Monthly Archives: July 2013

Sorrento & Portsea

A scenic one hour trip around the bay of Melbourne, we reach Sorrento & Portsea. Sorrento sits on the bayside of Melbourne where you can actually see the skyline of the city miles away which almost feels like a hallucination and i expect you’d have to see it to understand what i mean!

We have fish & chips looking out onto the water and the moored boats which is picturess and you can see why this is the choice of many a Melbournian to spend their weekends & holidays.

But it’s when we venture over the other side of the land onto to the coast-side that I actually yelp at the view!  Don’t get me wrong I love the bay, but i’m all about Aussie waves and coastline so when we hop out of the car on the coastal beach of Portsea I realise no bay or river will even come close. I guess that’s why Sydneysiders are so snobby when it comes to our beaches. But i have to admit this coast like is just as beautiful as any NSW beach and I make a mental note to spend the entire summer here!  Looking even further down the coast and we see huge rocks protruding through the water and I immediately think of the 12 Apostles and i even ask the dumb question as to whether its them.

It’s not.

Looking up the coast..

Looking up the coast..

It’s been raining all day but the heavens clear as we’re overlooking the Tasman and even a rainbow appears which i think was just overkill! 😉  

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Daylesford & Bendigo

This past weekend I was lucky enough to have a visit from Mum & Dad in my adopted city. Since all three of us have spent so much time in Melbourne and seen much less of country Victoria, we decide to hire a car and head out of the city to a few different regional spots. Not so lucky though, that it also coincides with a crazy time at work which means that our planned four day weekend in the country is cut short when I’m told I need to be back in the office Monday afternoon. Still, for the brief break outside of Melbourne is really feels like a holiday.

An extremely easy drive about an hour and a half out of Melbourne, we arrive into Daylesford, labelled on the welcome sign as the ‘spa capital of Australia’.   The area sits on natural mineral springs and as such has turned into a town of pampering and you can even swim in the (apparently medicinal) springs.  Also supposedly the gay capital of Victoria (still not sure why, I think we missed something), the town is sort of like the Blue Mountains but maybe slightly more ‘small town’.  Servicing tourists and weekend visitors from Melbourne is clearly the main business and it’s reflected in the knick-knack type shops that line the main street.  You know, the type that you go into and have look around but pretty much never buy anything.

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Gardens in Bendigo

Finally the Melbourne weather found me in Daylesford because it pretty much rains the entire weekend and for the first time this winter I’m seriously cold. Like ‘trip to the snow’ cold. It means the weekend is based around food & pampering which suits me perfectly! We eat out at every meal and there’s not one place that disappoints – the food is consistently good, from a trendy Melbourne-esque coffee house to a vegetarian café we accidently stumble upon.  Worth its own mention though is “Perfect Drop” the restaurant we go to on Saturday night which was chosen by Mum after some clever trip advisor research.  The place is conveniently next door to our accommodation and boasts possibly the best Modern Mediterranean food we’ve ever tasted.  The restaurant is cosy with fireplaces and accents like old records and exposed brick and has a really trendy vibe for such a small town.  Every dish is amazing and following our meal we sit in front of the fire as if we’re at home and order another bottle of red. I honestly could have stayed there all night, which Mum & I almost do, only leaving when we get the feeling they’d like us to move along.   Tragically we’re told by the waitress that their head chef is leaving to “spend more time with his family” which we assume means he’s been poached by some upcoming Melbourne spot.

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Bendigo Courts

The rain continues on Sunday and I decide I have NO other option than to get a massage and a facial at one of the several spas in the centre of town (poor me, right?!).  By now I’m sufficiently relaxed and the impending work stress that awaits me is a little further from my mind.  Daylesford is probably not more than a one day or two day destination but it was still a gorgeous quaint little town and I’m glad we went.

Melbourne bound on Monday morning, we take brief detour to Bendigo which is built on gold (!) and the town wows us all with its grandeur, apparently left over from the gold rush. Not exactly the type of place you could spend too much time I’m afraid but definitely worth a drive in and out visit and a nice end to our very brief tour of country Vic.

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Bendigo’s Town Hall

Gazi

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I was disappointed when I learned several months ago that The Press Club was closing down. The restaurant was somewhat of an institution in Melbourne for high end business lunches, long before George Calombaris became a household name and I never had the fortune of going!

Recently I was happy to learn though that while The Press Club had closed its Flinders Street door, a new door had opened to “Gazi” whose door now enters on the Exhibition side of the same restaurant space. Rumoured to be Greek Street food, I booked a table for a recent visit from Mum & Dad in the hopes that we could still have the Calombaris experience.

And that we did at Gazi – as we watched George himself running the kitchen and the floor as he saw fit. The novelty factor was pretty fantastic with the recently trimmed down Calombaris in his chef whites schmoozing waiters, snapping photos with diners and even setting places on tables.  If that wasn’t enough,

we even spotted him chatting to Adriano Zumbo who’s having a meal with a friend.

That aside the restaurant impress me the minute I walk in. The room is spacious and quirky with upside down terracotta pots hanging from the ceiling creating a wave like feature.

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Seating at the bar and kitchen counter overlooks rotisserie style pork belly and chicken as we have a drink before our sitting. The menu is designed to share and offers a $69 10 course tasting menu which I would definitely go for if I was feeling hungrier since everything looks amazing!  The price of each menu item is extremely reasonable and the atmosphere is anything but stuffy so it could definitely be a place to frequent, not just special occasions.

 

We order a couple of starters (sardines, lamb meatballs & taramasalata – all are extraordinary and not nearly as simple as they sound) and then a Souvlakia each which is reflective of the ‘street food’ element of the restaurant. An upmarket version of the Greek classic, the Souvlakia comes complete with chips and a paper wrapping but the flavour is beautiful! We comment that you could actually go there, have one or two Souvlaki and be happy. And at only $12 a pop, it’d be a cheap date!

We finish our meal and I’m totally satisfied but not in a sickening kind of way despite quite a lot of bread throughout the meal.  As such I figure we have to try one of the amazing desserts which are on a tray at the entrance of the restaurant. A banana… something… I actually have no idea what it was but it came in a jar and when the lid was removed let out a billow of smoke which was awesome. The smoky flavour continued in the dessert and it was incredible.

We leave the restaurant and pass George who thanks us and wishes us a great night. I’ll definitely be going back, with or without the celebrity siting.

http://gazirestaurant.com.au/