Pinned post from 4.33pm on Oct 27, 2025
Go to latestKeep up to date with who’s winning what
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This was published 4 months ago
Thanks for following our live coverage of The Age Good Food Guide Awards, presented by T2 Tea and Oceania Cruises.
Read all about the ceremony in our news story here, peruse the full list of hats and find out more about all the major award winners.
And don’t forget to download our Good Food app to explore all 500 Good Food Guide reviews (as Good Food’s Sarah Norris said in her welcome speech, it’s like having a Good Food Guide editor in your pocket).
Pick up the paper tomorrow for the special Good Food Guide liftout (starring New Restaurant of the Year winner Zareh on the cover, below), and come back tomorrow morning for the low-down on which restaurants gained or lost their hats.
I’m off to fetch myself a mini martini and get stuck into a spice bag, good night!
From one hat to three, here’s the essential list of every hat-winning restaurant fromThe Age Good Food Guide 2026.
Download the Good Foood app and find every review from the 2026 The Age Good Food Guide edition, complete with hats, maps and much more. You can make your own saved list of Good Food Guide venues, too.
Premium Digital subscribers can download the Good Food app from the Apple App Store or the Google Play Store now.
“I never thought that my Dad and I would be working together for two decades. I thought we’d kill each other,” Jason Lui.
Oceania Cruises Chef of the Year, Thi Le: “Favourite thing I’ve eaten recently… I was in Sydney yesterday and I went to Porkfat and the meal was incredible. An old Richmond favourite of mine is Oriental Grill, like a Northern Chinese barbecue house. Just a local favourite, love it.”
Tom Sarafian, owner-chef of New Restaurant of the Year, Zareh: “The favourite thing I’ve eaten this year has been breakfast at El Columpio [in Fitzroy], it’s my favourite place. It’s true, authentic Mexican food and everything they do is amazing, I love going there for a long, boozy breakfast.”
Let’s check in to see how the 10 contenders polled with readers. Looks like the Guide’s winner Zareh is leading the pack.
Congratulations to all the winners! Read more about them all here
Drum roll please… the T2 Tea Restaurant of the Year is the 50-year-old Flower Drum.
The city’s iconic Cantonese restaurant has been a standard-bearer for half a century, its menu a study in luxury seafood and roast meats.
Today, its food is just as breathtaking as it was in 1999, when it won this very award for the first time. It is a cultural landmark that is as Melbourne as the Yarra.
Keep beating that drum. Here’s to another 50.
Congratulations to Brae, Amaru, Minamishima and Vue de Monde for each retaining their three-hat ranking.
Amaru’s Clinton McIver is celebrating a hat-trick of three hats: “The three hats is a real milestone. To have it for three years in a row is not something we take lightly. Over the moon proud of my team. To my wife and kids who don’t see a lot of me Wednesday to Saturday – thank you.”
Vue de Monde’s Rajnor Soin thanks his team up on level 55 of the Rialto tower: “We make dreams come true every day, every service is so amazing.”
Congratulations to Thi Le, the Oceania Cruises Chef of the Year.
“This means so much for me, not just for me but for the team, my partner and everyone who’s been part of the journey. The original cooks and caretakers of this land. Food is more than putting something on the plate. It is about celebrating two cultures, cultivating the new. To the migrants. The elders. It’s the hands that have picked our garlic, washed our plates and grown our food,” says Le.
In the 10 years since Le opened Anchovy in Richmond – her partner Jia-Yen Lee by her side – she’s recast it multiple times, taking risks others would baulk at to unspool the story of her culture.
Born into a Vietnamese family en route to Australia, Le has become a strident voice for the children of migrants who feel caught between their family’s heritage and their own identity. Her book Viet Kieu encapsulates this experience through recipes but also unflinching, often raw narratives.