Lupino – Dani Valent

restaurant review Dani Valent Lupino linguine carbonara bit.ly:DVlupino

Linguine carbonara with ‘nduja and radicchio.

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41 Little Collins Street, Melbourne, 9639 0333

My score: 4/5

Lupino is a wily ‘little wolf’, a knowing, thronging Italian-but-oh-so-Melbourne restaurant. Clubby but welcoming, rigorous but high-spirited, it’s run by Richard Lodge and Marco Lori, hospitality die-hards who came together at Moretti on Exhibition Street more than 20 years ago, decamped to open Becco, then five years ago joined forces with Made Establishment’s George Sykiotis to create this smart trattoria.

At lunch, the room roars with regulars, businessmen ordering crumbed veal like it’s a secret pathway to extra stock options. At dinner, it’s more glam, a bit dressed up, and the early start makes it a pre-theatre winner.

The food is classic stuff, lightened and brightened a little so those who come three times a week don’t get bogged down or bored. And some of those stalwart customers go way back – they’ve followed the team from the Moretti days, eating that tortellini and this veal for decades, scolding the guys soundly if they so much as think about taking the polpette off the menu. (Don’t worry. Those $3.50 meatballs are bolted, soldered and glued on now.)

The menu swerves gently through the seasons but as well as the meatballs, you’ll always find beef carpaccio, thin as tissue paper, fanned and scattered with capers, parmesan and plenty of good olive oil. Chances are you’ll stumble upon cauliflower fritters, with aioli for dipping and white anchovies to help you find your taste buds again. Pasta is handmade with skill, care and soul. Pick of the current crop is the linguine carbonara laced with radicchio and spiced up with ‘nduja, a chilli-slammed Calabrian salami. There’s egg yolk and a little cream but the dish is pulled back from heaviness by a slosh of the brodo (broth) that is a kind of currency here, rounding out many dishes with a chicken-y clarity.

Lupino is serious about food, wine and hospitality but the surfeit of confidence means there’s room to play. There’s banter between the floor and open kitchen and the service, though schooled and efficient, isn’t too formal. The décor is simpatico: the foil-wrapped butter, terracotta tiles and macramé room dividers are nods and winks back to old-timey Italo-Aussie restaurants that Lupino has both transcended and honoured. Whatever, just eat.

See their website.

More Pasta:

Mister Bianco, 285 High Street, Kew, 9853 6929.
Perfect for autumn, the cavatelli pasta comes with goat ragu and green olive gremolata. Ask about the special mother’s day lunch and watch for chef Joe Vargetto’s new restaurant, Massi, opening in the city.

Ripponlea Food and Wine, 15 Glen Eira Avenue, Ripponlea, 8804 1313.
It’s all about comfort at this sweet neighbourhood diner, and the potato and ricotta gnocchi with taleggio, walnut and pear is the cosiest dish I’ve eaten for a while.

Trattoria Emilia, Rear, 360 Little Collins Street, Melbourne, 9670 7214.
Chef Francesco Rota reckons the pick of the autumn pasta dishes are the tortelloni emiliani with mortadella, prosciutto, walnut and balsamic, and the rosette, with ricotta and stinging nettles.

First published in The Age, 24th April 2016.

2018-05-04T11:16:36+10:00

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