The Sydney Morning Herald logo
Advertisement

Saint George

Party up the front, elegance in the back.

Whole fish with salmoriglio and shaved fennel.
1 / 7Whole fish with salmoriglio and shaved fennel.Supplied
Salt encrusted rib eye
2 / 7Salt encrusted rib eye Supplied
Potato cake with whipped cod roe and avruga.
3 / 7Potato cake with whipped cod roe and avruga.Wayne Taylor
The casual bar area at Saint George.
4 / 7The casual bar area at Saint George.Chris Hopkins
Paccheri marinara .
5 / 7Paccheri marinara .Chris Hopkins
Gnocco fritto with culatello.
6 / 7Gnocco fritto with culatello.Chris Hopkins
Beef tartare with feferoni and semolina yolk.
7 / 7Beef tartare with feferoni and semolina yolk.Chris Hopkins
Permanently closed

Saint George St Kilda

Mediterranean$$$

The mediocrity of the status quo isn’t always apparent until you experience excellence. See: Saint George’s first-rate fritto misto, a piping hot jumble of soft calamari, crunchy prawns, flathead fillets, crisp sage and tartare sauce.

It’s not surprising, with chef Karen Martini as culinary director. Her spanner crab on toast is dressed in lemony brown butter, and curly strozzapreti pasta mingles with pistachio pesto and stracciatella. The salmoriglio sauce for a Josper-grilled whole flounder is piquant.

For dessert there’s delightfully moist almond torta doused in Strega, the minty Italian liqueur. Soaring ceilings and brick walls give this historic pub an airy, modern feel, and cocktails are suitably beach-appropriate. Saint George is a worthy contributor to the revival of this part of town.

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

Sign up

From our partners

Advertisement
Advertisement