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Sixpenny

Small, serene, self-possessed... sixpenny.
Small, serene, self-possessed... sixpenny.Steve Lunam

Good Food hatGood Food hat16.5/20

Contemporary$$$

There is no menu at sixpenny (until you leave) so dining at Daniel Puskas’ and James Parry’s small, serene, self-possessed corner restaurant is very much a leap of faith. So leap. Or rather, sit back in comfort as a series of young chefs streams from the kitchen bringing plate after plate to your table: the crispest, thinnest salt and vinegar chips; a Jerusalem artichoke puff; a luminous golden beetroot baked in a wattle seed salt crust. Delicate crab with macadamia and camomile is like an intricate carving of ivory; a manicured finger of pastrami pork jowl is a rich, intense flavour hit; and just picked, pea-sized potatoes roasted in fresh mustard is the cutest potato dish ever. And so it goes, in a flow of natural, balanced, tantalising and slightly off-beat compositions, until, finally, carrot cake and a cookie jar of Anzac biscuits. Sweet.

And … Produce from the Parry family farm in Bowral and the back garden.

THE LOW-DOWN
Vibe
Calm, quiet and cosy.
Best bit Face-to-face contact with the chefs. 
Worst bit Men’s loo is outside.

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Original URL: https://www.smh.com.au/goodfood/sydney-eating-out/sixpenny-20141009-3hle0.html