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14.5/20

Peonee

Updated ,first published

Peonee has an elegant, industrial feel.
1 / 8Peonee has an elegant, industrial feel.Supplied
The dining room.
2 / 8The dining room. Supplied
The restaurant has an open kitchen.
3 / 8The restaurant has an open kitchen.Supplied
Peonee serves a seasonal set menu.
4 / 8Peonee serves a seasonal set menu. Supplied
Fried pork neck, brussels sprouts, ’nduja and ricotta salata.
5 / 8Fried pork neck, brussels sprouts, ’nduja and ricotta salata.Supplied
Goldstreet jersey cheese, rhubarb and leatherwood honey.
6 / 8Goldstreet jersey cheese, rhubarb and leatherwood honey.Supplied
Muscovado tart with allspice cream.
7 / 8Muscovado tart with allspice cream.Supplied
Roasted potato ice cream, coffee kombucha & dark chocolate.
8 / 8Roasted potato ice cream, coffee kombucha & dark chocolate.Supplied
14.5/20

Peonee

Contemporary$$

Glorious meeting of French technique and Australian produce.

Alberto Ranalli has a talent for sauces. The Bologna-born chef can knock up a mean handmade pasta and compose an impressive small plate, but his sauces at Peonee are the sort to make you swoon, to have you calling for more bread, to consider picking up the plate and licking it clean if that takes too long.

Case in point: blue-eye trevalla with sauce vin jaune, a gorgeously complex dish given extra depth with parsley oil and Geraldton wax. Beef flank with green peppercorn sauce isn’t your average bistro staple either, the charred steak swimming in rich, piquant jus.

Ranalli has an admirable CV featuring Sydney favourites Est. and Bentley, so the confidence and skill his tight menu exudes should come as no surprise. Perhaps the only shock at Peonee is that the Scandi-chic restaurant, tucked into a dark corner in suburban Campbell, isn’t attracting larger crowds. But that’s surely a matter of time.

Must-order dish: Blue-eye trevalla with parsley vin jaune.

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

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