The Sydney Morning Herald logo
Advertisement

Melbourne’s first steak frites-only restaurant, by the Rockpool team, is now open

7 Alfred only asks diners to choose if they want their 220-gram Gippsland scotch fillet cooked medium or well done, and what sauce to go with it.

Tomas Telegramma

Updated ,first published

Melbourne’s first restaurant serving only steak frites as a main course – and only one side salad and one dessert – is open from today.

It comes to Alfred Place in the CBD after Hunter St. Hospitality – the group behind Rockpool Bar & Grill, Spice Temple, Sake and more –launched a Sydney version of the dining concept in July.

Steak frites with peppercorn sauce at 7 Alfred.Steven Woodburn

Called 24 York for its street address in Sydney, the 200-seat restaurant got off to a flying start.

“We did just over 500 covers on the first day,” says Hunter St. Hospitality cheif executive Frank Tucker. “We wanted to prove we could get a steak on the table in 10 minutes – and we did.”

Advertisement

Melbourne will get a slice of the steak when its counterpart 7 Alfred, also named for its address, arrives in a grand three-storey space once used for Rockpool events, which was previously home to Stokehouse City and Mietta’s.

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

Sign up
The steakhouse will be housed in the building that was formerly home to the iconic Mietta’s restaurant, and later, Stokehouse City.Kristoffer Paulsen

The formula will be identical to that in Sydney: one main, one side and one dessert.

The piece de resistance is steak and fries – the French bistro classic – with 7 Alfred looking to emulate the success-in-simplicity of such restaurants as Le Relais de l’Entrecote, which has been all about steak frites since it launched in France in 1959.

The star at 7 Alfred is a 220-gram grass-fed scotch fillet with a marble score of two, sourced from Gippsland producer O’Connor and served with a sauce, and fries cooked in beef tallow, for $48.

Advertisement

The same cut of Gippsland beef is on the menu at Rockpool Bar & Grill, decided on after multiple tastings – including a blind one – to compare flavour and texture between cuts.

By dedicating themselves to a single dish, “we’re trying to take the complexity out at a time when complexity is what is killing businesses,” says Tucker.

“Someone [in Sydney] asked: ‘When will you add another item [to the menu]?’ We won’t. It’s not a gimmick.”

Inside 7 Alfred Melbourne, opening October 22.Kristoffer Paulsen
Advertisement

At 7 Alfred, you – and everyone else – will be going for the steak frites. But there are still a couple of choices to make. Medium or well done? And which sauce: chimichurri, peppercorn, veal jus or umami butter?

“At a time when there’s a lot of trepidation [around the cost of dining out], you know what you’re going to get, you know what the price is ... and you’re not going to break the bank,” says Tucker.

Plus, there’s a guarantee that you can be in and out within half an hour.

The upstairs bar at 7 Alfred.Kristoffer Paulsen

The menu’s only extras are an $8 side salad, made with seasonal Victorian leafy greens, and a $12 New York-style cheesecake served with a scoop of vanilla ice-cream.

Advertisement

Drinks are affordably priced on the whole, but even more so during the daily happy hour, offering $7 beers, house wines and spirits as well as $12 martinis and negronis.

7 Alfred opens on October 22 at 7 Alfred Place, Melbourne, 7alfred.com.au

Continue this series

Your November hit list: Hot, new and just-reviewed places to check out this month
Up next
El Columpio’s Ricardo Garcia Flores at his new “taqueria and marisqueria” in St Kilda.
  • Exclusive

Fitzroy Mexican favourite El Columpio opens ‘risky’ seafood spin-off in a St Kilda kiosk

Expect “next level” surf ‘n’ turf tacos, marvellous messy seafood towers, micheladas and burritos the likes of which Melbourne has never seen.

The BOM cheese roll.
  • Exclusive

Fine-dining pastry chef and Dessert Masters winner opens sunny Scandinavian-ish bakery

Try one of Denmark’s most popular grab-and-go sandwiches, the BMO, with butter “thick enough to show teeth marks”.

Previously
Three Horses bar in the Melbourne CBD.
  • Review

Caretaker’s Cottage is a tough act to follow. The team’s new bar is off to a galloping start

Sherry fortifies everything from arctic margs to intergalactic nightcaps at Three Horses in the top end of town.

See all stories
Tomas TelegrammaTomas Telegramma is a food, drinks and culture writer.

From our partners

Advertisement
Advertisement