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What’s better than a cheesy butternut toastie? Dipping it in hot honey at this new cafe

Inner west favourite Algorithm brings its creative cafe menu and specialty coffee to Potts Point.

Lenny Ann Low

Decor-wise, Algorithm in Potts Point is inverse to its inner west cousin.
1 / 14Decor-wise, Algorithm in Potts Point is inverse to its inner west cousin.Wolter Peeters
Avorithm (avocado, burrata, tomato, salsa verde and cashews).
2 / 14Avorithm (avocado, burrata, tomato, salsa verde and cashews). Wolter Peeters
Cheese and butternut pumpkin toastie.
3 / 14Cheese and butternut pumpkin toastie. Wolter Peeters
Cafe owner Beryl Leomongga.
4 / 14Cafe owner Beryl Leomongga. Wolter Peeters
Chorizo chilli eggs.
5 / 14Chorizo chilli eggs. Wolter Peeters
Algo classic toastie with hot honey for dipping.
6 / 14Algo classic toastie with hot honey for dipping. Wolter Peeters
Milk chocolate cookie.
7 / 14Milk chocolate cookie. Wolter Peeters
Blueberry jelly cloud.
8 / 14Blueberry jelly cloud.Wolter Peeters
Matchapresso.
9 / 14Matchapresso. Wolter Peeters
Raspberry milk choc muffin.
10 / 14Raspberry milk choc muffin.Wolter Peeters
Iced raspberry earl grey.
11 / 14Iced raspberry earl grey. Wolter Peeters
Salted caramel matcha crunch.
12 / 14Salted caramel matcha crunch. Wolter Peeters
Latte using Algorithm coffee.
13 / 14Latte using Algorithm coffee.Wolter Peeters
14 / 14 Wolter Peeters

Algorithm, Potts Point

Cafe$

You know a cafe is popular when the front door waitlist is pages-deep and people stare at your table like it’s the only jammy bun in the baker’s window. This was us, seven minutes ago, a speedy wait-to-table timeframe that is testament to one of Algorithm’s magnetic pulls – in this case, service.

Many in the inner west will be familiar with their Algorithm, the bright white corner cafe on Marrickville Road serving roasted spam, truffled folded egg, pastries in a slide-out glass case and glasses of Rhythm, the undisputed cold brew drink of last summer, with its lip-lacing orange-zested vanilla cream topping.

Cheese and butternut pumpkin toastie. Wolter Peeters
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Its co-founders, husband-and-wife team Beryl Leomongga and Baby Angelina Kartiko, who is also head chef, are behind Algorithm in Potts Point too. And, while the menu is similar, they’ve added new dishes and drinks, tackled a very different part of town, and made some effective mood changes.

Decor-wise, Algorithm in Potts Point is inverse to its inner west cousin. Unlike the semi-industrial Marrickville cafe, with its chalk-white exterior, pale origami-esque stools and floor-to-high-ceiling windows flooding every corner with light, Potts Point is darker and cosier.

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There’s stainless-steel banquette seating with curves like a skateboard park. The kitchen and front counters, also lined with gleaming alloy, are spotlit like a gallery. The low ceiling, undulating with cross-beams and light racks, resembles an upside-down egg cartoon, which might be why it feels like we’re cocooned in here, ensconced between inky black tables, a record player with disco soul playing from red speakers and shelves and ledges of precisely placed packets of house blend Rhythm (made with Headland Coffee).

Blueberry jelly cloud.Wolter Peeters

The frenetic pace of Darlinghurst Road – cruising taxis, dogs on leads, wandering tourists looking up and down for the Coca-Cola sign – is but a framed slice of life once you’re inside sitting down to a plate of beautifully crumpled folded egg. Speckled with pepper, it’s zig-zagged with blushing LP pork sausage lolling across a sourdough muffin layered with chilli aioli and tomato relish.

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Then one of the small platoon of staff members – all in T-shirts illustrated with a white print of the Marrickville cafe building – brings their cheesy butternut toastie.

I’ve never had roasted butternut pumpkin and sweet potato in a toasted sandwich before, least of all one that also includes melty cheddar and ricotta, sage and pecan nuts. This triumvirate of golden tastes – soft orange pumpkin, sweet, fleshy tuber, oozing cheeses, all mingling with buttery pecans – is a balm-like slice of hedonism. Dipping it in hot honey ups the ante significantly.

Salted caramel matcha crunch.Wolter Peeters

Match this with the previously mentioned Rhythm for a head-zinging mix of caffeine and cream. Or go Algorithm’s new two-tone brew – the salted caramel matcha crunch. This layers salted caramel cream and iced oat matcha under a crispy oblong of frosted cornflakes. At a pinch, you could call it breakfast in a glass and it goes down a treat.

Algorithm’s speciality coffee is one of the reasons behind both cafes’ popularity; it leads to long conversations between staff and customers considering which bean batch to take home. The other driving force is the level of service. Locals – and many tourists, judging by the German, French and US accents around us asking for warm coconut rice pudding, chorizo and chilli eggs and gingery yakiniku chicken rolls – are clearly loving the attentive staff.

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At one point they whisk 10 footpath tables, and the people sitting at them, out of the spitting rain between delivering cutlery, taking orders and providing cheer to a crying baby. Leaving customers are farewelled by at least five of them. It’s like leaving behind a personal butler.

It took a year longer than expected for Algorithm to cross town and open in Potts Point due to renovation and council delays but its arrival heralds a new hospitality hot spot.

Three more specialty drinks cafes to try

Ickle Coffee

Specialising in sourcing coffee from independent producers, Ickle’s co-owner Rowena Rangwan Chansiri roasts the beans for this cheery, sustainability focused cafe – and others throughout Australia – and is on-site to help pick a brew.

251 Kingsgrove Road, Kingsgrove, icklecoffee.com

Moon and Back

An industrial-minimalist cafe serving a plethora of specialty drinks including the creamy Matcha Magic, served with dango – skewered sweet rice dumplings – or the cacao- and berry-infused black forest cold brew, topped with cranberry foam.

7/2 Crewe Place, Rosebery, moonandbacksyd.square.site

Poketto

Poketto, a spin-off from the owners of Kurumac and Cool Mac, is already serving its summer cooler – iced strawberry latte with plenty of cream and sweet fruity pulp. Match it with cod roe and shimeji mushroom udon or soy pork belly soba at the monthly in-house clothing, art and flowers market.

1 Dangar Street, Chippendale, @pokettocafe

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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