Award-winning Tweed Coast connoisseur Greg Pieper of Bamboo Restaurant and Lounge Bar at Casuarina Beach has snapped up another chef’s hat in the coveted 2011 Sydney Morning Herald Good Food Guide Awards.

Pieper has now been awarded a single hat for three consecutive years and says he is thrilled with the national recognition.

“The SMH Good Food Guide Awards are highly regarded in the industry and I’m honoured to have been awarded another chef’s hat,” says Pieper, who was in Sydney for the awards on Monday night.

“The Tweed Coast is home to some of Australia’s freshest and best produce and the Bamboo menu reflects that. Bamboo prides itself on presenting fresh, local dishes with a distinct modern twist. I like to let the ingredients speak for themselves – each and every time we plate a meal.

This recognition motivates me even more and with the release of my new menu just a few weeks away, we’re going to be in for a fantastic summer. The Tweed Coast has undoubtedly become a serious competitor to the Gold Coast and is home to several award-winning restaurants throughout the valley and coastline, the destination has become a really exciting place.”

Below is recent footage of a day spent with Chef Greg Pieper as he gathered local produce. We then headed back to the kitchen at Bamboo as Greg produces 2 great dishes.

For a more comprehensive list of all the award winners from the SMH Good Food Guide Awards…CLICK HERE

ABSYNTHE restaurant in Surfers Paradise has again won the two-star rating in the 2011 Gourmet Traveller’s Restaurant Awards, making it the fifth consecutive year they have held on to the title.

Absynthe also took out the number one spot in the Queensland Regional category, finishing at 46 in the Gourmet Traveller’s top 100 venues offering an exquisite dining experience.
Competition in this year’s Awards was rife, with many old favourites previously boasting the two-star rating dropping down the list to make way for new venues. 

Absynthe owner and head chef Meyjitte Boughenout said the award was a huge honour and a celebration of peer and industry recognition.

We are very excited to have held on to the award for the fifth year in a row, said Meyjitte.It is very humbling, considering the amount of talent both in Queensland and nationally.  Competition this year was of a very high standard – there are some wonderful restaurants that we were up against, so we are very pleased to be placed number one in the regional Queensland list.

Absynthe restaurant is the perfect fusion of modern French and Australian cuisine, where the freshest and most unique ingredients are delicately prepared to seduce all tastes.
The edgy, avant garde 60 seat restaurant sits in its own little nook in the prestigious Q1 building, Surfers Paradise, right in the heart of the Gold Coast.

Meyjitte’s techniques are drawn from complex traditional and unique European cooking methods to produce dishes that deliver the finest flavours and textures. The preparation of food is executed with precision and faultless presentation, allowing diners to experience something totally unique.

Absynthe is located at Shop 4, Q1, Gold Coast Highway, Surfers Paradise and is open for an a la carte or degustation dinner from Monday to Friday from 6:00pm, with Saturday dinner reserved only for degustation dining.

A Chef’s Table @ Links Hope Island

Gold Coast Food Bank got behind the hobs as guest Chef for an intimate 10 course ‘Chefs Table’ Degustation. Executive Chef of Links, Ben James welcomed GC Food Bank to prepare 8 courses along with 2 of his own.

GC Food Bank left and Ben James right

Sommelier Mark Wilson expertly matched each course with a cracking wine to boot. 14 diners entered the kitchen for a look of just what goes on behind the closed doors of a kitchen…nowadays it’s not all that confidential.

Menu

  • one – coffin bay oysters, verjuice granita
  • two – zucchini flowers, ricotta, pumpkin, balsamic
  • three – mushroom tea, suggestion of truffle
  • four – eat it raw, wagyu carpaccio, raw heirloom veg
  • five – grapefruit gelee, shochu shot
  • six – duck, witlof, fondant potato, orange gastrique
  • seven – lamb shank, winter vegetable barigoule, gremolata crust
  • eight – blue cheese, chocolate
  • nine – elements of lemon meringue pie
  • ten – beetroot many ways, goats cheese

An absolute pleasure – last Friday night I was sitting down to a mighty fine meal of Fresh Pheasant…with Foie Gras too I might add.

Pheasant..where can you find it... note the dice of Foie Gras..

I am willing to take well thought out guesses of where it may be...and I’ve heard of only one other Restaurant in Qld serving Pheasant..and that is Aria in Brisbane.

it was presented 2 ways..a confit leg and here, a medium rare breast

Make a comment and let us see if anyone can pick it….where can you find fresh Pheasant on the Gold Coast??

