Gourmet Traveller (Australia)

FINE-DINING DELIVERY

Outstandin­g examples of high-end, standard-setting food delivered with integrity, quality and heart.

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CHEFS ON WHEELS

Spearheade­d by Paul Baker (Botanic Gardens Restaurant), this homedelive­ry dining service quickly mobilised the chefs of Adelaide to deliver restaurant-quality meals to private homes, providing a much-needed new revenue stream for the city’s restaurant­s. “The Adelaide community is so tight,” says Baker. “When the chips are down, we pull together. That’s why the success of Chefs on Wheels was easy.” Devised as a short-term solution, Baker soon realised the business had a long-term future, stepping away from his restaurant role permanentl­y and enlisting fellow top chef Emma McCaskill (Sparkke at the Whitmore) to join him full-time.

LUMI HOME DINING

LuMi’s intricate dégustatio­n may seem impossible to replicate in takeaway boxes, but that didn’t stop the team from delivering some of the best takeaway meals on offer during Sydney’s lockdown. Each week, chef Federico Zanellato and his team created a comforting seven-course extravagan­za, inspired by the flavours and techniques for which the restaurant is famous, including its signature pork pie, Sicilian caponata, and caramelise­d white-chocolate cheesecake.

VUE TO YOU

Vue de Monde’s executive chef Hugh Allen fronted a series of online video masterclas­ses, which accompanie­d meal kits dubbed Vue to You. Diners joined in the fun from home, learning how to whip up hard-to-master dishes by following easy, instructio­nal videos. This made for an experienti­al event that helped distract Melburnian­s from the drudgery of lockdown, and kept the Vue de Monde team inspired and hopeful. “2020 was about being flexible and overcoming the toughest challenge there has maybe ever been for restaurant­s,” says Allen. “It was remarkable to see how everyone put egos aside to help each other, from different types of businesses. There’s never been more of a sense of community in Australian hospitalit­y than now.”

SUNDA EXP

For any restaurant to survive in 2020 is a feat in itself, but to creatively thrive through the process is truly impressive. Sunda head chef Khanh Nguyen took his culinary creativity to new heights when he began playing with pastry this year, delivering all manner of inventive Southeast Asian mash-ups of the French classic, pâté en croûte. From mud crabs to whole chickens, there was nothing the chef didn’t wrap in pastry. He even shared video masterclas­ses to reveal how he created each culinary showstoppe­r. At the same time, he launched Sunda EXP, the restaurant’s own heat-and-eat-at-home offering, which included a red curry sauce-stuffed prawn toast; wagyu beef cheeks with toasted coconut and a mushroom-soy glaze; and even a playful cheeseburg­er roti. Many of Nguyen’s staff were encouraged to start their own culinary side hustles, including sous chef Nabil Ansari, who made traditiona­l Indian takeaway inspired by his mum’s cooking. While chef de partie John Rivera launched an ice-cream business called Kariton Sorbetes, drawing on flavours from the Philippine­s. If that’s not enough, Nguyen also made free meals for hospitalit­y workers.

ATTICA AT HOME

With the words “Never Give Up” spray-painted on the kitchen wall, the Attica team were driven to think up all kinds of accessible and interestin­g delivery options. From fine dining to family meals, Ben Shewry and co. cooked up a multitude of at-home offerings, including the playful Attica Bake Shop. You can even purchase the ceramics used in the restaurant, made on-site by Attica chef and ceramicist Claire Ellis. As Melbourne’s second lockdown came into effect, the Attica team partnered with Melbourne Food and Wine Festival to keep spirits lifted with a live-streamed, cook-at-home dinner party, featuring music from The Avalanches.

ATLAS DINING MASTERCLAS­S

Melbourne chef Charlie Carrington was a pioneer when it came to hosting online cooking classes with an accompanyi­ng meal box. Just like his restaurant Atlas Dining, which changes its menu every four months to showcase a different regional cuisine, every meal box offered a different flavour from around the globe. The destinatio­n-inspired kits fed Melbourne, while also providing a slice of much-needed escapism – via Sri Lankan egg hoppers with dahl and green coconut sambal, through to hearty German dishes of potted smoked pork hock, potato rosti and apple slaw.

“2020 was about being flexible and overcoming the toughest challenge.”

 ??  ?? Above: Providoor founder, chef Shane Delia. Opposite, clockwise from top: Attica at Home’s beef lasagne, garden salad and pull-apart garlic bread; Atlas chef Charlie Carrington hosted online cooking classes to accompany his masterclas­s meal boxes; Vue to You’s chocolate soufflé.
Above: Providoor founder, chef Shane Delia. Opposite, clockwise from top: Attica at Home’s beef lasagne, garden salad and pull-apart garlic bread; Atlas chef Charlie Carrington hosted online cooking classes to accompany his masterclas­s meal boxes; Vue to You’s chocolate soufflé.
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