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The Waratah

Friendly, occasionally loud and Australian-produce proud.

Oysters with rosella granita.
1 / 7Oysters with rosella granita.Supplied
The fairy bread ice-cream sandwich.
2 / 7The fairy bread ice-cream sandwich.Jason Loucas
The downstairs bar.
3 / 7The downstairs bar. Jennifer Soo
Scallop-on-scallop.
4 / 7Scallop-on-scallop.Jason Loucas
Waratah spritz.
5 / 7Waratah spritz.Jason Loucas
Grilled king prawns and lemon myrtle butter.
6 / 7Grilled king prawns and lemon myrtle butter.Jason Loucas
Smoked pork skewers.
7 / 7Smoked pork skewers.Jennifer Soo

14.5/20

Contemporary$$

To visit The Waratah and not order cocktails would be like watching West Side Story with the sound off. You can still have a perfectly fine time, but you’ll be missing out on the best part.

You’ll be missing out on co-owner Evan Stroeve’s regularly changing drinks, like a deliciously sharp Mai Tai starring passionfruit, rum and house-made cherry-pit liqueur.

Across a smart, jade-tiled street-facing bar and tiny dining room upstairs, Australian ingredients inform both booze and food. We’re talking butterflied prawns glossed with lemon-myrtle butter; rock oysters splashed with rosella mignonette; and scallops (the potato kind) seasoned in a koji marinade and topped with diced scallop (the seafood kind).

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Juicy bronze-skinned chicken is a highlight, cooked under a brick and scattered with a crunch of saltbush leaves. Hold the wine and pair it with a rum, pineapple and skin-contact chardonnay sharpener instead.

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Original URL: https://www.theage.com.au/goodfood/nsw-good-food-guide/the-waratah-20241003-p5kfkr.html