Gourmet Traveller (Australia)

GATSBY GLAM

Andrew McConnell’s polished new bar diner is a place to linger for bistro classics, writes MICHAEL HARDEN.

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Atip when eating at Gimlet: don’t neglect dessert. Even if you’re “not really a dessert person” (whatever that means) the sweet stuff here – achingly pretty pastel-coloured gelato, house-made, topped with sugared rose petals, in flavours like white peach or Champagne or maybe wood-grilled apricots basted in caramel and served with a rich, silky almond cake and marzipan-y apricot kernel gelato – is worth the battle for a reservatio­n alone.

Gimlet’s the kind of place you want to linger so dessert’s a good excuse, though having a crack at the inventive, detail-obsessed cocktail list (there’s an olive flight accompanyi­ng their martini) is another worthy option.

It’s a gorgeous room, a clever conversion of a cavernous 1920s space that pays tribute to the lovely bones without descending into period drag. Sure, there are tiles, rippled glass and upholstere­d stools at the central bar, but there are also light fittings that are more ’60s than ’20s, horseshoe booths and a wall of modern-day dark grey tiles that frames the open kitchen. It’s a room with a been-here-forever vibe, the sort where you’d have a favourite table, perhaps on the raised tier that runs around the outside of the room and has superb sightlines.

The room’s design might channel a classic big-city American version of a Parisian bistro but the menu is quintessen­tially Melburnian and vintage Andrew McConnell. McConnell and head chef Allan Doert Eccles keep European bistro as spiritual guide but rearrange that story with non-classic ingredient­s (the seaweed butter that accompanie­s oysters, for example) and sometimes complex technique.

Good gnocco fritto are topped with dark crimson, deep-flavoured bresaola. Slices of excellent saucisson come scattered with Sicilian olives. A superb confit duck salad (the duck boned, panko-crumbed and fried) comes with fresh and pickled figs, pickled elderberri­es and pieces of rye toast slathered with duck liver parfait.

A pack-leading roast chicken is flavoured with vadouvan sauce and fried curry leaves while vegetable dishes, like a charred gem lettuce given Caesar treatment with anchovy, egg, garlic and guanciale dressing, take centre stage rather than supporting roles.

Not surprising­ly, given Gimlet’s an Andrew McConnell joint, the wine list, from the talented Leanne Altmann, embraces mostly small producers across the natural-traditiona­l spectrum. There are few bargains but many surprises. Ask questions because the wine service – the service generally – is spot on.

It’s a good way to describe Gimlet. Order dessert and linger.

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 ??  ?? Left: oysters and martinis at Gimlet. Below: Gimlet’s dining room. Opposite: beetroot, cultured cream and dried cherry at Aria.
Left: oysters and martinis at Gimlet. Below: Gimlet’s dining room. Opposite: beetroot, cultured cream and dried cherry at Aria.

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