NewsBite

Advertisement

Is this tucked away buffet the cheapest feast in the south-east?

In a time when many people are watching pennies, Sri Lankan buffets offer extraordinary value and great variety. Ceylonese by South Ceylon is a fine example of the genre.

Dani Valent
Dani Valent

Take a plate and serve yourself from the array of bain marie trays.
1 / 5Take a plate and serve yourself from the array of bain marie trays.Joe Armao
A plate piled with white rice, pepper pork, fried fish, mango curry, beetroot curry, tempered eggplant and cashew curry.
2 / 5A plate piled with white rice, pepper pork, fried fish, mango curry, beetroot curry, tempered eggplant and cashew curry.Joe Armao
White rice; kale mallum; chicken, beetroot and cassava curries; pappadum.
3 / 5White rice; kale mallum; chicken, beetroot and cassava curries; pappadum.Joe Armao
Egg fried rice, devilled prawns, vegetable salad and chilli paste.
4 / 5Egg fried rice, devilled prawns, vegetable salad and chilli paste.Joe Armao
The buffet restaurant has two rows of tables and high-backed padded chairs.
5 / 5The buffet restaurant has two rows of tables and high-backed padded chairs.Joe Armao

Sri Lankan$

I’m standing with a Sri Lankan guy in a used car yard chatting about what’s good to eat nearby. Sure, I should be thinking about roadworthies and airbags but I’m a restaurant critic, so I’m always obsessing about my next meal.

My new salesman friend is happy to chat food, too, so he’s opened the Facebook page for Ceylonese by South Ceylon: every day they post the dishes they’ve cooked for the buffet so you know what you’re up for before you commit. He’s not keen. “Don’t go today, they don’t have the crab,” he cautions, disappointed, perhaps seeing Subway in his near future.

I go anyway. The pictorial menu looks good to me and trawling my way through an array of bain marie trays is more appealing than spending money on a motor vehicle.

Advertisement
“‘You can come back for more,’ I mutter, seduced by the aroma of curry leaves and coconut.”

Ceylonese by South Ceylon is in a minor suburban cluster of shops and feels tucked away, but it’s close to Casey Hospital, Federation Uni and Berwick Station, as well as the local crush of car stores, so it’s handy for lots of people and worth the trip for others.

The setup is simple but welcoming. Two rows of heavy wooden tables with throne-like padded chairs lead to a courtyard, in case you want to eat in the breeze. There’s a sink for washing hands – cutlery-free eating is encouraged, forks are fine, too.

White rice; kale mallum; chicken, beetroot and cassava curries; pappadum.
White rice; kale mallum; chicken, beetroot and cassava curries; pappadum.Joe Armao

Take a plate and serve yourself, trying to avoid the obvious peril of overload. “You can come back for more,” I mutter, seduced by the aroma of curry leaves and coconut.

Advertisement

There’s white rice with fried onion, soft cashews in turmeric gravy, waxy cassava in coconut curry with pandan, and green mango in tangy cinnamon-scented sauce.

That’s my first go-around: the food is hearty and the flavours are honest, sparked up by the sambols that offer such joy to condiment connoisseurs. There’s one with coconut and chilli and a jammy seeni sambol with caramelised onions.

I’m back for crisp river fish, creamy yellow dal, black pork curry, redolent of slow-braised spices, then I finish off with sweet milk tea.

A plate piled with white rice, pepper pork, fried fish, mango curry, beetroot curry, tempered eggplant and cashew curry.
A plate piled with white rice, pepper pork, fried fish, mango curry, beetroot curry, tempered eggplant and cashew curry.Joe Armao

I ate my weekday buffet with pappadums but I’ll return on a Friday or Saturday night when a special cooking station is set up for “live hoppers”, the bowl-shaped pancakes made with fermented rice and lentil batter. On those days, the all-you-can-eat price climbs from the Monday to Friday bargain of $17.95 to a not-exactly-princely $27.95.

Advertisement

In a time when many people are watching pennies, Sri Lankan buffets offer extraordinary value and great variety, and Ceylonese by South Ceylon is a fine example of the genre.

Did I buy a car? Not today. Did I eat delicious food in a friendly place and come home with change? Indeed I did. I may not have cracked open a crab but I definitely clawed my way to culinary joy.

Price: Buffet: $17.95-$27.95 per person; A la carte: $8-$33.95

Continue this series

Your November hit list: The hot, new and just-reviewed places to check out, right now
Up next
Elio’s Place, a new all-day eatery in Flinders Lane, feels as if it’s been here for decades.

This Flinders Lane newcomer with flex is the all-day diner the CBD has been missing

For a food city, Melbourne could do better at all-day dining. Elio’s Place ticks many boxes.

The signature brownie bomb is a brownie-croissant hybrid.

Brownie bombs, chilli-cheese pastry wands: Lumos bakes up some magic in the suburbs

Nothing happens at this luminous local bakery without Hagrid, reviews Dani Valent.

Previous
The go-to dish: Oxtail lends heft to the spring roll filling.

Bang or a whimper? The verdict on Fitzroy’s much-hyped StandardX hotel’s restaurant

It has boho-glam looks and backing from a luxury international hotel chain. But does the street-level restaurant deliver the goods?

See all stories
Dani ValentDani Valent is a food writer and restaurant reviewer.

From our partners

Advertisement
Advertisement

Original URL: https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/goodfood/melbourne-eating-out/is-this-tucked-away-buffet-the-cheapest-feast-in-the-south-east-20241007-p5kghv.html