Time Out (Melbourne)

Stokehouse

- Larissa Dubecki

YEP, STOKEHOUSE HAS finally reopened its doors to let that fresh St Kilda air in; restored and rejuvenate­d after the fire that left a blackened spot on the foreshore for nearly three long years. With a slightly pared-down menu and a work-in-progress feel, the Stokehouse of now is not the Stokehouse as it will be in six months’ time. Then it will have a raw bar, for one, although in its current unfinished state it’s open to walk-ins, who happily down outrageous­ly pink drinks on a new balcony overlookin­g the beach. The cheap seats never looked so good. As for the restaurant itself, Pascale Gomes Mcnabb’s fitout runs with the beach shack theme. There are wide, rough-sawn boards and tubular glass chandelier­s that undulate just slightly in the breeze. The tables are well spaced and linen-clad, which is like the Stokehouse of yore, as are the waiters, a full battalion of them, who are uniformly good. All is as it should be. And the menu? Stokehouse Mark II is the same mix of don’t-scare-the-horses classics and slightly more outré Med-leaning dishes. Richard Ousby and Ollie Hansford (executive and head chef, respective­ly) know their crowd and know that it wants steak – they serve a very decent oyster blade with watercress salad and a zippy little jus – and crumbed King George whiting with chips and tartare. But they also know that southside tastes veer to more adventurou­s seafood dishes, so they’ll serve canapés like king prawns in a seeded taco shell that almost trespasses into wellness territory, and fried oysters dobbed with caviar and sauce gribiche, which don’t. Beautiful, just-seared tuna treads a very successful semi-raw path with whipped wasabi mayo and pickled daikon; a gutsy beef tartare littered with capers, oregano and puffed buckwheat gets hit with a flavourbom­b of Vegemite-y black garlic emulsion. There’s a minimalist bent to some dishes: jamón-wrapped roast chook breast teamed with peach “carpaccio” (read: paper-thin raw slices), honey and native pepper, is a great dish that nonetheles­s demands a sidekick (charred broccolini with nutmeg and lemon ought to do it). This stealthily adds to the cost – but with all due respect, Stokehouse has never been a restaurant to approach in an economisin­g frame of mind. Get there, if you can.

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