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Good Food hatGood Food hat16/20Critics' Pick

Yellow

Updated ,first published

Seasonal radish, hempseed and nasturtium.
1 / 16Seasonal radish, hempseed and nasturtium.Wolter Peeters
Chef-owner Sander Nooij describes Yellow’s menu as “botanical cuisine”.
2 / 16Chef-owner Sander Nooij describes Yellow’s menu as “botanical cuisine”.Wolter Peeters
3 / 16 Wolter Peeters
Potato terrine, celeriac mustard and caper.
4 / 16Potato terrine, celeriac mustard and caper.Wolter Peeters
5 / 16 Wolter Peeters
Caramelised cauliflower tart with hazelnuts.
6 / 16Caramelised cauliflower tart with hazelnuts.Wolter Peeters
Yecora cavatelli with Jerusalem artichokes and leek consomme.
7 / 16Yecora cavatelli with Jerusalem artichokes and leek consomme.Wolter Peeters
8 / 16 Wolter Peeters
Red clover sprouts with cultured cashew and pumpernickel toast.
9 / 16Red clover sprouts with cultured cashew and pumpernickel toast. Supplied
The exterior.
10 / 16The exterior.Supplied
Burnt bread custard tart with spring berries.
11 / 16Burnt bread custard tart with spring berries.Supplied
The dining room.
12 / 16The dining room. supplied
Parsnip pappardelle, egg yolk and pine mushrooms.
13 / 16Parsnip pappardelle, egg yolk and pine mushrooms.Christopher Pearce
Snacks.
14 / 16Snacks. Supplied
Baby turnip, green garlic and horseradish.
15 / 16Baby turnip, green garlic and horseradish. Supplied
Mango and cumquat ice cream sandwich.
16 / 16Mango and cumquat ice cream sandwich.Supplied
Good Food hatGood Food hat16/20Critics' Pick

Yellow

Vegetarian or vegan$$$

Inventive and inclusive fine-dining vegan food.

It’s been a year of change at Sydney’s premier plant-based restaurant, with head chef Sander Nooij buying the business from his former bosses at the Bentley Group in March. The chef works tirelessly to coax flavour from modest ingredients.

For a carrot skewer, he shaves, steams, cures, smokes, dries, pan-fries and blow-torches the vegetable, and serves it with sunflower cream and a chilli oil crunchy with fried garlic. The diversity of mushrooms is highlighted by fermenting shiitakes, pureeing buttons, pickling chestnut varieties and wilting black pearls in herb oil. Cavatelli is served on a luscious bank of Jerusalem artichokes and bathed in kombu and thyme consomme.

Meanwhile, collaboration is evident across the board, from sommelier Jean-Luc Prasopa-Plaizier’s wine program highlighting independent producers, to the bar drawing on the kitchen’s koji reserves to ferment a yuzushu with citrus-bright sake notes, but none of the booze. Clever stuff.

Good to know: Nooij describes Yellow’s food as “botanical cuisine”, much like Michelin-starred De Nieuwe Winkel does in The Netherlands.

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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