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Good Food hat15/20Critics' Pick

Ates

Updated ,first published

Charcoal grilled market fish.
1 / 9Charcoal grilled market fish.Supplied
The exterior.
2 / 9The exterior. Supplied
Sauternes custard.
3 / 9Sauternes custard. Edwina Pickles
The main dining room.
4 / 9The main dining room. Edwina Pickles
Tender duck with Nectarine and Szechuan.
5 / 9Tender duck with Nectarine and Szechuan. Eve Sczechowski
Hiramasa kingfish with mushroom soy.
6 / 9Hiramasa kingfish with mushroom soy. Supplied.
Clarence river octopus with tarator.
7 / 9Clarence river octopus with tarator. Supplied
Inside the cosy Blackheath restaurant.
8 / 9Inside the cosy Blackheath restaurant. Eve Sczechowski
Cumin-roasted pumpkin, garlic yoghurt, and coriander oil.
9 / 9Cumin-roasted pumpkin, garlic yoghurt, and coriander oil.Eve Sczechowski
Good Food hat15/20Critics' Pick

Ates

Mediterranean$$

Wood-fired food that captures the spirit of the upper mountains.

It’s all about the snacks. Lots of ’em, and fast. A one-bite flavour-bomb of deep-fried mashed potato topped with fresh truffle shavings, say, or a tartlet filled with sweet potato and caramelised onion under fine curls of comte cheese.

A fat wedge of focaccia, baked in the restaurant’s historic wood-fired oven, is made to run through a dish of house-made ricotta, pickled zucchini and basil oil. Yup, chef Will Cowan-Lunn can cook. And it’s a pleasure to eat in Ates’ cosy dining room, with its terracotta walls and open kitchen.

Food is mostly designed to share and heavily skewed to vegetables, with a few meat dishes here and there (hello, roast duck and caramelised grapes). A wood-fired head of cauliflower smothered in curry leaf butter and sweetened with currants is all richness and savour. Could there be a little more reprieve from the deeply roasted buttery brown things? Sure. Does a barely set Bilpin honey panna cotta make up for it? Absolutely.

Good to know: Keen for a pre-dinner drink? Frankie and Mo’s is just up the street, pouring natural wine and shaking margaritas.

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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