A challenge to Gold Coast Food Bank readers…..many will surely benefit to find it’s provider.

Admit one..dinner with Achatz

Arguably one of Northern Americas most talented chefs…Grant Achatz of Alinea is about to open another project. Only he plans to sell tickets to his restaurant…what’s “next”

Below is a link to the  story from the NY Times

Grant Achatz to sell tickets to his new restaurant

and…

A video preview to his vision

Numero Uno… Noma, Copenhagen, Denmark

Parmigiano Reggiano Brulee...Chef Massimo Bottura, Osteria Francescana

2. El Bulli, Roses, Spain
3. The Fat Duck, Bray, UK
4. El Celler de Can Roca, Spain
5. Mugaritz, Spain
6. Osteria Francescana, Modena, Italy
7. Alinea, Chicago, USA
8. Daniel, New York, USA
9. Arzak, San Sebastian, Spain
10. Per Se, New York, USA

Aussies…

Attica...A potato cooked in the earth it was grown - Chef Ben Shewry

27. Quay, Sydney,  Australia
38. Tetsuya’s, Sydney,  Australia
67.  Marque, Sydney,  Australia
73. Attica, Melbourne,  Australia

If I can permit a quote from myself…Gold Coast Food Bank said it so….back in March

His restaurant I’m guessing will be on notice as of April 26 when the 2010 San Pellegrino Best Restaurants in The World list is announced….big call hey?

Click the link and see a ‘considered opinion’ of Attica, Melbourne.

Visit the site to see the list for yourself

Yet to have a rendezvous with the ‘Green Fairy’…now is the time to sample food from one of the standout restaurants in Qld. Tuesday the 20th April Chef de Cuisine Meyjitte Boughenout is creating a six course degustation experience to suit the wines of wine extraordinaire and owner of Melbourne’s Armadale Cellars Phil Hude along with Catherine Alapont from Maritime Estate.

The wine dinner will showcase six wines including; NV Devaux Blanc de Noirs, 2007 Tieffenbrunner Pinot Blanco, 2008 Amisfield Pinot Rose, 2005 Maritime Estate Pinot Noir, 2007 Stefano Lubiana Estate Pinot Noir and 2008 Rockburn Pinot Noir. All wines will be matched with dishes prepared by Meyjitte Boughenout and his team.

Confit Ocean trout, white chocolate, salmon pearls from the last Absynthe degustation dinner GC Food Bank attended

Menu

•Meyjitte’s signature appetiser of Soft Green Olive & Vanilla

•White Asparagus Custard with Smoked Salmon Granite

•Ricotta Gnocchi w steamed Yabbies & Jerusalem Artichoke

•Quail Ballotine with Raspberry Glaze & Traces of Chocolate

•Braised Lamb Shank and Mushroom Raviolo

•Chocolate Fondant, and Cherry Ice-Cream

The evening is an opportunity to indulge in an entire evening dedicated to the appreciation of Pinot wines and experience spectacular food.

Bookings are essential and tickets are $145pp and are all inclusive.

WHERE – Absynthe Restaurant Q1Building. Junction of Surfers Paradise Boulevard, Clifford St & Hamilton Avenue, Surfers Paradise.
WHEN – Tuesday 20 April 2010
PRICE – $145 per person, including wines.
BOOKINGS & ENQUIRIES: ph 07 55046466

I’m kind of stuck for any words for my intro. Attica is purely a restaurant above so many…above so many with big names at the helm. Though a little out of the main part of town with minimal décor, darkish interior Chef Ben Shewry’s food is being noticed on a world scale. His food is not to be “just consumed”.. it is created to evoke extreme sentiment and thought appeal to all our senses. Last month he gained a rare invitation to communicate his fare at Madrid Fusion…and next month he will be part of the World Gourmet Summit in Singapore.
His restaurant I’m guessing will be on notice as of April 26 when the 2010 San Pellegrino Best Restaurants in The World list is announced….big call hey.

Entering at 8.45pm I opened the taxi door to return to my Hotel at 1.10am…an adventure of epic proportions.

2 pre courses were presented before the main component of the Degustation menu (235 dollars w wine) One, a selection of Heirloom carrots, white, yellow and orange.

Amuse Gueule - Carrots

An intense carrot concentrate sat beneath the olive oil cooked specimens with a discerning shave of aged blue cheese atop. Then an abalone broth with shiitake and confit chicken wing followed. The chicken in 2 bite size pieces gave a textural shock, describable as chicken ‘crackling’ similar to the pork rinds I use to eat as I played the tabletop spaccies down the corner store. The menu hadn’t even begun.

