The Sydney Morning Herald logo
Advertisement
14/20Critics' Pick

Hope St Radio

Updated ,first published

Pasta and vino at Hope St Radio.
1 / 10Pasta and vino at Hope St Radio.Charlie Hawks
Focaccia with butter.
2 / 10Focaccia with butter.Luis Enrique Ascui
Outdoor dining.
3 / 10Outdoor dining.Luis Enrique Ascui
Signature wall scribbles.
4 / 10Signature wall scribbles.Supplied
The venue hosts regular DJ sets.
5 / 10The venue hosts regular DJ sets.Charlie Hawks
Oysters.
6 / 10Oysters.Luis Enrique Ascui
Hope St is a popular inner-north wine bar.
7 / 10Hope St is a popular inner-north wine bar.Supplied
Sardines.
8 / 10Sardines.Luis Enrique Ascui
Rigatoni all’amatriciana.
9 / 10Rigatoni all’amatriciana.Supplied
Plenty of natural light.
10 / 10Plenty of natural light.Supplied
14/20Critics' Pick

Hope St Radio

Contemporary$$

Part restaurant, part radio station and all revelry.

Collingwood Yards’ flagship bar-restaurant is a beacon for the cool kids of the inner north. But it’s also so much more. The music is au courant, the wines au naturel and the chef, Blake Ellis, oh-so-handy throughout an uncomplicated Italian-ish menu.

Raw scallops with creamy celeriac puree are livened with a zap of sauvignon blanc vinegar and caperberries. A colourful canopy of pickled radicchio and chicory adorns silky smooth ricotta. There’s olive oil to spare, and that’s where the signature, spongy focaccia comes in.

Oyster and shimeji mushrooms, egg yolk and dark sesame oil is an intensely savoury, Japanese-inspired detour, while ruffled malfadine ribbons, verdant with silverbeet sauce and crunchy with pangrattato, plant you squarely back in the Med. The rambunctious dining room can feel nightclubby, with rotating DJs and a heaving crowd inside and out; dress for fun.

Good to know: More than a restaurant, the online radio station walks the talk with regular music festivals, plus workshops and life-drawing classes.

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

Melbourne’s Northern Suburbs
Up next
Slow-cooked beef cheek.
  • Review

Ides

This handsome salon remains as creative and sure-footed as ever.

Ima Asa Yoru in Brunswick.
  • Review

Ima Asa Yoru

Day-to-night dining dressed in Yves Klein blue.

Previously
  • Review

Hi Chong Qing

Beloved noodle house in a laneway lobby.

See all stories

From our partners

Advertisement
Advertisement