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14/20

Kirbie

Chef Kirbie Tate has flipped James into the eponymous Kirbie.
1 / 9Chef Kirbie Tate has flipped James into the eponymous Kirbie.Bonnie Savage
Creamed silverbeet.
2 / 9Creamed silverbeet.Bonnie Savage
Flatbread with nori butter.
3 / 9Flatbread with nori butter.Bonnie Savage
Black sausage with braised white beans and chickpeas.
4 / 9Black sausage with braised white beans and chickpeas.Bonnie Savage
Tarte tatin.
5 / 9Tarte tatin.Bonnie Savage
The casual neighbourhood hangout shifts gears according to the time, day, season.
6 / 9The casual neighbourhood hangout shifts gears according to the time, day, season.Bonnie Savage
Zucchini and radishes with pink peppercorns and house-made ricotta.
7 / 9Zucchini and radishes with pink peppercorns and house-made ricotta.Bonnie Savage
Cucumbers with smoked yoghurt, smoked almonds and ajo blanco.
8 / 9Cucumbers with smoked yoghurt, smoked almonds and ajo blanco.Bonnie Savage
Kirbie Tate has replaced her previous restaurant James with Kirbie bistro.
9 / 9Kirbie Tate has replaced her previous restaurant James with Kirbie bistro.Supplied
14/20

Kirbie

European$$

A simple vision, fully realised, making a great neighbourhood even better.

Kirbie is a feelgood space, supported by food, wine and the professionals who bring the experience into being. Owner Kirbie Tate has been welcoming people to this spot for 10 years, but now has given her name to the business. Head in for a glass of wine and seafood pasta or book in a friends’ catch-up where you order just about everything and let salt, olive oil, lemon, chicken stock and chablis gather into a rollicking canter to good times.

The decor is layered, a bit like a French farmhouse, and the food is broadly European. Chopped zucchini and radishes are macerated in champagne vinegar, then arranged over house-made ricotta. Blood sausage is sliced and grilled, then placed in a soupy, summery cassoulet. And you’ll want the glossy flatbread served with nori butter. It’s a casual neighbourhood hangout and a wholehearted, happy addition to inner Melbourne.

Good to know: There is a daily “mystery wine” at a keen price.

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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