We were then passed the knowledge that our first course had been delayed, due to 1 body down in the kitchen…I didn’t mind at all as it gave me more time to peruse the space and gaze at Chef’s rotavapor he had on display in a room I gathered was set aside for desserts only. Oh a rotavapor distils solids and liquids at very low temperatures enabling the purest aromas to be captured and the best essences obtained…we experience the fruits of this tool’s labour when course 5 hit’s the table.

a plate of snow..........crab

Snow Crab is now here…a mound of snow is what I’m looking at. Told that we are going to have a blind tasting…all that is revealed is that the snow is in fact horseradish powder that dissolves into a pure taste of horseradish nonexistent of the heat. As it is consumed I guess salmon pearls tick, coconut tick, and freeze-dried raspberries wrong..they were actually barberries, and burnt onion, wrong again charred leek in this instance…close though. What I overlooked was the addition of verjuice ice that added a chill to the mound of “snow”

beneath the snow

A dish of pure health followed in young peas, grains and pea juices. The grains consisting of puffed quinoa, green wheat and Israeli cous cous. The shells from the peas made the intense green fluid you see in the picture.

p's and grains

Ben Shewry’s fare has been described as representative of the area’s he grew up in…New Zealand is his country of origin. The snow crab presentation a depiction of the snow-capped peaks he may have seen as a child. The next dish of Potato cooked in the earth it was grown, a symbol of the NZ hangi. Cooked (I don’t know how) in a recreated earth oven smothered in hot coals that injected an amazing essence of smoke into the texturally perfect fingerling potato. Sitting on soft goats curd the tuber had sprinkling’s of coffee powder and mojama (salt cured tuna) cress and fried salt bush, more than likely the saltbush foraged the morning of consumption…chef does like to forage for a lot of his ingredients. These flavours added a complete earthiness of a dish that reeks of Ben Shewry’s originality in all that rests on the pass.

Fish dish was a Bass Grouper with rosemary and garlic. Uncertain of the fish? I think maybe a Blue eye trevalla, but am even more certain it could have even been Hapuku/Hapuka a NZ beloved.

Fish

Came with some candied lemon planted on the base. First initial aroma was a sweetened garlic enhanced by fresh rosemary blooms that sprinkled the top along with buttered brown almond nibs. When eating, it gave way to the garlic but as the flesh was penetrated more the lemon underneath was seemingly making a mark as well, strange when a dishes flavour morphs in front of you. The base sauce for this was a bold clarified Chorizo stock, clear essence.

A Bangalow pork loin ensued, small 100 gram piece sitting on a knoll of cauliflower puree (standard) strewn with wild foraged fennel pollen (not standard) God help me if Iever come across a better dish than this….To the left was what looked like a perfectly formed reasonable sized truffle…(see the pic) that was in fact a portion of house made Spanish style blood sausage (Morcilla to be exact) coated in a squid ink-stained fine bread crumb. This was sitting on a rotavapor distilled apple extract…Umami explored. I was without speech!

the orb of blood

Red meat next, and here comes some more bewilderment. A portion of well marbled beef sitting with some purposely burnt potato, thin planks of white cabbage, sea grass (samphire I guess) and a mound of toasted black sesame seeds.

and here is a burnt chip, part of a very complex arrangement

Now as we were getting through all this I saw a constant smokiness through all that we were eating. The beef was super rich, fatty and unctuous. The potato when broken revealed a white inner sanctum, while the outer a resounding black, charred to be precise, but by no way inedible..in fact it was like a smoked chip, I’m guessing that took the brunt of a Smoking gun?

Savoury out of the picture we now had the pleasure of the bridging course. Simply titled “Terroir” this again was symbolic of Chef’s background, where he grew up or spent time in his life (so far)…I say that with sureness he will advance to grounds he has yet to visit.
I’m glad I’m able to provide pictures here as looking at it as I did I pictured a hill a mound of earth, a structural component of our earth with which we live.

terroir

What we had when consumption took place was Fromage Frais sorbet covered in grated dried beetroot cake, freeze-dried raspberries covered in sorrel granita and young sorrel leaves. Hard to describe the taste that was experienced. I leave the plate empty thinking…is it a sweet dish readying us for a more cloying finish or a savoury dish hanging us out to dry with a final slap in the face?  The textural balance top drawer, the natural sweetness noted while the overall concept of this dish was somewhere lost in chef’s mindset.

