The Sydney Morning Herald logo
Advertisement
Good Food hat15/20Critics' Pick

Olympus

Updated ,first published

Kalamari tis skaras (grilled calamari).
1 / 8Kalamari tis skaras (grilled calamari).Jennifer Soo
Olympus Dining’s retractable oculus glass ceiling looks like it came off the set of Dr. No.
2 / 8Olympus Dining’s retractable oculus glass ceiling looks like it came off the set of Dr. No.Jennifer Soo
Horiatiki (village salad, tomato, cucumber, olive, feta).
3 / 8Horiatiki (village salad, tomato, cucumber, olive, feta).Jennifer Soo
4 / 8 Jennifer Soo
Pork kalamaki (pork souvlaki).
5 / 8Pork kalamaki (pork souvlaki).Jennifer Soo
6 / 8 Jennifer Soo
Kokkoretsi (lamb sweetbreads, liver and belly).
7 / 8Kokkoretsi (lamb sweetbreads, liver and belly).Jennifer Soo
Frozen yoghurt with “spoon fruits”.
8 / 8Frozen yoghurt with “spoon fruits”.Jennifer Soo
Good Food hat15/20Critics' Pick

Olympus

Greek$$

Like a long lunch in a glamorous Greek village.

From their many years directing Potts Point’s Apollo, Olympus co-owners Jonathan Barthelmess and Sam Christie know that if you serve big-flavoured Greek comfort food, people will come. And do they ever at this 200-seat taverna inside Redfern’s Wunderlich Lane precinct.

Chef Ozge Kalvo isn’t grilling souvlaki, however, although it’s very much on the menu, along with about 40 other dishes including roast lamb, dolmades and golden honey-sweetened, skillet-fried kefalotyri cheese. The kokoretsi is a highlight – a crumbly, rustic sort-of rissole rich with chopped lamb sweetbreads, belly and a ferric undertow of liver.

Wild-weed spanakopita pie is made to order and features a vibrant mix of greens under crisp eggshell-thin pastry; thick curls of grilled calamari are tangy with lemon-forward ladolemono sauce. Interior architect, George Livissianis, has excelled his own lofty standards with that oculus glass ceiling, too. If Dr No had a lair in a Greek village, it would look a lot like this.

Good to know: The 50-year-old bougainvillaea in the middle of the room was trucked up from Bowral for the job

Good Food reviews are booked anonymously and paid independently. A restaurant can’t pay for a review or inclusion in the Good Food Guide.

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

Sign up

Continue this series

South Sydney
Up next
Spring rolls and sugar cane prawns at Phu Quoc in Cabramatta.
  • Review

Phu Quoc

Evergreen favourite with a perennial queue.

The Pines is located near North Cronulla Beach.
  • Review

The Pines

Hamptons-channelling eatery in a prime beachfront position.

Previously
Kangaroo tail sope.
  • Review

Lottie

Sun-splashed rooftop for margarita-charged long lunches.

See all stories

From our partners

Advertisement
Advertisement