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14.5/20

Lost Cat

Updated ,first published

Steak with “umami butter” is cooked over a wood grill.
1 / 6Steak with “umami butter” is cooked over a wood grill.Andrew Clark
Inside the Warrnambool restaurant.
2 / 6Inside the Warrnambool restaurant.Andrew Clark
Focaccia with onion butter that uses onion in three different forms.
3 / 6Focaccia with onion butter that uses onion in three different forms.Andrew Clark
Wood-grilled cabbage, cashew cream, chilli crisp.
4 / 6Wood-grilled cabbage, cashew cream, chilli crisp.Andrew Clark
The restaurant opened in January.
5 / 6The restaurant opened in January. Andrew Clark
Fish crudo with radish and white soy.
6 / 6Fish crudo with radish and white soy.Andrew Clark
14.5/20

Lost Cat

Contemporary$$

Regional dining in a low-fuss, high-impact format.

It’s one of the more unassuming doorways gracing the dining strip of this seaside town, but it’s one of the most hectic. Locals have embraced Lost Cat like, well, a prodigal kitten. Indeed chef Zac Nicholson (ex-Rockpool Bar & Grill) is a returning son of Warrnambool, and he understands how locals like to eat: no frippery, just amped-up flavours cleverly applied to produce grown nearby.

The concise menu changes weekly. Often there’ll be local snapper, perhaps a tartare sharpened by orange and white soy dressing. Otway Ranges pork belly is a favourite, maybe served with kimchi-laced coleslaw and doused in gochujang sauce. Steak - another mainstay - always comes with a flavour-bomb butter on top, chips on the side.

Customers leave lemons in the hope chef will make his impossibly fluffy lemon meringue pie. This is country dining to make city restaurants take note.

Must-order: House-made focaccia. This textbook, balloony wedge of carb has to be on the table somewhere.

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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