wasn't terribly hungry anyway, hence the light order.
I didn't know whether to react to this sentence with incredulity or uproarious laughter.
So you pretty much have control over where you eat on this trip?
MF Old
#14
Posted 26 April 2014 - 10:12 PM

Man about town.
#15
Posted 26 April 2014 - 11:08 PM
The room is very nice - an art deco space with soaring ceilings. Reminded me of Eleven Madison Park, but not as great. Service was competent, but I think less attentive than you'd expect in NYC. But they give you bread and water!
The appetizer was a sampler of four crudos ($32), the best of which was a scampi ceviche. The others were just OK - although the fish was of good quality. One was an "ocean trout", one looked like akami, the other I'm not sure - some sort of white fish.
I ordered "lamb chops and cutlets" ($52) as my main, with a side of carrots. The carrots ($9) were prepared extremely simple - boiled, and covered in butter. They were excellent though.
I take issue with the lamb, and I think this is a cultural issue with the way Australians like to cook meat because I encountered this at another place. Australians seem to like their steaks cut about half as thick as you'd get in a good steakhouse in NYC, and they cook them to death. If you order something medium-rare, it will come out at least two levels of doneness higher. And so it was with the lamb. (They call lamb chops "cutlets" here.)
The dessert was a black forest trifle ($25), apparently inspired by a dessert at The Fat Duck. It was terrific.
Comped a glass of wine.
Man about town.