First look: This penthouse pasta restaurant is raising the roof(top) in Cremorne
Zip past street-level sibling Caffe Amatrice to the 10th floor for Italian feasting with (almost) 360-degree views.
Rooftop bars are a dime a dozen in Melbourne. But rooftop restaurants? Not so much.
That’s what sets Amatrice apart. The 10th-storey Italian diner opens today as the cherry on top of Cubitt Place, a new, mostly commercial development in Cremorne.
From Stephenson Street there’s little sign it exists, but recently opened sibling Caffe Amatrice provides a clue.
“A [ground-floor] venue to hint at what’s happening on the rooftop was always part of the plan,” says Alex Brawn, who runs the Amatrices – and Williamstown’s Sebastian – with Dave Parker (also San Telmo Group) and Kelly Brawn, his partner in business and life.
What first strikes you are the views (yes, plural), which differ between spaces and span almost 360 degrees. Gaze from Richmond to the Dandenongs from the greenhouse-like main dining room, completely enveloped by glass but with a scalloped awning for shade.
The al fresco, all-seasons main deck looks out across the Melbourne sports precinct and skyline, but there’s also a more intimate smaller deck and a 10-seat private dining room.
Interiors whiz Brahman Perera – designer and co-owner of Entrecote and Hopper Joint – has given the 80-seat restaurant an effortless elegance, with splashes of red (marble tabletops, velvet banquettes), and statement-making sculptural pendant lighting.
Inspired by the members-only Soho House rooftops overseas, the team has filled the space with greenery and is shooting for a vibe that’s sophisticated without feeling stuffy.
That extends to the menu, from head chef Vincenzo Di Giovanniello (Bar Carolina, Osteria Ilaria): it’s approachable in its Italian origins but, at times, ambitious in its provenance.
Seldom seen in Melbourne, the star is an IGP-certified dried angel hair pasta that the team had to get a licence to import from the Italian village of Campofilone. Di Giovanniello describes it as “the champagne of pastas” and because of its high egg content, it adds extra richness to the wagyu beef and pork ragu it’s served with.
The big four of Roman pastas (the namesake amatriciana, carbonara, cacio e pepe, gricia) are all here too, with either spaghetti or short, tubular mezze maniche. There’s also inky black Campofilone fettuccine, served with prawns, tomatoes and stracciatella.
But pasta isn’t the be-all and end-all. Snacks include citrusy grouper crudo, and globe artichokes fried in the alla giudia Roman-Jewish style. There’s also cotoletta – made with veal from Fairlight in the Northern Rivers of NSW – with a mustardy apple sauce. And dessert includes bomboloni (doughnut balls) filled with raspberry creme patisserie.
Both Amatrice venues are wins for the suburb, but there’s more goodness to come with the opening of Baker Bleu and a soon-to-be-announced Future Future concept nearby. Alex says, “We’re just one piece of the puzzle of the evolving nature of Cremorne.”
Open Wed 4.30pm-late; Thu-Sat noon-late; Sun noon-6.30pm
16 Stephenson Street, Cremorne, amatrice.com.au
Continue this series
Your November hit list: The hot, new and just-reviewed places to check out, right nowUp next
10 hot and new diners, delis and bar to try in South Melbourne
After a flat few years, South Melbourne is back on the dining map. Here’s what’s new and what to look forward to sinking your teeth into.
Swan along to this new Richmond wine bar for budget-friendly Roman dishes and drinks
No dish costs more than $28, and aperitivo hour means $9 glasses of vino and free snacks at Casta Mariotti.
Previous
It’s an all-you-can-eat adventure at Dainty Sichuan’s new hotpot and barbecue buffet
Come hungry – and prepared to wait. This colourful 220-seater, complete with kid-friendly desserts, is already pulling crowds.
Restaurant reviews, news and the hottest openings served to your inbox.
Sign up