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14/20Critics' Pick

Residence at the Potter (Cherrywood)

Updated ,first published

Oysters are baked in the style of rarebit, with a cheesy topping.
1 / 9Oysters are baked in the style of rarebit, with a cheesy topping.Supplied
Specially commissioned artwork ties back to Cherrywood’s opening menu.
2 / 9Specially commissioned artwork ties back to Cherrywood’s opening menu.Supplied
Chicken “tea” (a chicken broth) is served at Residence.
3 / 9Chicken “tea” (a chicken broth) is served at Residence.Supplied
Leatherwood honey tartlet with persimmon.
4 / 9Leatherwood honey tartlet with persimmon.Supplied
Comte cheese with leek tarte tatin is a fresh spin on a cheese course.
5 / 9Comte cheese with leek tarte tatin is a fresh spin on a cheese course.Supplied
Residence has opened with its first chef-in-residence, Robbie Noble.
6 / 9Residence has opened with its first chef-in-residence, Robbie Noble.Supplied
Soused sardines with cucumber and mezcal.
7 / 9Soused sardines with cucumber and mezcal.Supplied
British-born chef Robbie Noble.
8 / 9British-born chef Robbie Noble.Supplied
Line-caught Blue Eye fish with haricot blanc and chervil.
9 / 9Line-caught Blue Eye fish with haricot blanc and chervil.Supplied
14/20Critics' Pick

Residence at the Potter

Contemporary$$

Combining two of Melbourne’s great loves: food and art.

Housed in the Potter Museum of Art on the University of Melbourne campus, Residence is an incubator restaurant for young chefs, selected to test a promising concept. The inaugural young chef is Robbie Noble and his idea is Cherrywood, a bistro inspired by his northern English roots. There’s an homage to his mum’s roast chicken in the form of a “tea”: a very rich chicken broth poured from a kettle over aromatic tarragon into tiny cups.

Hanger of beef comes with ox tongue and peppercorn, an overload of richness. But Noble also challenges ideas of British cooking being prodigiously meaty. A lion’s mane mushroom carpaccio is actually a vegetarian take on vitello tonnato, the thin-sliced mushrooms laid over a tofu cream, the cumin-tinged dish clever and satisfying. Art needs patrons. If food is art, perhaps restaurants need them, too.

Good to know: On weekdays, the space opens from 8am as a cafe stocked with roast chook sandwiches and pastries from Brunswick bakery, Iris.

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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