Skip to main content

Backstreet Eating

My housemate and I have an ongoing list of places we want to try. One she has been mentioning for a while, Backstreet Eating (152 Kerr Street, Fitzroy), seemed appropriate for a weekend brunch we'd locked in.



On the corner of Napier and Kerr, Backstreet Eating is just one block from Brunswick Street and aptly describes itself as "a modern neighbourhood bistro". Open seven days a week for three meals a day, this place seems to offer it all, and there is not much on the menu that doesn't appeal. We seriously considered a Bloody Mary, Mimosa or Bellini with brunch, but my housemate has just started Febfast, and I'm enough of a lush as it is.



Items from the lunch (house-made gnocchi with goat ragu, anyone?) and cheese sections also greatly appealed, but we eventually settled on salmon gravlax for me, and avocado on toast for her, both with scrambled eggs. The food was delivered relatively quickly considering the place was full, and was faultlessly presented, well-cooked and delicious.

Avocado on toast

Salmon gravlax with scrambled eggs


The coffee is by Espresso Syndicate (a fitting choice for a Fitzroy venue), and was also well-made. The service was impeccable. Our waitress was ever-present but not annoyingly so, she constantly refilled our water glasses, and was quite happy to let us sit around at the end of our meal because we didn't feel like leaving this lovely haven just yet.



My housemate remarked that the main room would be a great lounge room. (You can sit outside at sidewalk tables, but we didn't.) I think she meant the outlook towards the street was lovely - lots of trees - with abundant natural light streaming in across the beautiful Art Deco-style parquetry flooring. The tables and chairs are classic dark wood and black, with leather bill folders and hand-written specials on a wall-mounted blackboard. Overall it's a very schmick, warm and classic European-style venue.




Down a staircase are modern bathrooms with Aesop hand soap (my favourite!), and to the other side, a charcuterie room-cum-delicatessen/shop - which can also be used as a private dining room for up to 16 people, according to the website. This room houses a walk-in hanging meat fridge, amazing-looking cheeses, various chutneys and a few books about charcuterie. A blackboard announces dates of upcoming Charcuterie Making Workshops - another clever use of the space, IMHO.






Backstreet Eating definitely has it together, and comes across as much classier than its street-food sounding name implies.


Update: 9 April 2013

We recently revisited Backstreet to try its dinner fare. This time around, it seemed to have a much stronger French influence - or perhaps I just noticed it more this time?!

The gentleman serving us was most helpful in trying to identify a white wine low in sulfites, providing a taster of one before we settled on another.

The food this time around was good, but sadly not amazing. The dinner menu is strongly based upon meats rather than stretching out their accompanying flavours. The charcuterie plate - comprising house-produced cuts beautifully presented on a wooden breadboard - was found to be rather hard and dry by the friend who ordered it. But we all had a taste, and I quite liked the majority of the cuts.

Charcuterie plate


My goat ragu gnocchi was delicious and perfectly cooked. It was quite hearty and cooked home-style, but with finesse, shown through the light yet slightly chewy state of the gnocchi, the soft and deliciously rich pieces of goat, and the fine strips of pecorino cheese served over the top.

Gnocchi with goat ragu, peas, mint & pecorino


The steak special was, again, beautifully presented on a breadboard, and cooked as per requested (medium rare, closer to rare). Unfortunately, its potato accompaniment was not particularly liked, due to its solidity and blandness.

Steak with jus and potato


I like Backstreet Eating's commitment to quality produce and was again impressed by its European sophistication. However, our brunch there had been more satisfying, in terms of food and value. Yet, I'm somehow not at all disappointed that I'll "have to" go back for another dinner, to reassess.

Side note: this place would be fantastic for a date - it's cosy, warm, and classy; quiet enough to chat but close to the action of Brunswick Street, should diversion be required!


Note: 12 June 2013

I discovered over this weekend that Backstreet Eating is owned by the same crew that runs Birdman Eating on Gertrude Street. Makes perfect sense really: their fonts are so similar! However, I'm not such a huge fan of Birdman Eating. Read my previous blog post about it here.


Additional notes: 19 July 2013

I was back here last weekend for breakfast, and thought I'd share the pics, as both dishes were delicious!

Creamy mushrooms, toast and poached eggs (special)

Ricotta hotcakes with fig compote


Update: 11 January 2014

More breakfast pics!

Avocado, tomato and goats cheese on toast

with a side of mushrooms!


Update: 19 September 2014

More dinner pics! 









Backstreet Eating on Urbanspoon

Popular posts from this blog

Lane's Edge, Waiter's (Club) Restaurant

Meyers Place is one of my favourite Melbourne laneways to hang out in, not least because it offers a variety of bars to choose from. Yes, there are several, but together they form a chilled-out sanctuary from the ritzy, pricey hotspots around the top end of Bourke Street ( Siglo/Supper Club/City Wine Shop , Longrain , Madame Brussels , Gin Palace and 1806 all come to mind). Don't get me wrong - many of these are excellent; but when you venture out midweek on a regular basis, it's nice to know you have a cluster of affordable, more relaxed options available, as well as the schmancier, special-occasion places. Also handy is how easy Meyers Place is to find, compared to many other Melbourne laneways. "It comes off Bourke Street, near the Parliament end," is a phrase I'm sure I've spouted multiple times to uninitiated friends. Failing that, I tell them to look for the Palace Theatre - it's almost directly across the road. The Bourke Street entrance to Me

Kong

We'd been hearing about it for months and months. Chris Lucas and his never-fail Lucas Group venues had closed what was Pearl Cafe at 599 Church Street (corner of Newton Street), Richmond, and left the small 60-seater site to marinate for a while. Things went quiet next to  Petbarn , then suddenly the new fit-out was complete, and Broadsheet was running a competition in cahoots with Mercedes-Benz for winners to experience the as-yet-unopened restaurant, Kong , at a special (and very well-publicised) dinner. There were also tastes of the food - with mixed reviews - through Rue & Co , a pop-up Collins Street venture between Kong, Jimmy Grants and St Ali . Everyone was anticipating Executive Chef Benjamin Cooper 's menu - would it be all "chilli, chilli and more chilli", that he had proclaimed as his preference on a Masterchef immunity challenge? Or would his expertise from heading up the kitchen at the ever-popular Flinders Lane haunt,  Chin

Supernormal

Is it, though? So normal it's super normal? I think maybe not. There are a lot of 'normal' things at Supernormal (180 Flinders Lane, Melbourne) - you go in, get a table (if you're lucky), order food, eat it at said table. But there are a few things that set this restaurant apart. Kitchen behind the bar One is size. Supernormal is quite big for a Melbourne CBD restaurant. There are different sections: a looooong bar (behind which sits the kitchen, and which pretty much runs the length of the restaurant), a line of booth-style tables, a couple of walls hosting tables with bench seating, and stand-alone tables in the middle. Bench seating tables and random display flowers and bottles It also has a very high ceiling, which makes the interior feel very spacious and airy. Hard surfaces everywhere do echo the noisy chatter from so many covers, but the space above all the heads helps absorb it. Stand-alone tables in the middle and hi Another is