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Country goes luxe at Three Blue Ducks at Nimbo Fork

Terry Durack
Terry Durack

The dining room is exactly the type of room you'd like to find yourself in at the end of a long drive.
The dining room is exactly the type of room you'd like to find yourself in at the end of a long drive.Alex Ellinghausen

14.5/20

Modern Australian$$$

It turns out there IS a track winding back to an old-fashioned shack along the road to Gundagai. If you're on Brungle Road coming in to Gundagai from Tumut, turn left at the Nimbo Road letterboxes, then cross four cattlepits, drive around a very big tree, and wait for the slow-moving cattle to get off the road (twice), you will arrive at a rather charming two-storey fly-fishing lodge overlooking the fork of the Tumut River and Nimbo Creek.

OK, it's not old-fashioned, and the only shacks are six extremely well-appointed cabins in which to stay overnight, but let's not spoil the story.

Owners Josh and Sophie Walsh and Alex and Tom Heggaton took over Nimbo Fork Lodge in 2017. In a move right for the times, they turned up the luxury dial, and invited the ever-expanding Three Blue Ducks group to dinner.

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Butterflied whole Nimbo trout, cooked meuniere-style.
Butterflied whole Nimbo trout, cooked meuniere-style.Alex Ellinghausen

It's the seventh feather in the cap of the Duckies, adding to venues in Bronte, Rosebery, The Farm and Oma in Byron Bay, URBNSURF in Melbourne, and the W Hotel in Brisbane. Mark LaBrooy – the Duck most likely to go fishing and actually catch something – hand-picked his Bronte chef, French-born Edmee Driez, as head chef.

While the food follows the Ducks' ethos of simple technique, local produce and zero pretension, Driez, with chef Joe Spencer, upgrades it with greater precision and balance.

She's also capable of baking (beautiful) bread, churning butter, and preserving and pickling vegetables in order to make her country larder more self-sufficient.

Crumbed pork terrine with pickled onion, gribiche, preserved lemon and parsley salad.
Crumbed pork terrine with pickled onion, gribiche, preserved lemon and parsley salad.Alex Ellinghausen
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The fish of the day is rainbow trout (duh), fresh from the Snowy Mountain Trout Farm on the Tumut River. Lightly smoked, it makes a pretty starter with dill, creme fraiche and crispbread ($24).

But the dish with a real sense of place is the main course of plate-sized trout ($44). Butterflied and grilled, and smothered in a panful of capers, butter and dill in the meuniere style, its delicate flesh is elevated by meticulous boning and careful cooking.

Going beyond trout, there's pig, in a crumbed and deep-fried baton of rough-textured pork terrine ($22). It's a great combo – crunchy panko crumbs and rich pork with a spoonful of gribiche, with its capers and herbs, and a fresh salad of parsley, pickled red onion and preserved lemon. Who needs trout? This is what I want to catch on a fishing holiday.

Half rack of lamb with pearl barley tabbouleh, smoked potato aioli and jus.
Half rack of lamb with pearl barley tabbouleh, smoked potato aioli and jus.Alex Ellinghausen

Murray cod ($29), another great Australian farmed fish, is lightly seared, floating in a creamy saffron sauce studded with wilted stinging nettles, with a puffy hat of crisp skin. It's listed as a starter, but would make a better main course.

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Lamb is sourced from the Riverina and nicely fattened up for sale. A big-boned four-chop rack ($45) makes a no-nonsense, I'm-in-the-country-now feast of nicely cooked, well-marbled meat with a pile of pearl barley tabbouleh and a pool of smoked potato aioli.

Luckily, this is the sort of place where nobody blinks twice when your wife picks up the bones and rips off the remaining meat with her teeth.

Sea salt meringue, lemon curd, chantilly and berries.
Sea salt meringue, lemon curd, chantilly and berries.Alex Ellinghausen

The chef's take on an Eton mess is a moreish get-together of crunchy sea-salt meringue, lemon curd, chantilly cream and berries ($16). It's simple, bright and fresh, the salt in the meringue balancing the sugar.

With its soaring slate fireplace, walls hung with vintage fishing memorabilia and verandah with river views, the dining room is exactly the type of room you'd like to find yourself in at the end of a long drive.

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Manager Lucy Young is a natural host, and the atmosphere is more buzzy ski lodge than hushed hotel dining room, although I could live without Michael Jackson on the '70s playlist.

Nimbo Fork Lodge is a great package that brings luxury to what we love about the country, and Driez is a new regional star. I'll be back for the trout, the lamb, and the kangaroo (not on the menu, on the drive in). This is like eating in ... where? Dobrovo, Slovenia? The Dordogne, France? No, wait. Gundagai, Australia.

The low-down

Vegetarian Several choices, from harissa-roasted cauliflower to potato gnocchi.

Drinks Classic cocktails, half a dozen craft beers, and a usable list of natural, low-intervention Victorian and NSW wines from group sommelier Mem Hemmings.

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Cost About $160 for two, plus drinks

Pro tip Keep an eye out for kangaroos on the way in and out.

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Terry DurackTerry Durack is the chief restaurant critic for The Sydney Morning Herald and Good Food.

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Original URL: https://www.watoday.com.au/goodfood/sydney-eating-out/three-blue-ducks-at-nimbo-fork-review-20210405-h1uyp0.html