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‘Audacious’ top chef’s new destination restaurant

He’s taken a big risk to open this small, outside-the-box destination restaurant west of Brisbane. We went to check out if chef Jack Stuart’s move has paid off.

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There’s a certain romance to the creation story of new restaurant Blume.

As the pandemic buffets the country’s dining scene, a head chef leaves behind his gig at an acclaimed eatery in inner-Brisbane and decides to open his own establishment an hour’s drive away in rural Boonah in the Scenic Rim.

There, in a town of 2500 where you could buy a tractor, or fruit and vegetables grown in the fertile surrounds, but not until now, a degustation dining experience, he takes over a former dental surgery, and with a menu crafted from mostly local produce including some plucked from his aunt’s garden a couple of doors up the road, he opens three days a week.

It’s a lifestyle overhaul and possibly an audacious bid to build a reputation as a small, outside-the-box destination restaurant in the vein of eateries such as 22-seat stunner Fleet in Brunswick Heads.

Blume restaurant in Boonah. Picture: Grace Dooner
Blume restaurant in Boonah. Picture: Grace Dooner

Brisbane-born chef Jack Stuart, who worked in the UK before three years as head chef at Congress Wine in Melbourne, returned home to South Brisbane’s innovative Gauge for a year before heading for the hills and opening just before Christmas last year.

Blume, a nod to Boonah’s original name of Blumbergville, is just off the town’s main street in an historic building with white pressed metal covering the walls as well as the ceiling and the voluminous, recessed skylight.

Timber floors, white curtains shrouding the front windows and bowls of vibrant flowers on each of the bare wooden tables set with linen napkins and handcrafted earthenware crockery complete the simple but appealing fitout.

The set, ever-changing, multi-course menu is $85pp, with a couple of add-on options.

From the first sip of a small bowl of iced consommé of tomato and lemon verbena with gaspingly fresh basil leaves, it’s game on, the dish revealing skill and a serious intent with stunning, intensely distilled flavours.

Chunks of “coal oil” zucchini and spelt cannoli filled with a savoury custard accented with pecorino from local supplier Towri Sheep Cheeses are similarly noteworthy.

Coal oil zucchini and spelt cannoli at Blume.
Coal oil zucchini and spelt cannoli at Blume.

It’s a 20-seat establishment, which means Stuart and his kitchen offsider can deliver and explain courses themselves, with another cheerful, low-key member of staff on hand to clear and take care of drinks from the zippy two-page global list that includes Scenic Rim Witches Falls sauvignon blanc or barroca or, perhaps, a Domaine Gerard Tremblay Chablis or a Lombardy nebbiolo.

Kingfish pastrami over devilled eggs and house-made butter at Blume
Kingfish pastrami over devilled eggs and house-made butter at Blume

Thin strips of kingfish pastrami recline over a mound of lightly spiced devilled eggs, both of which marry perfectly with thick slices of superb house sourdough and butter made from cream from nearby Tommerup’s Dairy Farm, which are delivered at the same time.

White bread “sangas” of muscularly flavoured mutton enlivened with a smear of black garlic mayo (a menu add-on at $12 each) are well worth the diversion before we’re back to the main menu and a lovely fillet of delicate rainbow trout lightly cloaked in a beurre blanc and speckled with magical pops of finger lime, roe and pearl tapioca.

Rainbow trout at Blume
Rainbow trout at Blume

The most substantial dish is barbecue pork neck that’s been marinated in barley shio koji, with a warrigal greens sauce boasting nasturtium “capers” from Auntie Jen’s garden and a side of toasted barley studded with sweet corn and pepped up with guanciale (cured pork jowl) beneath a covering of nasturtium leaves.

Dishes arrive at well-timed intervals and a fine, high-summer finish comes in the form of pleasingly tart yoghurt ganache topped with strawberry slices and a surrounding granita flavoured with the zesty herb, apple marigold.

Visiting Blume is a wonderful experience, and a destination absolutely worth the drive for city slickers. It’s pretension free, just a laid-back deep dive into the region’s produce via an harmonious array of clever creations that deliver flavour-wise, dish after dish.

BLUME

4/12 High St, Boonah

blumerestaurant.com.au

Open

Lunch Fri-Sun, dinner Fri and Sat

Must try

Mutton neck and black garlic sangas

Verdict

Food 4.5

Ambience 3.5

Service 4

Value 4

Overall 4/5 stars

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Original URL: https://www.couriermail.com.au/lifestyle/qweekend/audacious-top-chefs-new-destination-restaurant/news-story/055e3162a7a90503a58fdb1bbd252d54