Good

Good Local

The place to go for brunch in Christchur­ch, where the menu is refreshing­ly original, challengin­g perception­s on every front.

- Words and photograph­y Tania Seward

Hello Sunday, Canterbury

For many of us, Sunday is a day of rest. Bookended by busy Saturday and frantic Monday, Sunday signals the end of the week and a chance to catch our breath before getting back on the treadmill. It’s the ideal day for brunch – and luckily for Cantabrian­s, there’s a place in Sydenham that specialise­s in brunch.

Hello Sunday has its origins in the 2011 Christchur­ch earthquake. Local therapists Yasmeen Clark and Jonathan Spark were looking for new premises to house their Pascha wellness centre when they stumbled across two heritage buildings side by side in Sydenham.

Around the same time, local hospitalit­y aficionado­s Chris Penny and Sam Stewart were mulling over the idea of introducin­g a brunch restaurant to the Christchur­ch café scene. Spark offered them the use of one of the heritage buildings and Hello Sunday was born.

What was a post office in the 1870s and a Sunday school in the 1920s is now a fully renovated café-cum-restaurant with full table service. The ceramic tiles that line the counter date back to the early 19th century and were sourced from demolition yards. Wooden church pews that line one wall were rescued from head chef Stewart’s father’s church, which was badly damaged in the earthquake­s.

Co-owner and café manager Chris Penny has a simple answer when asked what makes Hello Sunday stand out from the crowd.

“It’s simply the food,” he explains. “We’ve always considered ourselves to be a brunch restaurant as opposed to a café. We’ve brought chefs with restaurant background­s into a position where they have the freedom to transform what people perceive as brunch.”

That’s not to say that you can’t get an eggs benny – that’s a menu staple, along with world-famous-in- Christchur­ch cinnamon brioche. But the Japanese crêpe (featuring kewpie mayo), chipotle scrambled eggs and pretzel rolls start to push the boundaries of what we traditiona­lly consider to be brunch food.

The menu changes several times a year, and Penny conservati­vely estimates that they would have created more than 100 different dishes since opening in early 2014.

Supporting local business has been a priority for Hello Sunday since its inception. The salmon on the eggs benedict comes from the Akaroa Harbour, the bacon is free-range from a butchery in Edgeware and the coffee is from Christchur­ch roastery Switch Espresso.

It’s fair to say that the locals have embraced the concept of a brunch restaurant, with the line often reaching out the door in the weekends. Hello Sunday also scooped up Best Café, People’s Choice and the Supreme Establishm­ent awards at the 2016 Christchur­ch Hospitalit­y Awards. Hello Sunday 6 Elgin Street, Christchur­ch (03) 260 1566 Opening hours: 7.30 - 4.30 Monday to Friday; 8.30 - 4.30 Saturday and Sunday.

 ??  ?? Left: Worth going, if only for the brioche. Above: Gin & Lime Cured Salmon from the fresh spring menu Far left: Co- owner and manager of Hello Sunday, Chris Penny Left: Reclaimed 19th century ceramic tiles line the counter.
Left: Worth going, if only for the brioche. Above: Gin & Lime Cured Salmon from the fresh spring menu Far left: Co- owner and manager of Hello Sunday, Chris Penny Left: Reclaimed 19th century ceramic tiles line the counter.

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