NewsBite

Advertisement

Get hands-on with this sushi platter with a difference at this 10-seat city restaurant

Tiny Temaki Sushi joins Melbourne’s growing number of Japanese specialty venues.

Dani Valent
Dani Valent

Temaki Sushi specialises in its namesake, roll-your-own hand rolls.
1 / 7Temaki Sushi specialises in its namesake, roll-your-own hand rolls.Penny Stephens
Hojicha pudding with mochi, raspberry and sweet adzuki red bean.
2 / 7Hojicha pudding with mochi, raspberry and sweet adzuki red bean.Penny Stephens
Temaki platter, nori sheets and rice, ready for DIY assembly.
3 / 7Temaki platter, nori sheets and rice, ready for DIY assembly.Penny Stephens
Cucumber and wakame salad.
4 / 7Cucumber and wakame salad.Penny Stephens
Somen noodles in bonito dashi broth.
5 / 7Somen noodles in bonito dashi broth.Penny Stephens
Miso soup.
6 / 7Miso soup.Penny Stephens
Temaki Sushi in Little Collins Street.
7 / 7Temaki Sushi in Little Collins Street.Penny Stephens

Japanese$$$

Last December, I was one of 112,500 Australians who visited Japan and I’m sure the culinary offerings of this most delicious of nations were a feature of everyone’s trip. No surprise, I ate excellent food, too, including at a popular place for temaki, a style of sushi roll that sees diners given palm-sized seaweed squares, a bowl of rice, and a tray of fillings for self-assembly.

The same day I rolled cone-shaped snacks in Tokyo, Temaki Sushi opened in Little Collins Street. I stalked their Instagram. “Ooh,” I thought. “That Melbourne temaki looks better than the one I just had in Shibuya.”

The mini dishes roam from classic to a bit wacky, but they all work.
Advertisement

The more Australians travel to Japan, and the more Japanese come to Australia, the better the standard of Japanese food here, and the more confident we become to put our spin on it. It’s a win all round and might even save you a ticket to Tokyo.

Temaki Sushi is an intimate 10-seat restaurant, best visited solo or with one companion. The setting is poised, calm and elegant, with deep blue tones and textural tile and timber finishes. There’s jazz playing and the toasty smells of rice, crisp nori and sake.

Hojicha pudding served in handmade ceramics.
Hojicha pudding served in handmade ceramics.Penny Stephens

Gorgeous glazed ceramics are handmade locally at a pottery studio in Sassafras, which is also the location of owner Allan Greenfield’s 14-hectare farm. There they grow wasabi, shiso, yuzu, persimmon and other fruits and vegetables that turn up here and at sister businesses Onigiri To Go (a few doors away) and Onigiri on Degraves Street, a sit-down place for rice balls. The team will also soon open a soba noodle bar using buckwheat they grow and mill.

Advertisement

Five small tables face the bar and kitchen where chef Hiroshi Uchiyama prepares set banquets. Unlike omakase or kaiseki, where dishes are made and presented for immediate consumption, the centrepiece of this $145 set meal is a colourful platter of 11 fillings for you to pile into nori sheets, or deliver to your mouth by chopstick, as you wish, and in whichever order you like.

The centrepiece platter of 11 temaki fillings.
The centrepiece platter of 11 temaki fillings.Penny Stephens

My seasonal selection of morsels included a lotus root crisp piled with raw kingfish and garlic chips, a creamy salad of grapes and soft tofu, grilled eel over a cube of sweet omelette, steamed duck with pumpkin mash, and gingered eggplant tangled with kiwi and dressed with bonito shavings.

The mini dishes roam from classic to a bit wacky but they all work, and it’s fun to dress each with yuzu pepper paste, salted plum and wasabi as you go.

The main event is bookended by appetisers and noodles and there’s a silky, cosy mochi and red bean pudding to finish.

Advertisement

Temaki Sushi is a culinary choose-your-own-adventure where every road is rewarding. It’s a tasty pointer to the maturity of Melbourne’s Japanese dining scene. We still need our trips to Tokyo, but there’s joy here in between.

The low-down

Vibe: Elegant interlude

Go-to dish: Temaki (as part of a $145 set menu)

Drinks: Sake, Japanese beer and wine − including wines from Japan

Cost: $290 for two, excluding drinks

Good Food reviews are booked anonymously and paid independently. A restaurant can’t pay for a review or inclusion in the Good Food Guide.

Restaurant reviews, news and the hottest openings served to your inbox.

Sign up
Dani ValentDani Valent is a food writer and restaurant reviewer.

From our partners

Advertisement
Advertisement

Original URL: https://www.theage.com.au/goodfood/melbourne-eating-out/get-hands-on-with-this-sushi-platter-with-a-difference-at-this-10-seat-city-restaurant-20250305-p5lh3c.html