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The 10 Queensland restaurants you need to eat at this year

From Brisbane and the Gold Coast to Cairns and beyond, here’s where you need to eat in the Sunshine State.

Matt Shea and Callan Boys

Drilling down on the best Queensland restaurants is an almost impossible task, such is the quality of the dining across the state in 2024.

From Brisbane and the Gold Coast all the way up to Cairns and beyond, there are cracking eateries just about everywhere you look.

Agnes is Brisbane’s must-do restaurant right now.
Agnes is Brisbane’s must-do restaurant right now.Supplied

But consider the restaurants on the following list, published in this year’s Sydney Good Food Guide – out tomorrow – as the essential go-tos when you’re next exploring the Sunshine State.

Agnes

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There’s no gas here, no electricity – just a blazing hearth over which chef Ben Williamson and his team tend to an endlessly innovative menu steeped in local produce.

Atmosphere is always on the menu at Agnes.
Atmosphere is always on the menu at Agnes.

The striking digs, all low lights in a heritage-listed former dairy co-op, only add to its reputation as Brisbane’s most essential restaurant right now.

22 Agnes Street, Fortitude Valley, anyday.com.au/agnes-venue-page

Blume

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Occupying an old Boonah timber shopfront replete with pressed metal walls is this star of Scenic Rim dining.

Owner-chef Jack Stuart’s ever-changing set menu might feature clay-baked beetroot, Spanish mackerel with broccoli, curry leaves and a mussel broth, or lamb shoulder with local mushrooms. There’s just 20 seats, so book well ahead.

5 Church Street, Boonah, blumerestaurant.com.au

Essa

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This moody 60-seater is a welcome contrast to its glitzy James Street neighbours.

Essa, just off James Street in Brisbane.
Essa, just off James Street in Brisbane.Supplied

A popular flame-focused set menu might include a crab crumpet with lemon and mayo, and wood-fired market fish with nori butter, but you can also choose your own a la carte path. An organic and biodynamic wine list splits the difference between local and overseas producers.

181 Robertson Street, Fortitude Valley, essa.restaurant

Essen

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At this friendly, independent BYO-only restaurant about three hours’ drive inland from Brisbane, owner-chef Clarissa Pabst writes her own rules.

Cottage restaurant Essen serves up to 30 guests per night.
Cottage restaurant Essen serves up to 30 guests per night.Paul Harris

A four-course set menu is built around the kind of comfort cooking you can imagine Stephanie Alexander serving for Sunday lunch, so you might encounter Tropea onion and parmesan tart, roast chook with white polenta, lemon-thyme panna cotta, and Golden Queen peach sorbet. Visit Stonefruit in nearby Tenterfield if you’re keen to bring great wine.

2 McGregor Terrace, Stanthorpe, essenstanthorpe.com.au

Exhibition

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Following Joy, the acclaimed (and still essential) tiny degustation restaurant he opened with Sarah Baldwin in 2019, Exhibition is Tim Scott letting his inspiration run wild.

Exhibition in Brisbane’s CBD.
Exhibition in Brisbane’s CBD.BEDA

The menu is ever-changing, but expect a phalanx of snacks anchored in Japanese technique, followed by larger plates such as wagyu tartare with rayu oil and sweet potato, or slipper lobster with kohlrabi and macadamia. Unmissable.

109 Edward Street, Brisbane, exhibitionrestaurant.com

Restaurant Labart

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It may have loosened its tie post-pandemic, but Labart hasn’t changed the assured precision of the cooking.

Restaurant Labart in Burleigh Heads.
Restaurant Labart in Burleigh Heads.Supplied

Expect black-mussel escabeche, market fish with bouillabaisse butter and celeriac rouille, or baked scallops with an anchovy and pink peppercorn butter – all served in a beautifully presented Euro-inflected bistro.

8 West Street, Burleigh Heads, restaurantlabart.com

Nu Nu

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A celebration of everything Far North Queensland, from the stunning Palm Cove location looking across the Coral Sea, to the innovative ways with local produce.

Nu Nu in Palm Cove.
Nu Nu in Palm Cove.Supplied

Go large on plates such as ginger caramel chicken wings and kimchi butter-poached reef fish, before finishing with something spice-spiked from the cocktail list.

1 Veivers Road, Palm Cove, nunu.com.au

Pneuma

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The latest restaurant from Dan Arnold (whose namesake fine diner is a local star), Pneuma is co-owned by former GOMA Restaurant chef Matt Blackwell.

Pneuma in Brisbane’s CBD.
Pneuma in Brisbane’s CBD.Tammy Law

In a heritage dining room, Blackwell deals in dishes such as white anchovies with a ’nduja and piquillo pepper emulsion, and roasted monkfish tail with a smoked onion and mussel beurre blanc. The bold food is matched with a thoughtful and globetrotting wine list.

336 George Street, Brisbane, pneumarestaurant.com

Rick Shores

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This modern classic refuses to lean on its fabulous beachside location, with chef James Brady punching out a menu as fresh as the Burleigh Heads breakers gliding past the restaurant’s front-row seats.

Rick Shores in Burleigh Heads boasts one of the best outlooks in the country.
Rick Shores in Burleigh Heads boasts one of the best outlooks in the country.Supplied

Eat Madras lamb rump with rice dressing, or Patagonian toothfish with cardamom leaf, yellow curry and fried garlic. The bug roll, meanwhile, is a must.

3/43 Goodwin Terrace, Burleigh Heads, rickshores.com.au

Snack Man

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It’s neighbouring Happy Boy that put Cameron and Jordan Votan on the map, but Snack Man is arguably more essential, a fabulous menu of regional Chinese snacks – think Guangdong-style crispy tofu skin rolls with prawns, or Beijing-inspired pan-fried pies with pork floss – matched to small-producer European wines and grower champagne.

Jordan and Cameron Votan outside Snack Man, in Brisbane’s Fortitude Valley.
Jordan and Cameron Votan outside Snack Man, in Brisbane’s Fortitude Valley.Morgan Roberts

The brothers’ new, neighbouring French diner, Petite, is also worth a look.

East Street, Fortitude Valley, snack-man.com.au

Matt SheaMatt Shea is Food and Culture Editor at Brisbane Times. He is a former editor and editor-at-large at Broadsheet Brisbane, and has written for Escape, Qantas Magazine, the Guardian, Jetstar Magazine and SilverKris, among many others.
Callan BoysCallan Boys is editor of SMH Good Food Guide, restaurant critic for Good Weekend and Good Food writer.

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Original URL: https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/goodfood/brisbane-eating-out/the-10-queensland-restaurants-you-need-to-eat-at-this-year-20241110-p5kpel.html