In these difficult times, these eateries are still helping those most in need through the best way they know how – through the power of a home-cooked meal.
A menu by an ex-Quay chef, a glamorous private room where phones aren’t allowed, and a cocktail list to rival the best speakeasy – this is Darlinghurst but not as you know it.
In our new video series, we step into the kitchens of Australia's best chefs and find out what it takes to dish up some of the finest food in the country.
They've moved up the road sans wood-fire oven, but that hasn't stopped the Sydney restaurant from serving good, honest food backed up with a commitment to sustainability.
Sure, Pasi Petänen can spin Pacojets with the best of them. But with his new, permanent home in Sydney's Inner West, the chef and serial pop-up artist shows he can still win at the basics.
Mat Lindsay has gone in with the owners of Paramount Coffee Project, and they're serving the Middle Eastern snacks from morning till night. Your late-night kebab just got a whole lot better.
There’s an ever-evolving menu of hand-rolled pasta, a 300-strong list of mostly Italian wines, and a plum CBD location. This pocket-sized bar could be your new friend in town.
One sitting. Sixteen guests. And a cavalcade of courses that reflect the chef's fine-dining background. No wonder word has spread about this neighbourhood cafe.
It’s dinner with a view, squared, as restaurant group Fink and BridgeClimb announce a partnership that allows guests to climb one Sydney landmark, then dine at another. Talk about a meal deal.
The chef is returning to the Sydney kitchen where, 11 years ago, he made his start at the Merivale group. And he's bringing back that hot fudge sundae.
The dumpling maestro on the challenges of being a female chef, the evolution of Chinese cuisine and which dish she has made millions of times throughout her career.
Along a 300-metre stretch of Newtown's main drag, three restaurants are dishing up some top-notch fried chook. On a wing and a prayer, Tristan Lutze tries them all.
Two decades is a long time for a fine-dining restaurant to not just survive but thrive in this town. A lot has changed but the tablecloths, and that stunning view, remain.
With our growing familiarity with wattleseed and finger limes, some would say that the quest to bring Australian ingredients into the national vocabulary is over. Over 22 courses at Orana, it’s clear that we’re just getting started.
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.
Think of Fratelli Paradiso as a stage, its diners and staff all actors working together daily to produce a play dedicated to the joys of a peculiarly inner-city brand of Sydney-Italianness.
It could be one of the darkest dining rooms in town, but nine years in the ideas on the plate and in the glass at Monopole are brighter and sharper than ever.
The food is only part of the appeal; the lively crush of bodies yelling for picks from one of the edgiest wine lists in town gives the place permanent buzz.
This large gorgeous restaurant atop the former Newport Arms owes more than a dash of its sunny elegance and Med-luxe vibe to Merivale's Paddington flagship.
Kylie Kwong’s Sydney restaurant Billy Kwong has closed its doors after 19 years. It’s a time for reflection, but also a chance to look ahead to new beginnings.
At Sydney restaurant Alberto’s Lounge, chef Daniel Pepperell adds unexpected twists and modern turns to the classics in an Italian(ish) sequel to Restaurant Hubert.
The Sydney trio behind the Italian-ish restaurant are back from a two-week research trip to their culinary motherland. And now a long Sunday lunch is on the menu.
There’s 800 kilometres separating head chefs Clinton McIver and Joel Bickford, but that hasn’t stopped them from developing an eight-course dégustation together.
The neighbourhood restaurant has been an incubator for emerging chef talent over the years. Chef-owner Karl Firla is calling time, but says this is not the end of the Oscillate Wildly brand.
At Pipit, the newest destination restaurant in the Northern Rivers region, an ex-Noma chef and original Byron boy takes his cues from the coast and the community.
The low-down on what to order at Barangaroo House's produce-driven restaurant, where vegetables, seafood and a Milo-inspired dessert receive top billing.