The Grain Store, Melbourne

As the saying goes, while the cat’s away the mice will play! With a short working week, courtesy of Easter and ANZAC Day, our usual complement of eight team members, dwindled to a lowly three. With our boss also away and left to our own devices, Stevo, AA and myself decided to motivate ourselves with a special breakfast meeting before embracing the long weekend.

Working in the Melbourne CBD, I tend to steer clear of the city on the weekends and look for new places to eat in the inner suburbs. Its been a while since I’ve been to The Grain Store and I’ve been looking for another opportunity to come back. Located between Spencer and King Streets in what could be described as the “interesting” end of Flinders Lane, when you step inside The Grain Store it feels like you are entering a whole new world. With a fitout that embodies a Hamptons style elegance that captures a mood that is light and spacious, casual yet stylish, the café feels like a haven and a place to escape from the frenetic pace of city outside. The neutral tones accentuated by muted lighting, pale timber finishes, completed with white marble topped benches and linen cushions provides a sophisticated and relaxing ambience.

The menu seems to have changed since I last visited the café with a focus on the produce in season. Once I had spotted the Buttermilk French Toast and Spiced Pear with passionfruit crème, apple puree, peppered caramel and walnut praline, I closed the menu. The boys didn’t spend too much time perusing the menu either and they both opted for the Ginger Beer Gammon Steak, Smoky Borlotti Beans with fried egg, nashi pear fritters, remoulade, salsa verde and apple vincotto. Our breakfast dishes arrived shortly thereafter.

Buttermilk French Toast & Spiced Pear with passionfruit creme, apple puree, peppered caramel, walnut praline - The Grain Store, Melbourne
Buttermilk French Toast & Spiced Pear with passionfruit creme, apple puree, peppered caramel, walnut praline – The Grain Store, Melbourne

My dish was well presented although on first glance there seemed to be lots of different shades of beige and brown on the plate and it was hard to know where to begin. With so many strong flavours on the plate, each component tasted best individually. The passionfruit crème was sweet and tart and paired well with the poached pear, lightly rolled in dukkah which was a touch of brilliance. The moist French toast, topped with the crumbled walnut praline, combined with the concentrated flavour of apple puree was delicious. Thick and with the same consistency as dulce de leche, The Grain Store has cleverly created another composition of caramel sauce through the addition of black pepper. The taste and texture blended well together although strong and bold on your palate. The dish was enjoyable and whilst substantial, there seemed to be just the right quantity of caramel, toast, fruit and crème on the plate without making it too overwhelming.

Ginger Beer Gammon Steak, Smoky Borlotti Beans with fried egg, nashi pear fritters, remoulade, salsa verde, apple vincotto - The Grain Store, Melbourne
Ginger Beer Gammon Steak, Smoky Borlotti Beans with fried egg, nashi pear fritters, remoulade, salsa verde, apple vincotto – The Grain Store, Melbourne

As for the breakfast dish that the boys chose, it was colourful and vibrant with an abundance of flavours in the combination of ingredients, which they generously shared with me. For AA, the best component on the plate was smoky and lightly spiced beans which were truly delicious and full of flavour. Stevo’s pick of the dish was the nashi pear fritters, which was an exotic blend of fruit that had been battered and deep fried. Extremely wicked but equally a joy to eat. From what I sampled, I enjoyed both the pear fritter and the beans, but I also liked the finely shredded celeriac remoulade which provided a light crunch and worked well with all the other sweet and savoury components on the plate. While I couldn’t immediately detect the ginger beer flavouring, the thick cuts of gammon steak were moist, succulent and almost melted in your mouth.

Having enjoyed our breakfast and the opportunity to start our last working day of the week in a special way, we trudged up the hill towards the other end of Flinders Lane, looking forward to walking off the abundance of food we had just consumed.

The Grain Store on Urbanspoon

The Hardware Societe, Melbourne CBD

One of my favourite cafes in Melbourne is The Hardware Societe. If friends ask me where they should go for breakfast in the city, I usually recommend this cafe but with a warning. According to Urbanspoon, The Hardware Societe is also the most reviewed and blogged about restaurants in Melbourne and therefore extremely popular. My last visit to the cafe would have been almost two years ago and when I found myself in the city on a Saturday morning and looking for somewhere to eat, I tentatively headed towards Hardware Lane to see how long I would need to wait before I could eat.

As feared, there was a lengthy queue of twenty-five people waiting outside to be seated. I took my place in the line to give my details, all the while formulating a back-up plan to head to Mr Tulk at the State Library if the wait was longer than fifteen minutes. I’ve said it before but there are distinct advantages to dining alone! To my pleasant surprise, I got to bypass the crowd was seated immediately inside at the communal dining table near the kitchen.

Looking around the table, the most popular breakfast dish seemed to be the baked eggs and I was almost tempted to follow suit, until my eyes honed in on the French toast towards the bottom of the menu. When I gave my breakfast order, my lovely attendant asked if I had seen the specials and pointed out the brioche with nutella, banana and hazlenuts. I was almost tempted for a moment but stuck with the exotic, tropical sounding Fried Brioche.

