travel

MoVida

Melbourne’s small bars get talked of endlessly, though there are plenty of cosy and rustic bars to go to in Sydney if you know where to look. What is uniquely Melbourne are cafe laneways off Flinders Lane: narrow passageways crammed with a dozen or more eateries cheek-by jowl down both sides. Centre laneway is tight and grungy with tiny tables outside pint-sized restaurants; as I passed through a jazz trio was playing down one end serenading above the buzz. Across the way Degraves Lane is a little more open, with diners huddling beneath giant umbrellas as waiters scurry back and forth. Both lanes are packed with people eating, drinking and chatting, as always on a Saturday morning.

However I decided to keep on wandering along Flinders St, with the vague goal of gazing at the menu of The Press Club restaurant. On the way I literally stumbled across MoVida, a leading edge tapas restaurant credited with establishing the small plate concept in modern Melbourne dining. Open since 2003 and rated One Hat by latest The Age Good Food Guide, I was surprised to find it open for Saturday lunch and talked myself into going in. It wasn’t a hard sell.

MoVida is sensational. I’ve long believed that entrees allow chefs far more freedom to show off their creativity than mains, and MoVida is proof of concept. The space is superb too, with the small and warmly-decored high ceiling room never feeling too cramped. The highlight for solo diners is the long and comfortable bar that runs along one half of the restaurant, and you don’t need a reservation for one of its high stools.

The menu is in two parts: tapa, individual morsels that are sold per unit; and rationes, entree-sized dishes that are designed to be shared. After a bit of consultation with my waiter I decided two tapas and two rationes would be enough, and in fact it was more than plenty. At just $45 for the food it’s brilliant value as well! From ten choices of tapa and sixteen rationes (plus a few specials of the day) I opted for:

Roasted scallop with jamon and potato foam – served on a single shell is a plump scallop on a sliver of jamon ham, doused in the potato foam. The foam dominates but that’s no bad thing, it’s amazingly potato-y yet light.

Baby leek wrapped in brik pastry served with chicken liver parfait – a triumph of skill and design. A slender shoot of leek is encased in a cylinder of crisp pastry and nestled between two shining blobs of rich fresh parfait, which is just the right side of melting. With a drizzle of honey underneath it’s a sublime match of flavour and texture, the wafers of crouton the only distraction (too hard and crispy).

Smoked spanish mackerel with pine nut gazpacho sorbet – WOW. Thin slices of delicious and unsalty mackerel drizzled with a white sauce and a scattering of toasted pine nuts… and that sorbet. If pine nut ice cream sounds like an odd idea then get yourself to MoVida and check it out: it’s superb. The highlight of the meal for me, frankly!

Braised beef cheek in Pedro Ximinez on cauliflower puree – no tricks or fancy presentation here, just meltingly good beef on a tasty puree. A large portion too.

Other menu options sounded inviting but I was stuffed by this stage. Five reasons to return: Hunter Valley quail, partially boned, crumbed and filled with jamon and Mahon cheese; roast lamb cutlet encased in a Catalan pork and paprika pate; spicy steak tartare of raw grass-fed Wagyu beef; white beans garnished with berkshire pork belly, chorizo and black puddling; Andalucian sweet sour farmed rabbit legs with almonds.

Naturally it has an excellent wine list with several good options by the glass (most in the $10-13 range). I’m sure I’ve read whispers in the food press that MoVida might establish an outpost in Sydney, which would be a very, very good thing. However for now us northerners will have to schedule a trip to Melbourne to try this fantastic kind of food.

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Road Trip rules

Bugger Broken Hill, I’ve just had a much better idea.

Out of interest I plugged into google maps and tested one part of a theory. Check. Then another part…. check. A third part? Check. Suddenly it all came together: a gourmet road trip to some of Australia’s finest country restaurants.

Grazing in Gundaroo. Stefano’s in Mildura. The Victory Hotel at Sellicks Hill in McLaren Vale. And top of the list: the Royal Mail Hotel in Dunkeld, The Age’s Country Restaurant of the Year 2009 and Australian Gourmet Traveller’s Regional Restaurant of the Year 2009.

The dates fit. Bookings can be made. Frankly a trip this good needs a companion, but who would be interested in such a journey. Any takers??

