Advertisement
Home Australian
Advertisement
Piece of white fish in a bowl at Clarence in Brisbane

Clarence

You'd be crazy to forgo the flavour-forward $75 prix fixe menu at this bastion of fair pricing, but be sure to add a turnip cake or two.
Advertisement
Hentley Farm restaurant in Seppeltsfield, photo of fish dish with liquid being poured onto plate

Hentley Farm

Chefs momentarily down tools to welcome guests and lead them to the dining room, where views over the gum-lined creek and single estate vineyard delight.
Fino Seppeltsfield restaurant in South Australia dining room

Fino Seppeltsfield

As far as last meals go, you'd be hard pressed to go out with a more satisfying bang than Fino's Basque cheesecake and a nip of Seppeltsfield Para Vintage Tawny.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Firedoor

Firedoor

There's a lot more to Firedoor than just meat. Ignore the hype, trust the chef and enjoy the show.
Raes

Raes

It would be easy for this Byron mainstay to rely purely on its good looks, but chef Jason Saxby brings genuine substance to the table.
The façade of Restaurant Labart, Burleigh Heads

Labart

A Gold Coast diner that deftly balances the old-school and the on-trend.
Advertisement
Grazing

Grazing

This agrarian fantasy is manifested in the diminutive town of Gundaroo, where comforting dishes are constructed under the historic tin roof of the 1865 Royal Hotel.
Attica

Attica

Ben Shewry recognises the expense of his world-famous 10-ish course meal and strives to honour Indigenous culture and ingredients. He succeeds, completely and beautifully.
Gimlet

Gimlet

With escape from reality at a premium, Gimlet's gorgeously renovated, high-ceilinged space is the perfect bolthole.
Advertisement
Embla

Embla

Since opening five years ago, Embla has offered one of Melbourne's quintessential dining experiences: eating at its kitchen bar.
Underbar

Underbar

Open just two days a week, Underbar plays a great game of hard-to-get. The room is minimalist, the service warm, the encounter unforgettable.
Templo

Templo

From a softly glowing shopfront on the fringe of the CBD, Templo serves Hobart's best Italian food.
Advertisement
Restaurant Botanic

Restaurant Botanic

The restaurant in Adelaide's tranquil Botanic Gardens has always been perfectly situated, and has now been injected with wild new life.
Brae

Brae

Brae is one of Australia's great food offerings, bringing an experience that's unforgettable, educational and unmissable.
Gather at Coriole

Gather at Coriole

A thoughtful experience from beginning to end, peppered with creative surprises.
Advertisement
Quay

Quay

Post-lockdown, Peter Gilmore is back, and he's unveiled a new signature tasting menu that's as ingenious as ever.
Peel Street

Peel St

Always bustling, but rarely raucous, this bright, buzzing place hasn't faltered for a second since opening in 2013.
O.My

O.My

Since grabbing attention in 2013 with their low-waste farm-to-table concept, O.My has only gone bigger and better.
Advertisement
Aurora

Aurora

Aurora is more than just a fabulous newcomer to the Adelaide restaurant scene – it's also a registered charity. Eat well and do good in one sitting.
Lake House

Lake House

Lake House provides many applause-worthy moments and deserves every ovation.
Igni

Igni

Featuring a mysterious six-course dégustation menu that's the best thing to happen to Geelong since the Cats won the flag in 2011.
Advertisement
Dier Makr

Dier Makr

Expect magnificent flavours to emerge from this Hobart restaurant.
GOMA Restaurant

GOMA Restaurant

Forget what you know about gallery restaurants. Brisbane's GOMA is a cut above the rest.
Essa

Essa

An elegant take on progressive dining.
Advertisement
Fleet

Fleet

Fleet, the exceptional Brunswick Heads fine-diner, is getting ready to welcome diners back in January 2022.
Advertisement
Bar Rochford

Bar Rochford

Nowhere else captures Canberra's special blend of the parochial and the worldly like Rochford.
Aria Sydney

Aria Sydney

The game plan here has always been top-dollar cosseting, and with a splendid wine list and largely accommodating service to match, that's what you get.
Advertisement
Automata

Automata

Clayton Wells pulls it off time and time again.
Bennelong

Bennelong

Service here is confident and charming, ensuring any occasion at Bennelong is just that little bit extra.
Advertisement
Captain Moonlite

Captain Moonlite

The coastal view from the dining room of Angelsea’s Surf Lifesaving Club is surely one of Victoria’s best.
Gauge

Gauge

This café-by-day and restaurant-by-night has become the yardstick for ambitious Brisbane dining.
Advertisement
Acme

Acme

REVIEW An evening at Acme is like kicking on at your mate’s place after a big night out. There’s Drake and Cardi B on the stereo. Staff greet you like the party couldn’t start until you got there. And the best part? Your mate’s a banging cook whose combinations blow your mind. On the menu, […]
St Isidore

St Isidore

REVIEW There’s a frog on our table. No, our uninvited visitor isn’t on the menu, but plenty of other items from this rural restaurant’s multi-acre garden are: kipfler potatoes (roasted), heirloom tomatoes (fried), just-picked green leaves (lightly dressed with horseradish). Using local produce isn’t novel, but Alex Delly’s way with flavours and textures is deft. […]
The Bridge Room

The Bridge Room

REVIEW At one end of the long, elegant room, a table of silks roars at a joke from the senior partner. At the other end, the arts maven and the former premier collude on the banquette at half the volume and twice the intensity. This is a place for machers who like their dining fine, […]
Advertisement
Coastal saltbush

What is saltbush?

This native shrub, once used as animal fodder, has found a new lease on life at the table, proving its worth in salads, roasts and stir-fries.
Drinking Australia’s native ingredients

Drinking Australia’s native ingredients

Locally made drops - from tonic to golden ale, vermouth to eau de vie - are full of the flavours and aromas of the bush, as the next generation of producers embrace quandong, wattleseeds and more. Here are our picks.
Advertisement
Margan

Margan

REVIEW Sitting pretty in wine country, surrounded by mountain and vineyard, Margan is more than worthy of a detour. The estate bottles its share of fine wine (not least the shiraz), but it’s also a fine place to while away an hour or two at the table. They’re good at growing things other than grapes, […]
Three Blue Ducks

Three Blue Ducks

REVIEW Chickens and children are as much part of the experience as the food here: there’s a playground for kids, while cows, pigs and chooks are star attractions at The Farm, the restaurant’s grand agricultural, ecological and educational project. Embraced by locals and mobbed by visitors, things can get chaotic, but the floor staff keep […]
South on Albany

South on Albany

REVIEW If you can judge the quality of a chef by their terrine, then John Evans is worth knowing. His jamón-wrapped example, studded with Thirlmere chicken and quail, is Impressionist art – a still life with a small loaf of brioche, chutney and tarragon butter. So, too, a salad of beetroot and fig with Binnorie […]
Advertisement

Chiswick

REVIEW Named after the gardens it graces, this restaurant has a Hamptons-meets-the-Highlands look that resembles a busy conservatory. Soumak rugs and the open kitchen framed by jars of preserved vegetable jars set the curated-homely tone for Matt Moran’s tribute to garden-to-plate dining. Yes, you’ll see  lamb from the Moran family farm, plus a seasonal map […]
Subo

Subo

REVIEW This is, hands down, the best place to break bread in Newcastle. You wouldn’t know it by looking at the restaurant’s unassuming shopfront, but Subo is a gem. And the bread you’re breaking is local Baked Uprising sourdough with butter, caramelised garlic and chive salt. It’s so good you’ll want seconds, but hey, there’s […]