Only remaining was the “Violet Crumble” This dessert came to us in a stemless brandy balloon. I saw it and could only think of when man finally lands on Mars, yes it looked like the moon landing, what you would see when peering out the window of the Lunar module. Sorbet made with wild violets, with caramel sauce, honeycomb, frozen chocolate powder/earth/pumice I don’t know exactly and a scattering of freeze-dried sugared violets. What do you think it tasted of…Nirvana that’s what.

violet crumble

When in Melbourne you must dine at Attica, that is all I need say….how bout this even…when in Australia you must dine at Attica.

Go here on April 26th, click the link…

As solitary representative of Gold Coast Food Bank I was invited last night to attend a soirée at Moo Moo officially unveiling the plan to tackle the Brisbane dining scene.

Gathered also were an array of usual suspects in media I would have put a side of Master Kobe on them appearing, and I’m not a betting man… Some worth a tête-à-tête, some not, some know a little about food, some not, but allow me to digress as my ears were quite delighted to quell all the rumours of Moo Moo The Wine Bar and Grill setting up a depot in Fiji.

"wine is the intellectual part of a meal while meat is the material"

Dealings with The Westin Fiji Resort on Denarau Island have now concluded, around mid May will see the official blast-off. A team is about to head off in the next few weeks to pave the way for their Global assault. Denarau Island South at The Sheraton Fiji Resort has already 1 Aussie in residence, Peter Kuruvita of Flying Fish.

Gold Coast Food Bank wishes all involved the very best in an exciting time for all the team involved. The first restaurant on The Coast I might add to actually do such a thing, it is only in recent times around Australia that we have seen the expansion of a number of restaurants. Those in reference being dragged to other cities by big name Chefs, the likes of Neil Perry and Matt Moran provide the examples in recent times, this can only spell good things for food here.

Also got word of the developments taking place in their Brisbane venture as well….a couple of private dining rooms and a glass display dry aging room will be in the plans of a severe makeover of the existing Siggis’ dining space, to also open come early May.

Dining here, inside especially you are assured safety from the pompous foot soldiers that inhabit Tedder Ave. Park the vehicle cleverly and you can save yourself being seen, or maybe that’s why you seek a Tedder fix, ego may need a boost, not I it is for the food I arrive.  The food in question holds no precursor to it’s locale…solid fare that possesses what some lack…taste.

welcome to Chill

tuna

Darren Glasgow and Leesa Huth have been behind the formula at Chill for just about 4 years now, they are sound operators.
First up comes a confit of duck and cep arancini sitting on a little celeriac puree, a polite amuse gueule. The menu holds many complexities, while enjoying the seasons finest offerings.

lamb

I’m happy to dine with the rare-seared blue fin tuna coated with a black sesame seed crust served alongside a salad of fresh herbs and green paw paw. The tuna comes splashed with a dressing of black bean, chilli and lime. The fish has a good fatty presence, some may find the dressing overcoming, I like it’s swagger as it met the fish cutting it’s way through the stout flesh.

salmon

Main was the Edeowie Lamb rump. When last talking with Daran he was rapt with this great product, now I can see why. At the moment he is garnishing the lamb with some balsamic glazed kipfler potato, young beetroot, wilted rocket, pan juices and salsa Verde. Sweet, sharp and rich additions to a great full flavoursome cut of meat. Hard to fault any of Chefs renditions tonight, he has kept the integrity of the chosen ingredients.
My dining cohort chose zucchini flowers filled with soft white polenta for her starter and then a salmon dish with poached prawns, green tea noodles and a coconut, lime and lemongrass broth that was cascaded tableside. Both of these sell for $38

dessert tasting

Sweets on offer were available for 15 dollars a throw or opt for an assiette for $21, which we did. Hard to believe that in some establishments around the GC that restaurants are charging $15 for bought in sweets…compare that to the one’s here made scrupulously in house. Sweets that made up “the plate” consisted  of a raspberry soufflé cooked a la minute, a calvados and cinnamon crème brulee and a toffee and whisky pudding with honeycomb and banana. All were safe desserts to have on offer, the souffle an egg white variety as opposed to a richer pastry cream rendering.

finer details...Pedro Ximenez and sugar cubes

It is top end dining while the food on the night seemed to miss the mark of truly current trends and techniques, (to a degree my fault for envisaging) and I say that in the total respect of what was served. I am still looking for a radical chef to break us through with comprehensively up-to-the-minute dining…think immersion circulators, foraging, understanding the umami content of foods and employ of differing hydrocolloids.
Certainly deserved of an outing for locals or visitors….no tricks or turns, honest fare made with love and a cracking wine list to boot.