Category Archives: Seafood

Flying Fish Lunch with Peter Kuruvita, Pyrmont

flying fish, pyrmont, review

Many years ago, my friend Teena was always late for dinners. She’d be 30 minutes to about an hour late and Gina and I got so tired of it we hatched a plot to ensure that she never did it again. We knew that she wasn’t deliberately doing it, she was a considerate friend apart from this but we felt like she didn’t know how inconvenient it was. So one day we asked her to meet us an hour earlier than we would get there. It did the trick and after that she realised how annoying it was to have to wait for people and since then she has more or less been on time to places.

flying fish, pyrmont, review

Now I realise that I am probably in danger of being this person myself. Case in point, I am supposed to be at Flying Fish at 12:30pm for a lunch with Peter Kuruvita and Jodie Wallace (the head chef of Flying Fish) and I was early. Until I realised I had no idea which wharf Flying Fish was on and proceeded to walk up and down each finger wharf in high heeled boots my feet pleading with me to get a taxi and my brain telling me that I taxi wouldn’t take me a  few hundred metres.

flying fish, pyrmont, review

After trying in vain to call them  (the Telstra SMS arrived four hours later with their phone number) I finally got there, hot and panting and probably quite dishevelled. Set at the end of Jones Bay Wharf, it’s a stunning glass fronted building with dark timber slatted ironwood walls and floors completely renovated by Kuruvita. There is no doubt that it is an expensive restaurant with mains edging towards the high $40s. During the month of June all mains are $29 Monday to Thursday.

flying fish, pyrmont, review

Peter Kuruvita

Father of three sons Kuruvita is famous for his fish of course, hence the name and location, and his Sri Lankan heritage (Kuruvita is half Sri Lankan, half Austrian) pops up in certain dishes which I’m eager to try. He has his Head Chef Blue Mountains born 26 year old Jodie Wallace. Dining with us is last year’s Masterchef contestant Michelle Darlington who now manages The Essential Ingredient store. Michelle and I are undecided as to what to order so we decide that the easiest thing to do is share!

flying fish, pyrmont, review

Seared yellow fin tuna with ruby red grapefruit and sweet pork crackling $33

This is the dish we tried at this years Taste of Sydney, the absolutely ambrosial seared yellow fin tuna with red grapefruit and roast pork crackling. It is drizzled with their Flying Fish black pepper caramel (my favourite item from their new range) and accented with their chilli salt. It is the only dish that has been on the menu for six years and they are never allowed to remove it for fear of customers protests.

flying fish, pyrmont, review

Smoked Rainbow trout served on Himalayan salt, fennel cream, celery heart salad $32

Click here to read the full story

Win Prawns and Bubbles for You & 5 Friends at Helm Bar & Bistro, Darling Harbour

helm bar, darling harbour

Winter Sunset over Darling Harbour

I am torn about going to Darling Harbour. On the one hand, it is so touristy and full of tourist traps and on the other hand, it’s right next to the water and it’s ever so fun playing tourist in your own town on occasion. As often happens, the lure for me however was not the view or an event but the lure of seafood. Helm Bar in Darling Harbour has a different special every night and on the weekends you can get 1 kilo of prawns for $25. You know me – I am anywhere there are prawns to be had.

helm bar, darling harbour

There is the lower deck that is supposed to serve the meals, including a selection for $10 and under but it’s empty and there’s more people upstairs so we sit there. We take a look at the menu. The prawns are a given but Mr NQN is a bit of a mussel fanatic and wanted to give one of their big cast iron pots of mussels a go (on a weeknight there is a All-You-Can-Eat mussel night for $19.90). We also decide to give a $10 and under meal a go too. Looking around the patrons are typical mixed Darling Harbour crowd of tourists and locals. $15 jugs of beer are popular here tonight it seems.

helm bar, darling harbour

Wagyu Beef Burger $9.50

Our burger comes out and it’s topped with lettuce, tomato, bacon, cheese, caramelised onions and a fat, juicy beef patty on a soft, untoasted sesame seed bun. It’s juicy and moist although I find myself adding some aioli to it to give it a bit of extra flavour. Mr NQN likes the fact that it doesn’t have a dry, toasted bun and that the patty is juicy.

Click here to read the full story

Garfish, Kirribilli

It was that moment of panic. You know the one – where you need to find a place to eat in the immediate vicinity and there are no seemingly viable options. The place that I was taking my mother for her birthday lunch was closed, unexpectedly so and we were driving around Kirribilli trying to figure out where to go. My mum was flexible, anywhere was fine. It was just me that wanted to make it somewhere nice.

“Why don’t we just go to Yum Cha?” Mr NQN says. The only problem was that the Yum Cha I knew was in North Sydney and I had already written about it so I wasn’t in the mood to reblog it.

“Fine but I can’t blog it” I whispered to him.

Mr NQN thought about it and realised that a meal eaten and paid for and not blogged is a missed opportunity so we kept driving. Until we reached Broughton Street. I suggested Garfish guardedly. You see Mr NQN, Queen Viv and Miss America had dined at the Crows Nest branch years ago (B.B.=Before Blog) and had a highly unimpressive meal there. The waiter was rude, the servings were tiny and we left hungry and poorer. But figuring that lightening the wallet in aid of a birthday was probably the best excuse and besides, these people were hungry we decided to go back.

We choose an outdoor table. Our male waiter is friendly and explains the menu. There is the paper fold out menu that sits on the napkin and then there’s the daily specials menu with fresh fish of the day as well as specials. He recommends the Singapore Chilli Crab which at $70 for two including bread and salad is actually not a bad price at all. We choose the crumbed garfish with a coleslaw with apple, pomegranate and dill mayonnaise as well as a salt and pepper squid. The prices thankfully haven’t seemed to risen from our visit the years before.

Salt & Pepper Squid $16

While waiting for out entree, we ask three times for the side flap to be pulled down as the sun is shining directly on us. We’re on the brink of doing it ourselves when the tall waitress does so. Our salt and pepper squid arrives and true to the warning, it’s small. Ahh yes a reminder of our last visit. It is quite good though and the chilli and ginger sauce is moreish. My mum loves it so she asks the waitress if she can keep the chilli sauce and the waitress says that she’ll bring out a fresh one for our mains. She never does and we have to ask for it later when our main arrive. Then the waitress takes my knife and plate but places my used fork back on the left hand side of my setting. She takes my mum’s fork and knife but leaves my father’s fork and knife. Odd.

Crumbed Garfish with apple, pomegranate and dill mayonnaise salad $30

The wait for mains is a little longer than we’d like but it looks to be a small kitchen. The crumbed garfish is quite good although I don’t often go for crumbed fish when dining out (my mum’s choice, she loves crunchy deep fried things). The accompanying salad is very good and we try it with the chilli sauce.

Click here to read the full story