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Lune Croissanterie is (finally) opening in Sydney this weekend

Croissant extraordinaire Kate Reid confirms Lune's Sydney flagship will open in Rosebery — this Saturday.
Lune Croissanterie almond croissant with icing sugar showering down onto itLune Croissanterie

After years of anticipation and rumours swirling thick and fast like a well-whisked crème pâtissière, Melbourne’s Lune Croissanterie has announced it expects to open its Sydney flagship on Saturday, 7 December 2024.

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The Lune Sydney flagship venue was originally slated to open in a Darlinghurst location, but the team has since announced it has secured a new site in Rosebery “due to unforeseen delays in Darlinghurst”. “We’ve shifted to a new location in order to keep our plans on track and honour our commitment to bring the Lune experience to Sydney in 2024,” confirms Lune founder Kate Reid. “I’m excited for Lune to become part of the fabric of [Sydney’s} food and dining scene.”

Reid, who co-owns Lune with restaurateur Nathan Toleman and her brother Cameron Reid, will deliver on her plan to open the Lune Sydney flagship by the end of this year once it opens its doors this weekend. It’s been a long road to get here, with the Gourmet Traveller first covering the news in 2020. But building site delays and relocation aside, the long lead time has been necessary – there’s staff to recruit, blueprints to approve, and there’s a big question mark over how to maintain the quality of those croissants. It’s all part of ensuring the Lune’s je ne sais quoi translates over the state border. “This is not an outpost store – we’re bringing the Lune experience to Sydney,” she says. “I love that those who can’t make it to Melbourne or Brisbane can now have a Lune experience.”

Lune Croissanterie owner Kate Reid outside Lune's new Rosebery site in Sydney
Kate Reid outside Lune’s soon-to-open Rosebery site in Sydney

Reid has been determined to find the perfect venue that speaks true to the business she started 12 years ago. It’s a golden lesson learnt from in Paris while training at Du Pain et des Idées, a small bakery in the 10th arrondissement run by award-winning baker Christophe Vasseur. “Christophe said to me: ‘You can all the best ideas, but until you find the right site, you can’t open a business.'”

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The pastry powerhouse is renowned for two things: exquisitely engineered croissants, and early-morning queues. They are not mutually exclusive. The croissants, perfected by Reid, have a crisp shell that shatters beautifully on impact in the mouth; the feathery folds of pastry within are buttery without being bready.

The lines formed soon after Lune opened in its original shopfront in Melbourne’s Elwood in 2012; they only persisted after The New York Times described the classic beurre croissant as perhaps “the finest you will find anywhere in the world”.

Reid has a forensic approach to producing the pastries – the temperature of every ingredient is measured and recorded, and the resting times are adjusted according to those variables – which belies her former career as a designer for Formula One race cars.

ham and gruyere cheese croissants at Lune Sydney
Ham and Gruyère croissants at Lune
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The last time her croissants were spotted in Sydney was at the Lune x Koko Black pop-up in 2023. Now (finally) Sydney will soon be home to not one but two permanent Lune Croissanterie sites.

“We’ve grown a lot since opening in a tiny production kitchen in Elwood, and we’ve actually gotten better as we’ve gotten bigger,” she says. “It’s rare for a business to not just maintain, but also to improve, its quality. It’s very exciting.”

The patisserie promises to hit all the hallmarks of a café worth lining up for (hello lighter-than-air pastries and coconut pandan croissants). The Rosebery space recasts Parisian allure, melding modern vignettes with old-world accoutrements sourced from the Rosebery Engine Yards, an ode to its local digs. A second Lune Sydney site is also slated to open this month at Metro Martin Place, which comes as good news for Sydney suits and city workers.

lunecroissanterie.com

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