Makeover magic works its charm at Manly Pavilion
13.5/20
Contemporary$$
Even on a grey and blustery day, the Manly Pavilion is a spiffing place to be. Behind you, green cliffs.
Before you, ferry-dotted views across the harbour to the Heads. And directly in front of you, fish and chips and a glass of Polperro pinot gris.
The wedding cake pavilion has carved out a special little waterside niche for itself since it started life as a bathers' changing room in the 1930s.
Even as it lay sad and shuttered for the past three years, it proved an irresistible lure to the Isaac brothers' Boathouse Group, drawn to seaside venues (Palm Beach, Rose Bay, Balmoral, Shelly Beach) like a seagull to a chip.
Boathouse founders Andrew Goldsmith and Pip Robb have given the old dear a makeover and now she's awash with greenery, adorned with lobster pots and lined with anchor print lampshades.
A busy schedule of oft-postponed wedding receptions and events is playing out in the ground floor function room, while the first-floor restaurant is all scallop-shell bar, terrazzo floor, ornate mirrors and soft linen table napkins. It's totally charming and fresh.
Group exec chef James Brownrigg plots a course for the menu by the usual Boathouse stars – fish and chips, crab toasties, pizza flatbreads, prawn cocktails.
He then charts a different course with a few newbies, with a success rate that goes up and down like a Manly ferry tossed around by the swell.
There's a chargrilled kingfish collar that's all sticky, saucy fun, for just $11.
A savoury gochujang glaze outside seasons the soft, giving meat inside, begging to be squeezed with lime and torn from the bones. It's a good sign, too, that the kitchen buys whole kingfish and parlays it into different dishes across the board.
As ceviche ($27), each thick, even slice of kingfish is topped with red chilli in a puddle of coconut milk and lime, but it's strangely bland; more of a texture than a flavour. Crisp plantain chips – another recurring theme – add crunch.
Another newcomer of prawn and mussel laksa ($36), is a play on everyone's favourite spicy Malaysian noodle soup, but comes, oddly, without noodles.
Not sure of the thinking here. It's a very large golden-brown slurry of curry, nobbly with cashews and strewn with crisped curry leaves, with four big tiger prawns and four shelled mussels on top.
An impressive display, but it just doesn't work as a dish, noodles or not, and I'm relieved to hear later it will be quietly retired from service. The equally large Balmain or Moreton Bay bug linguine ($38) looks to be a better bet.
It's very rare that I get halfway through a dish and come to a stop, not because I actively dislike it, but because I am bored.
It happens with a pizza-like flatbread bearing Queensland bay lobster, bechamel and chilli ($29) that never quite gets off the ground, and a piled-high shredded beetroot and red cabbage salad ($12) whose flavours aren't as bright as its colours.
Desserts are more entertaining. Group head pastry chef Marco Iacobbe does a clever Bounty dessert ($16) that looks like half a coconut, the rough, crisp shell of chocolate holding a light, delicate, white coconut bavarois.
They haven't nailed the menu yet, and opening a restaurant and event space in the face of two long weekends was obviously pretty challenging.
The locals haven't worked out how best to use Manly Pavilion yet, either, but they will. My tips: colonise the bar, hog the armchairs and fire-tables (yes, tables with an open fire in the pedestal) on the terrace.
Meet up for drinks and oysters, and treat the kids to fish and chips and house-made Paddle Pop ice-creams.
If you stay cool, expect a wait, be nice to the fairly junior staff and don't order anything too fancy, the old place will still work its magic.
The low-down
Manly Pavilion
Vibe Sparkling fresh dining room and terrace with postcard-perfect sea views
Go-to dish Kingfish collar with chilli and lime, $11
Drinks Beachy cocktails (Boathouse margarita), 15 beers, a non-alcoholic drinks list and Australian/French wine list.
Terry Durack is chief restaurant critic for The Sydney Morning Herald and senior reviewer for the Good Food Guide. This rating is based on the Good Food Guide scoring system.
Continue this series
20 of Sydney’s best places to eat and drink on the waterfrontUp next
The Surf Deck's burger is hard to beat on a summer afternoon
The perfect cheeseburger doesn't exist, but this beachside cocktail shack might be the perfect place to scoff one.
The Pines brings the beach party to Cronulla
The Pines is Cronulla's hot ticket, with a seductive summer vibe that might last right through winter.
Previous
A whale of a time at Whalebridge in Circular Quay
Three cheers to this slightly crazy completely al fresco French bistro on harbour's edge, writes Terry Durack.
Restaurant reviews, news and the hottest openings served to your inbox.
Sign up- More:
- Manly
- Sydney
- Contemporary
- Outdoor dining
- Licensed
- Bar
- Accepts bookings
- Great or interesting view
- Family-friendly
- Pub dining
- Long lunch
- Open fire
- Wheelchair access
- Vegetarian-friendly
- Manly Pavilion
- Restaurant
- Reviews
From our partners
Original URL: https://www.smh.com.au/goodfood/sydney-eating-out/manly-pavilion-review-20220510-h23ngc.html