Firedoor – Surry Hills, Sydney – Tuesday 10 June 2025 – Dinner

Well, that was a surprise. Seems I should take more note of the places that I have on my list. I rocked up, and little did I know I would be at Firedoor for a good few hours working through the tasting menu.

I’m thinking about the absolutely beautiful toasted marshmallow that I finished off with, thinking about the saltiness the lamb rib, thinking about how good the tataki kangaroo was. I’m thinking about the marron with finger line. It was a very, very good meal.

Tataki kangaroo, wasabi oil, purple turnip

It’s so hard to compare places, but I will say that this experience took me by surprise. It’s so cool. The kitchen’s cool. The whole concept is very cool. Fire touched food is not a new concept but here the treatment with heat is more diversified.

There are staff all over the place, though there is still order. Dining up on the bar, watching the chefs feels like a privilege on bar stool “table 68” as it is often shouted out. It is great service helped by the fact I’m on the end of the bar, where it meets the entry to the kitchen. So even when small mistakes are made, they’re corrected quickly.

For once, the weakest dish is the first, surprisingly as I normally love any crab. Here spanner crab is treated uniquely, and while beautifully presented, it doesn’t cut it for me, but everything else does. Next I have the tataki kangaroo that I was talking about earlier, with purple turnips. It is brilliant. Kangaroo is becoming such an iconic dish in Australia, and more and more places are doing it well. In this case, doing it well includes the chef cutting it right in front of me with a very sharp knife and letting it rest for what must have been at least fifteen minutes. Added are precisely cut purple radishes after they have been subjected to severe heat. It’s the yeast dressing with wasabi oil that brings it all together so brilliantly.

Then there’s dishes like the lamb rib. I took three absolutely delicious bites. It’s so good. There’s a complicated process involved that I cannot explain, but it leads to a brilliant result. The other rib later on is wagyu. Cooked medium rare, perhaps more on the rare side, it is also beautiful, but the star on the plate is the artichoke. It is immaculate. Fire on vegetables is something that should be used early to get children on side, as it brings out so much flavour.

The marron is huge. Finger lime marries well, adding some texture, and it’s all delicious together. The chef sitting on the bar to the left of me manages to scoop out all of the residual marron meat. My effort is embarrassing, but at least I was able to access the claw. On the seafood spectrum, there is also the intricate calamari, cut very thinly in a rich pork broth, with a quail egg cooked in the middle. The dish is unusual. You mix it around once you’ve taken in the presentation, and the combination is fantastic.

Dessert comes as two. It starts with a refresher, which is a tradition I’ve always enjoyed. The mandarine granita is tasty to start, with a leaf of Mexican marigold, which really adds a new element with delicious custard at the base. Finally, the main dessert is the beer ice cream. It’s a Cooper’s stout ice cream, covered in cream, with Federation Chocolate from Tasmania on top. An enjoyable ending to a tremendous meal.

The wine list is interesting, diverse, and very reasonably priced. One tip I have for any fine dining wine list is to trust the wines by the glass. There is no way the sommelier is choosing any wines that will be uncomfortable, or create doubt about the next selection. When you trust the list, you can choose the more unusual wines, or at least ask about them to decide whether you will take a step outside of your comfort zone.

In this spirt, I tried the Quinta do Ermizio, Electrico, which is a combination of Loureiro and Arinto from Portugal. It is very reasonably priced, a great light introduction into the evening, with crispness and acidity. More serious in my opinion, comes the Bicknell Applecross Chardonnay from the Yarra Valley. I order it a little early and save half of the glass for the marron. Both reds I try are from further afield like the Portuguese wine. The first is a Nebbiolo by Menotti Rosavica, and the other is a Cabernet Franc by Les Athletes du Vin from the Loire Valley. Sometimes I like to stick to recommendations on what matches with certain dishes. In the case of the Nebbiolo, I just simply felt like a well chosen Italian wine from the wine team at Firedoor.

Perhaps this experience isn’t for everyone. There is some expense in having only a tasting menu, and a lot of rich dishes through the courses. For someone who loves diverse ingredients, treated to a lot of heat and fire, the expense is worth it. People dining here are as into the concept as the kitchen and floor staff. You can feel the excitement. When a chef douses marron with what looks like molten lava it is hard not to stand and applaud.

Firedoor
https://firedoor.com.au
23-33 Mary Street, Surry Hills, NSW
Lunch Fri & Sat; Dinner Wed-Sat
02 8204 0800 
info@firedoor.com.au

Bills – Surry Hills – Saturday 1 April 2017 – Breakfast

A big change is needed for tourists enjoying holidays in the Sydney CBD. There are very few worthwhile breakfast options in the city that have great coffee and diverse food choices. Not loving the thought of eating at a hotel buffet, we had no choice but to go out to the inner suburbs.

It is surprising, but there are not a huge amount of must try cafes near the city, and several good options are shut on the weekend. In the end we took the easy option and chose to meet friends at Bills in Surry Hills.

Bills is an institution. It has all the ingredients that you need for a successful café. Fame, quality food, decent coffee, good waitstaff, and a nice good looking fitout. It is a script that Bill Granger has used around Sydney and as far as London. I can tell you right now that you could not do exactly the same in Melbourne and expect as much success.

We were here for a good time but not a long time, which factored in the obligatory 20 minute wait. Ordering quickly, most of us had scrambled eggs and bacon, which was good quality. Catherine changed up to avocado toast, and again it was a nicely executed classic. The orange juice was fresh and sweet, and the coffee was nice enough, albeit plain.

There are little things here that you need to deal with though. For a start, our friend Simon (a chef himself) couldn’t believe there was no option for eggs on toast other than scrambled. Putting two and two together it would appear that the chefs don’t want to do poached, or the kitchen is too small to do regularly, or a bit of both. There are poached eggs offered as part of some dishes, and fried too, but not simply with toast and a side or two.

I came here knowing these things, and still decided to come. The reason is simple. There are not a lot of good options on the way to Randwick and I know you can depend on Bills. There is a good chance I’ll be back again next time, or the time after.

Bills Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato