Corner Hotel – Dani Valent

restaurant review Corner Hotel dani valent
The Corner Hotel’s rooftop dining area

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57 Swan Street, Richmond, 9427 7300

My score: 3.5/5

Let another year of eating Melbourne begin, and where better than at the Corner Hotel, a treasured live music venue with a sprawling, buzzing, newly renovated rooftop dining area. It’s one of those highly congenial ‘we’ve got you covered’ scenarios: there’s indoors and outdoors, smoking and non-smoking, stools and seats, a warm welcome for kids and a sanguine understanding that grown-ups can get semi-rowdy. Bookings are welcomed, including for private parties.

Order at the bar and take a number; your food will find you. The menu is a clever document that keeps thing pretty pubby (fried, fatty) but adds a few flourishes for salad fans and modern vegetarians. Large dishes to share are a highlight. Whole roasted eggplant is smooshed with quark (a continental cream cheese), herby almond bits and pomegranate. There’s house-made flatbread to scoop it all up. Glossy pork hock arrives in the piece: spike it with two forks and it falls apart into sticky strands, then cram it into soft buns with caraway-seed-strewn coleslaw and pickles. It’s rich, messy and fabulous.

Apparently fried chicken is still kicking on in 2017. There are three renditions of it here: in a burger, shareable and whole, and as tasty little nuggets served with kimchi mayonnaise. There’s no doubting the easy flavour wins with fowl and hot oil so I guess it will stay ubiquitous.

Keeping life fried, there are pork scratchings (think puffed crackling) piled over corn puree and lime. The accompaniments are cool but the pig isn’t as crunchy as it needs to be. Better are the Codfish Shanty Fritters named, I think, after a folk song that begins “Melbourne girls, they have no combs /Heave away, heave away / They comb their hair with cod-fish bones.” To be clear, I’ve never combed my hair with any kind of fish bone but I have enjoyed these fritters swiped through charred lemon mayonnaise.

This is a quinoa-free zone but there is a suggestion of ancient grains in the Roasted Bloody Beetroots salad. Along with the oozy red beets, there are pert lentils, nutty rye grains and barley. Don’t say ‘superfood’ but feel free to say ‘delicious’. Also tasty and meat-free (though swimmingly oily) is the orecchiette pasta with greens, mustard, chilli flakes and grated salted ricotta.

The Corner rooftop is the perfect place to make – or break – New Year’s resolutions. Sitting on a bench seat looking across to the train tracks, a Patty Smith burger in one hand, a sunset squint to help you look wise and thoughtful, where else would you want to contemplate life? Me, I’m musing on coming back for more of that pork hock: if there’s any food in town that might help a body recover from New Year’s Eve, that is it.

See their website.

More Beer Gardens:

Stomping Ground, 100 Gipps Street, Collingwood, 9415 1944.
Forget about the tennis centre, Melbourne’s best retractable roof is at this bar and brewery. They’re pulling beers today as usual. It’s kid-friendly – prams are welcome and there’s a cubby – but maybe steer children away from the beer ice cream.

Grub Food Van, 87-89 Moor Street, Fitzroy, 9419 8991.
The groovy Airstream caravan and its surrounding garden and shacky restaurant is kicking off another year of Fitzroy glamping and wholesome eating. They’re open today from 10am.

Windsor Castle Hotel, 89 Albert Street, Windsor, 9525 0239.
Today is a rest day but every other summer Sunday afternoon there’s a barbecue in the shady and colourful beer garden with its thatched tiki shelter.

Madame Brussels, 3rd floor, 59 Bourke Street, Melbourne, 9662 2775.
More of a Pimms garden than a beer garden, this sunny rooftop is one of Melbourne’s prime spots for tippling. If it’s too warm, head for the indoors lawn to cool down. She’s resting now but the Madame will be open again from January 3.

First published in The Age, 1st January 2017.

2018-05-03T16:07:37+10:00

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