This neon-lit New York-style Italian joint in a legendary St Kilda pub is cheesy in every sense
13.5/20
Italian$$
What’s the easiest way to let someone know you’ve never been to Yonkers, New York? Perhaps by making a cocktail heavily reliant on passionfruit and name it after Yonkers, as if the city separating the Bronx from Westchester County were some kind of tropical paradise and not a heavily industrial working-class enclave. As I sipped my (admittedly delicious) “passionfruit Yonkers” ($22.50) at Louey’s, the new Italian-American joint in the back of the Esplanade Hotel, I pondered what might actually represent Yonkers in a cocktail. Something oily? Maybe smoky? Later, my sister weighed in. She, like me, attended school not far from Yonkers. “Beer mixed with orange juice,” she quipped.
It’s a curious thing, Melbourne’s obsession with New York-style Italian joints, especially when they turn out as fantastical as Louey’s, a pop-art-adorned space with neon pizza slices decorating the ceiling, a disco ball, and, many nights, DJs spinning music underneath that whirling mirrored orb. It’s a bit like the Disney version of the Italian-American restaurant, a pure fantasy that piles on the gooey cheesy decadence while mostly ignoring the reality of what might be served in any real American restaurant that’s not in a theme park.
That’s not always a bad thing. There’s a pull-apart garlic bread situation ($16) that’s so loaded with cheese and butter that it’s impossible not to love. Pizzas ($27-$34) are similarly tawdry, slightly sloppy from almost-undercooked crusts and an abundance of toppings. The menu makes no bones about this: many descriptions include phrases like “very cheesy” and “loads of basil”. It does not lie.
This approach works best with dishes like the eggplant parmesan ($26), which is not only cooked to a pleasing mush and crusted with a ton of parmesan, it’s also stuffed with ricotta. Subtle? No. Delicious glop? Yes.
Pastas range from simple (“big rigatoni” with red sauce and vodka, $28) to over-the-top, such as the gnocchi carbonara ($33), which was so rich I could only muster a few bites.
Things become a little dicier when it comes to a half lobster, which, at $75, could be considered a bargain (I’ve seen half lobsters around town go for upwards of twice that price). But the spiny beast comes out unevenly cooked and hard to wrestle from its shell, its copious lashing of green garlic butter helping but not hiding its flaws.
And I wondered, in a kitchen so determined to slather, fry and otherwise enrich everything, why the green tomato side ($12) was soused and not fried, the result overly sour and a tad woody.
“This place is as fun as can be, if you’re into maximalist food and vibes.”
For a place this unabashed in its pursuit of gaudy fun, it’s odd that the dessert selection is limited to cannoli ($8 each), lemon gelato and sorbet served in a lemon ($16) and a gelato of the day (market price). I’d expect an ice-cream sundae, a pile of bomboloni, or at least a perfunctory tiramisu. The cannoli are quite good, though.
Service is a bit of an issue. Either the place is slammed, in which case the amicable young staff are exceedingly harried, or it’s dead, in which case they turn languid, failing to do basic table maintenance. On a recent quiet Sunday evening a spray bottle of cleaner and a rag was left for most of our meal on the booth partition next to us, we had to beg for water, and servers walked by studiously avoiding my hopeful attempts at eye contact.
But look, this place is as fun as can be, if you’re into maximalist food and vibes. It’s great for kids – a friend’s daughter just celebrated her eighth birthday there and had an absolute blast, the disco music and glittery lights and cheesy food making for a proper celebration. And the Espy itself is a bit of a booze-soaked theme park these days, allowing for multiple fantastical versions of the pub: the speakeasy bar and the grungy live music venue under one roof. Louey’s may be the silliest of them all, but it makes no apologies for itself. There’s a certain charm to a place so unabashed in its exuberance.
The low-down
Vibe: Pop-art-encrusted, disco-ball lit, theme park version of a red-sauce Italian joint
Go-to dish: Eggplant parmigiana, $26
Drinks: Cocktails that are almost novelty but nonetheless well-made; short Italian and Australian wine list
Cost: About $130 for two, plus drinks
Continue this series
20 group-friendly spots for last-minute Christmas catch-ups in MelbournePrevious
It’s a shop, a restaurant, a phenomenon: You could easily spend half a day at Asian megastore Foodle
Highpoint’s new supermarket-sized Asian grocer includes live seafood tanks, a premium butcher, sushi counter and oyster bar, Chinese barbecue restaurant, bakery, dumpling factory and canteen-style dining hall.
- More:
- St Kilda
- Louey’s Bar & Kitchen
- Melbourne
- Italian
- Licensed
- Accepts bookings
- Events
- Family-friendly
- Good for groups
- Pizza
- Pub dining
- Bar
- Reviews