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‘Avant-garde Bengali cuisine’ comes to Surry Hills as a Potts Point fine-diner closes

High-wire restaurant Khanaa has opened in Crown Street, bringing inspiration from Bangladesh, including fancy potato bhaji and a rice pudding brulee with saffron ice-cream.

Scott Bolles
Scott Bolles

Sydney restaurateur Opel Khan is in the midst of the most dramatic week of his career. Last Sunday, he closed the doors at his chef-hatted Potts Point French fine-diner, Metisse. This week, he opened Khanaa, a high-wire Bangladeshi restaurant, in the original site of Billy Kwong in Crown Street, Surry Hills.

It isn’t the end for four-year-old Metisse, however. Khan says it will reopen in early 2024 in Barangaroo, where he hopes to find a stronger lunchtime market. Metisse’s sprawling Roslyn Street digs won’t go unused, either. In October, Khan will move his artisan pasta venue, Acqua E Farina, there from Macleay Street. “We currently have to turn away hundreds of customers a week [due to its size],” he says.

Potato bhaji with goat’s curd and shiraz caviar.
Potato bhaji with goat’s curd and shiraz caviar.Petrina Tinslay

But it’s the food of his youth in Dhaka that currently has the chef’s undivided attention. Bangladeshi cuisine was his first culinary love, before he immersed himself in European cuisine and technique. He also believes the food of his homeland is overdue for some recognition.

With 60 seats indoors and 40 outside, Khanaa’s dining room – which Khan designed himself – is a clean mix of white walls, dark chairs and a wall sculpture titled Mermaid that’s made from hand-woven silk.

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Khan estimates there are 350 to 400 Indian restaurants and takeaway spots in Sydney, but fewer than 20 focused on the food of Bangladesh, despite a high proportion of local restaurateurs being from Bangladesh.

Chicken liver parfait with phuchka (pani puri) and mango saffron gastrique.
Chicken liver parfait with phuchka (pani puri) and mango saffron gastrique.Petrina Tinslay

“The food in Bangladesh is similar to Indian, but uses more seafood and is lighter. It doesn’t use cream or cashews. People are playing it safe because Indian food is known globally,” he says.

Khan isn’t playing it safe at Khanaa, with a Bengali food push he labels avant-garde, lifting elements of original recipes and recreating them as 21st-century restaurant dishes. A potato bhaji is served with goat’s curd and shiraz caviar, kaccha (raw) tuna with watermelon and a payesh (rice pudding) brulee with saffron ice-cream.

Khanaa’s head chef, Lucinda Khan, is keen to broaden diners’ perceptions of Bangladeshi food.

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“I feel like in Australia people see curry and think Indian,” Lucinda Khan says. “But lots of countries have curries: Japan, Korea. We think it’s time people got to see Bengali food.”

Open for brunch (from 10am) and lunch Fri-Sun; dinner Tue-Sun

Shop 3, 355 Crown Street, Surry Hills, khanaa.com.au

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Scott BollesScott Bolles writes the weekly Short Black column in Good Food.

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Original URL: https://www.theage.com.au/goodfood/sydney-eating-out/avant-garde-bengali-cuisine-comes-to-surry-hills-as-potts-point-fine-diner-metisse-closes-20230928-p5e8al.html