Fried Brioche - coconut bavarois, palm sugar, roasted pineapple and passionfruit
Fried Brioche – coconut bavarois, palm sugar, roasted pineapple and passionfruit

Within two minutes of ordering, my breakfast was placed in front of me. I kid you not. I could only speculate that the baked eggs was the dish du jour and the brioche was ready in the wings, waiting for an order.

I must admit that on a Saturday morning that I can’t readily recall what a bavarois is, but it was the first thing I started to eat. Lightly textured, similar to panacotta, with vanilla beans throughout and subtle coconut flavouring, the bavarois was delicious and a perfect accompanient with the brioche. Thickly sliced and cooked French toast style, the sweet bread, the creamy bavarois and crunchy pineapple were beyond description. The passionfruit and thinly sliced pineapple was not tart or sweet and counterbalanced the fried bread. In almost the same speed that the food was delivered to my table, my breakfast was also rapidly devoured.

I was in the restaurant for no more than fifteen minutes and having finished my breakfast, I headed back outside to avoid the stares of the anxious-looking people who were waiting in the queue before me.

Hideout Cafe and Rubix Cafe, Wodonga

Wodonga! Can anything good come from there? Well, it’s my home town. Sometimes I love it and at other times, I’m glad to leave it behind in the rear view mirror. Nevertheless, I have spent a great deal of my time and money indulging in Saturday breakfasts in Albury-Wodonga cafes over the past decade or so. My favourite places for breakfast used to be the Wodonga Plant Farm and Cafe Grove, but these cafes change ownership regularly so I’ve been a bit reticent to go back on recent visits.

Being keen to try somewhere new, one of my Facebook friends recently posted a beautiful photo of a pancake stack and I mentally noted that I needed to go and try it out when I was next in Wodonga. Hideout Cafe is located in Waratah Way and used to be a milk bar and takeaway store when I was in high school.

It felt really odd to return to the store after some twenty years or more. The facade has changed from mission brown to white, and the store has had a modern makeover to transform it into a cafe. However it still has that cloying smell of vegetable oil in the air and the usual corner store items are still for sale to the neighbouring residents.

At the counter, I quickly looked at the breakfast menu, which was divided into two pancake offerings, a French toast section, artisan bread for toast with condiments, corn fritters and then an array of individual items to create your own individual cooked, savoury breakfast. Enjoying the sunshine outside, the windows were emblazoned with self-printed signs proclaiming the “Border’s best breakfast”. Can’t wait!

My breakfast dish was personally delivered by a chef in whites. Extremely posh for West Wodonga but appreciated. The chef noted that I didn’t have water on my table and arranged for a bottle to be brought out to me. Two thumbs up.

French toast with poached pear, Turkish dried fig and lime yoghurt - Hideout Cafe, Wodonga
French toast with poached pear, Turkish dried fig and lime yoghurt – Hideout Cafe, Wodonga

The presentation was impeccable, however the yoghurt looked a little on the lumpy side and the obligatory sprinkling of icing sugar was about to declare war on my lovely orange pants. The bread was soft and light and perfect with the moist poached pears, which suprisingly still had skin on. I love toasted flaked almonds and they were a great accompaniment. The sliced dried Turkish figs were a bit tough to chew but added a sweet flavour.

When I tasted the yoghurt, I hate to admit it but it had a distinct taste of garlic. After another taste, I came to the conclusion that it didn’t need to be on my plate or near my toast for that matter. With all the dry elements on the toast, the dish needed some moisture and the syrup was not too sweet and was delicious with the figs, pears and almonds.

So in conclusion, a delicious and filling breakfast but I wasn’t overwhelmingly convinced that it was the best breakfast I’ve had in Albury-Wodonga.

A planned power outage on early Sunday morning made it necessary to leave home and go in search of breakfast and coffee. Last weekend, my wonderful Dad (who enthusiastically supports my food and wine adventures) cut out a comment from the letters to the editor in the local newspaper about a new cafe in Wodonga’s Cube complex and asking whether people knew about it. Well I do now.

The cafe space at The Cube is clean, spacious, modern with an outdoor dining area and much appreciated air-conditioning to escape the summer heat.

Rubix Cafe at The Cube, Wodonga
Rubix Cafe at The Cube, Wodonga

From the sweet to the savoury, the sound of the Potato Boxtie (sic), which is a traditional Irish potato pancake, with house smoked salmon and sour cream piqued my interest.

Potato Boxtie - potato pancake with house smoked salmon, sour cream and fresh lemon - Rubix Cafe, Wodonga
Potato Boxty – potato pancake with house smoked salmon, sour cream and fresh lemon – Rubix Cafe, Wodonga

My breakfast exceeded all expectations. Four fluffy thin savoury pancakes with a delicious creamy sauce of dill, finely diced red onion and sour cream, topped with thick, warm pieces of salmon fillet. Totally divine, delicious, yummy and filling. Perfect sustenance for getting me through another long train trip back to Melbourne.

http://www.thecubewodonga.com.au/cafe_bar/

As for the Border’s best breakfast, that honour will always go to my Mum and Dad!