Categories: food, travel | 1 Comment

LAN love

I think I have a new favourite airline. I’ve never flown Emirates and I haven’t flown Singapore Airlines for many years, so flying LAN to Chile has rocketed the South American giant to the top of my list of favourite airlines.

Qantas is fine and the benefits of being in Qantas Club are most appreciated, especially the quick check-in, lounge access and preferential seating treatment. But as LAN belongs to the same alliance as Qantas most of the benefits transfer over and, frankly, it is a much nicer experience with LAN than Qantas…

The seats are further apart, the food is better, the entertainment system is out of this world good (think 400+ CDs on demand plus more than 50 movies, most of them very well-chosen, and fast to access) with a decent-sized screen to watch. Service is efficiently friendly without being servile.

All in all the 16 hours passed very easily, so we arrived in Santiago quite well rested for the adventures to come…

Categories: south america, travel | Leave a comment

training wheels

Okay, so I’ve got a few things to re-learn about this blogging jag. Like posting with some kind of, y’know, regularity…

It’s been a good couple of weeks with lots of socialising. Some highlights:

– Getting a surprise lunchtime visit from ex-flatmate Mai and her partner Tim last Saturday. Catching up over fine tapas at a balcony restaurant overlooking Cronulla beach, enjoying the afternoon sun on that glorious day.

– Revisiting that same restaurant on Tuesday night with Joel – much quieter mid-week, but the food is just as good. Too many drinks afterwards with Joel and the guy she’s currently seeing followed, but it was still a good night!

– Dinner with James in Surry Hills on Thursday, at stalwart Thai restaurant Prasit’s on Crown St. When this place opened all those years ago it was a relative pioneer, offering a more refined level of food than was usually found in thai joints of the time. These days it’s more middle-of-the-road both in style and price, but the quality of the food remains excellent. As always we had great conversation and swapping of travel plans over a nice Italian pinot grigio (not so much for me, though as I was driving. Pity about the outrageous parking ticket I got afterwards).

– Flying to Melbourne yesterday for very close friend Katie’s 30th birthday party. And what a party! I’ve never before been to a private event which featured live music from half a dozen different acts, an acrobatic performance, and at midnight a very special burlesque solo dance for Katie performed by Kate (the woman who brought me and Katie together some years ago). Everyone had a great time, I chatted to several different people about a huge range of subjects and almost noone got drunk. Wow, it is possible…

– Visiting Wayne (my late stepfather’s brother) and his family in the eastern suburbs of Melbourne before the party, including his daughter Cherie whom I haven’t seen for years.

I’m currently at the airport waiting for the flight home, and am almost ready to face the new week ahead…

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“would you like cholera with that?”

“Yes. Yes I would.”

I’ve never gotten vaccinated before travelling in the past, because I’ve only ever visited developed western countries. Now that China is barely a month away, I’ve gone the pin-cushion route to travel safety: “just jab me with everything ya got.”

That meant three injections today, covering me for Hepatitis A and B, Typhoid, Tetanus, Diptheria, Pertussis and Polio. And two cupfuls of drink for the above-mentioned Cholera. But in true Demtel fashion, there’s more to come: in a month’s time I’ll get a second jab for Hep A and B, and Meningitus too if it’s back in stock.

Next year promises more fun: round three of the Hep cycle (but after that I’ll be vaccinated for 20 years), plus Rabies and some of the choice mosquito-borne nasties such as Japanese B Encephalitis. Expensive overall, but I choose to believe the hype (“it’s the best travel insurance you’ll ever get!”)

Apart from that, it’s been a very busy day:

  • I went for my first run in over two weeks, a 9km jaunt around the Quay before breakfast;
  • I went to work for three hours until midday;
  • I obtained from the Supreme Court the second-last piece of paper needed to become Irish;
  • I tried to lodged it with the Consulate, but they had closed for the Melbourne Cup;
  • I reserved storage space in Kirrawee, in preparation for my impending departure from The Rocks;
  • I placed a (losing) bet on the Melbourne Cup;
  • I picked up my car from the mechanics. They say it’s safe now, but I’m still going to check it constantly with my new CO monitor.
  • I went to the Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages and picked up the last piece of paper I need for my Irish-ness. Woo hoo!
  • I signed up for intensive one-on-one Mandarin lessons, which start tomorrow.

I’m having a quiet night tonight.

Categories: china, travel | 2 Comments

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