NewsBite

Advertisement

Il Bacaro

Dani Valent
Dani Valent

Atmosphere plus: Inside Il Bacaro Italian restaurant.
Atmosphere plus: Inside Il Bacaro Italian restaurant.Josh Robenstone

Italian$$$

To understand the restaurant as mood piece, you couldn't do better than to lose a few hours at Il Bacaro. It's not about the food – though the Italian food is good. It's not about the wine – even though the restaurant's name celebrates Bacchus, god of grapes. It's that food, wine, ambient interior and, crucially, service, meld to create an atmosphere in which every conversation is important and every joke becomes 15 per cent funnier. Life, with all its glittering sensation and swirling emotion, is bigger.

If you're doing business, you can count on discretion (I once interviewed Julia Gillard in a corner nook; we shared calamari then she had ravioli). If you're doing romance, count on good advice and a general sense that every choice is a sign of your cleverness and sophistication.

Chef David Dellai has been here for 13 of the restaurant's 20 years: consistency is a hallmark. The menu mixes classic and tricksy but it's all got heart. Shallow-fried calamari will be on the menu until Melbourne wins a premiership; the spaghettini with shellfish and chilli is similarly bolted on.

Advertisement
Roasted duck breast with crisp cubes of black pudding.
Roasted duck breast with crisp cubes of black pudding.Josh Robenstone

I recently revelled in another seafood pasta: taglierini with fresh sardines, cooked with garlic, fennel and white wine, then blitzed into a full-flavoured sauce. Powerfully flavoured yet impeccably balanced, it turned pasta from filler to thriller.

Meat dishes use classic flavour and technique as bedrock for fanciful darts. Pork is cured with spices and grappa, then rolled, roasted and served with torn mozzarella. Duck comes with almond puree and crisp bites of black pudding.

A slightly mad cheesecake is a signature, sweetened with agave nectar and jazzed up with pop rocks, but there are also more demure desserts like panna cotta with rhubarb. No matter what you eat, simply being here is the sweetest, richest aspect of every meal.

Rating: Four stars (out of five)

Continue this series

Hush hour: 20 of Melbourne’s best restaurants for quiet conversation (and great food)
Up next
Salt and vinegar zucchini fritto.

La Madonna is the Next's best thing

This Melbourne hotel restaurant is a playground with potential, reviews Gemima Cody.

The opening flurry of snacks starring Turkish breads, hummus, and arak cucumbers.

Go high-end vego at new-look Maha

We interrupt our regular broadcast to bring you Maha: The vego edition.

Previous
Poulet au cidre with apple, onion and calvados.

Melbourne bistro Chancery Lane leaves little to chance

Dining at Scott Pickett's new French-ish restaurant is akin to strapping yourself in for the business class flight we're not allowed to take, reviews Michael Harry.

See all stories

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/il-bacaro-20150302-3r8qw.html