Glovers Station – Dani Valent

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258 Glen Eira Road, Elsternwick, 9532 7765

My score: 4/5

You know those derelict but magnificent buildings that you fervently hope will be turned into something lovely? Too often, desires are dashed and bulldozers move in. Sometimes, as with Glovers Station, good people act in the most marvellously Melbourne way: they bring excellent coffee and delicious food to a neighbourhood in need. This 1935 mock Tudor structure was a garage with arched entrance, stucco facade and quirky turret. Where lumbering EK Holdens once gorged on leaded fuel, now towering prams have disc brakes engaged so their drivers can top up on muesli with activated almonds. As in the good old days, friendly attendants see to all needs; they’ll fill your water but perhaps don’t ask them to check your oil.

The old workshop was a mess when Jim Marinis, Mary-Jane Daffy and chef Brett Hobbs (all ex-Little Tommy Tucker in Bentleigh) stepped in. They’ve magicked it into an attractive haven with factory windows, curved walls, must-touch textures and loving details in everything from bespoke timber tables to thoughtful food. There’s a sommelier’s approach to coffee with tasting notes and various brews (try the bottomless batch if you’re there for the long haul).

The menu enthuses about autumn produce so you know this is cafe cuisine not just fuel. Poached trout with quinoa, kale and goji berry salad isn’t only a roll-call of hip ingredients; it’s also a tasty breakfast, especially considering a wobbly egg and piped dollop of pureed avocado are part of the picture. The pulled pork roll works anytime: it’s layered with bitey relish, fried egg and hunks of crackling. Juicy chicken comes with a modified, elegant waldorf salad that includes caramelised walnuts and a shard of crisped chicken skin. There’s a respectful kids’ menu and moreish desserts. If it’s a toss up between a grease and oil change and moist chocolate zucchini torte, let me eat cake anyday.

See their website.

More ‘once were garages’:

Garage Espresso, 126A Chapel Street, St Kilda, 9531 1331
The coffee is good and the muffin flavours are pretty ace. A recent combo was raspberry, lychee and vanilla.

Roller Door, 13 Stawell Street, West Melbourne, no phone
The roller door that hides this higgledy piggledy cafe makes me think of garages even though it used to be a tool shed. Book in for pizza nights.

Garage Cafe, 221 Berkeley Street, Carlton, 9349 5000
Nasi goreng and fancy cars may not seem like a natural fit but that’s the deal at this Indonesian restaurant with adjacent car park.

First published in The Age, April 19, 2015.

2018-05-03T17:08:37+10:00

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