NewsBite

Advertisement

Food legend Kylie Kwong to close Lucky Kwong and step away from restaurants

After 30 years pioneering a new style of Chinese cuisine, Kwong is ready to move on to her next chapter. But first? A well-earned break.

Ardyn Bernoth
Ardyn Bernoth

Kylie Kwong after receiving a Vittoria Coffee Legend Award in 2023.
1 / 7Kylie Kwong after receiving a Vittoria Coffee Legend Award in 2023.Edwina Pickles
Kwong and wife Nell at Lucky Kwong in South Eveleigh.
2 / 7Kwong and wife Nell at Lucky Kwong in South Eveleigh.James Brickwood
Kwong on life with Nell: “I love how our worlds overlap at points.”
3 / 7Kwong on life with Nell: “I love how our worlds overlap at points.”Louie Douvis
Kwong cooking in China in 2018.
4 / 7Kwong cooking in China in 2018.
In 1998 as the head chef of Wockpool.
5 / 7In 1998 as the head chef of Wockpool.Jennifer Soo
In Billy Kwong restaurant in Surry Hills in 2004.
6 / 7In Billy Kwong restaurant in Surry Hills in 2004.Edwina Pickles
Kwong with her mother, Pauline, celebrating Lunar New Year in 2018.
7 / 7Kwong with her mother, Pauline, celebrating Lunar New Year in 2018.Anna Kucera

One of Australia’s most influential chefs, Kylie Kwong, is closing her Sydney restaurant and stepping away from professional kitchens after 30 years at the forefront of the dining industry.

Lucky Kwong, her Australian-Cantonese eatery in South Eveleigh, will shut at the end of June, and she will take a break to “relax and reflect”.

Kylie Kwong is closing the doors of her South Eveleigh eatery, Lucky Kwong.
Kylie Kwong is closing the doors of her South Eveleigh eatery, Lucky Kwong.Alan Benson

“For all the many challenges that come with being in the hospitality industry, I consider myself fortunate for I have had far more positive experiences than negative,” Kwong says.

Advertisement

After three decades of standing behind the pass in a professional kitchen, Kwong says she’s ready for a new stage in her life. But she also acknowledges that inflationary pressures have made running a restaurant difficult.

“Everyone is feeling it. I have never seen the restaurant industry in such tough times as it is right now.”

Many of Kwong’s dishes, such as duck with Davidson plum, quandong and orange sauce, blend Cantonese technique with native ingredients.
Many of Kwong’s dishes, such as duck with Davidson plum, quandong and orange sauce, blend Cantonese technique with native ingredients.William Meppem

Kwong, who did her apprenticeship with Neil Perry at Rockpool in 1994, can be credited with pioneering a new genre of cuisine that became internationally lauded.

Inspired by a 2010 talk by rock star international chef Rene Redzepi, from Copenhagen’s Noma, Kwong began weaving Australian native ingredients into the home-style Cantonese cooking she was serving at her first restaurant, Billy Kwong.

Advertisement
‘I have never seen the restaurant industry in such tough times as it is right now.’
Kylie Kwong

“Integrating Australian native produce into our Cantonese-style food literally revolutionised our menu and viewpoint of the world,” Kwong says.

And so was born her distinctive style of Australian-Chinese food, one that included native saltbush being used in dumplings, and Davidson plums being served with Chinese roast duck, among many dishes. Her bold move inspired other Australian chefs to explore indigenous ingredients.

Kwong and Bill Granger in 2000 at the opening of their joint venture, Billy Kwong in Surry Hills.
Kwong and Bill Granger in 2000 at the opening of their joint venture, Billy Kwong in Surry Hills.Jennifer Soo

“Billy Kwong also gave me my first experience of having a business partner, which was the late Bill Granger. Bill’s belief in me, guidance and small business know-how was invaluable. He held my hand through those early days and all these years later, I see ‘Bill-isms’ throughout my Lucky Kwong eatery,” Kwong says.

Advertisement

They opened Billy Kwong in 2000, and it quickly became commonplace to see queues of eager diners snaking along Crown Street, particularly as Kwong’s fame grew thanks to numerous television series and six cookbooks. Granger and Kwong parted ways after a year and Kwong ran the restaurant solo, moving it to bigger premises in Potts Point in 2014.

Kwong (back row, second from left) with suppliers, staff and collaborators involved in Billy Kwong in Potts Point.
Kwong (back row, second from left) with suppliers, staff and collaborators involved in Billy Kwong in Potts Point. Nic Walker

“Moving from Surry Hills to Potts Point was a major learning curve with two main challenges: how to distil and shift the essence of the jewel-box-like BK into a space that was three times the size, and going from running a business with less than 15 staff [and 50 stools], to a medium-sized business with 44 staff and 145 seats,” Kwong recalls.

After nearly two decades – during which she wrote the specials board every night before service – she closed Billy Kwong in 2019.

“For me, running a restaurant was a deeply personal business. I love watching diners eat my food. Feeding people is my love language. I could have opened many more Billy Kwongs. But I need to be connected, to be hands-on.”

Advertisement
Kwong and wife Nell at Lucky Kwong restaurant.
Kwong and wife Nell at Lucky Kwong restaurant. James Brickwood

In 2021, she opened Lucky Kwong, a more casual, lunch-only eatery in South Eveleigh, still showcasing Cantonese-meets-native-Australian food. She and wife Nell lost a baby in 2012 and the restaurant, on the site of the historic Eveleigh Railway Workshops, was named after and dedicated to him.

Kwong will now focus on the many connections she has forged with Indigenous communities and charity groups such as the Wayside Chapel and Addi Road Food Pantry. That involvement contributed to her recognition last year with an Order of Australia.

Loading

“I will still cook; that is what I do. But not in professional kitchens,” she says. “First I want to take a break, regroup and spend time with the important people in my life. Travel is high on the list of priorities. After so many years of being on the pass and running a business I now have the opportunity to take stock and think about what’s next.”

Advertisement

As the recipient of the Good Food Guide 2024 Legend Award, she has important advice for young up-and-coming chefs.

“Always cook from your heart and take care of your staff, treat them with respect and everything will flow from there; plus for me, having a supportive business partner and landlord has been very important.”

Read more

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

Sign up
Ardyn BernothArdyn Bernoth is National Good Food Editor.

From our partners

Advertisement
Advertisement

Original URL: https://www.theage.com.au/goodfood/sydney-eating-out/restaurant-legend-kylie-kwong-to-close-lucky-kwong-and-quit-the-industry-20240514-p5jdi1.html