JustOpen – Michmutters
Categories
Business

Bondi brewery bar and restaurant Curly Lewis brings local beer to the beach

A beer after a beach swim is pretty hard to pass up, and now Bondi-goers can enjoy the suburb’s very own brew, with the arrival of the strip’s first brewery bar and restaurant.

Curly Lewis, which opens on Campbell Parade on Friday, August 19, is a collaboration between four long-time locals Adam Richards, Oliver dos Remedios, Gareth Morton and Loren Morton, and brewer Scotty Morgan.

The team wanted to bring a brewery experience – until recently mostly restricted to the city’s inner west and northern beaches – to the eastern suburbs.

The Curly Lewis team (from left): Gareth Morton, Loren Morton, Scott Morgan, Adam Richards and Oli dos Remedios.

The Curly Lewis team (from left): Gareth Morton, Loren Morton, Scott Morgan, Adam Richards and Oli dos Remedios. Photo: James Evans



“The idea started as one of those typical pub chats that turn into a brainstorm on a coaster,” Richards says.

“It’s common knowledge that when you’re from Bondi you generally don’t leave the bubble, so we thought … let’s give another reason to not have to leave, and for people outside of Bondi to enjoy too, of course.”

The venue includes a working brewery, bar and diner, and launches with two main beers: the Curly Lewis Clean Cut Lager, a “crisp, smooth straight-up lager”, and Bondi Hazy Ale, which is “hazy and hoppy with tropical notes “.

Beachgoers can enjoy a fresh brew at the Campbell Parade venue.

Beachgoers can enjoy a fresh brew at the Campbell Parade venue. Photo: James Evans



Both are available on site and in neighboring bottle shops and venues.

“Our core beers needed a clean and easy drinking approachability, made for those baking hot beach days,” Morgan says.

The brewer has also devised a rotating menu of small-batch, seasonal and experimental beers (called “wildcards”) and seltzer, offered on 20 stainless steel taps.

These include a “fresh, sour and salty” Salty Mermaid Gose, made on-site with a few buckets of ocean water, and richer beers including an IPA and coffee stout.

A curated list of spirits, cocktails and independent-label wines are also available.

Don’t expect the usual pub grub, however. Popular Bronte Road spot Frank’s Deli is in charge of kitchen operations, with co-owners Sammy Jukubiak and Ben Kelly bringing a menu to Euro-style snacks and plates.

Frank's Deli is working the kitchen.

Frank’s Deli is working the kitchen. Photo: James Evans



Dishes include Frank’s meatballs, croquettes and chargrilled prawns with Aleppo butter alongside sandwiches such as Portuguese chicken, Frank’s reuben and vegan mushroom toasties. For desserts, it’s a crowd-pleasing burnt basque cheesecake.

Interior architects ACME (designers of Fred’s, Margaret and Archie Rose) are behind the 120-seater’s look, with natural materials, beer tanks, outdoor seating and timber bars enhancing the casual, coastal vibe.

“People will be able to walk straight in from the beach in wet togs, pull up a chair at the bar and enjoy a fresh brew,” dos Remedios says.

Open Tue-Sat 11am-11pm; Sun 11am-10pm.

Curly Lewis, 102-106 Campbell Parade, Bondi Beach, curlylewis.com.au

.

Categories
Business

Cult US burger chain Five Guys opening first Melbourne store in Southbank

It’s Melbourne’s turn for Five Guys fever, with the US burger joint planting its first flag in Victoria next week. A 79-seat restaurant will open in Southbank on August 8, where its red-and-white branding will match the red stairs near Queens Bridge.

The first two Five Guys stores in Australia, both opening in Sydney in the last 12 months, attracted long queues of people keen to get their taste, with brand manager Robby Andronikos saying some people waited up to four hours.

While Melbourne isn’t short of burger shops, not many offer the same level of individualism as Five Guys.

Five Guys' Penrith store was its first Australian location and was quickly followed by another in Sydney's CBD.

Five Guys’ Penrith store was its first Australian location and was quickly followed by another in Sydney’s CBD. Photo: Supplied



A menu of stripped-back burgers and hotdogs is complemented by an enormous array of toppings – 15 in total – that let the diner create their own perfect burger. Or it might just be whatever feels right to them that day.

“We don’t dictate to them how they should have their burger,” says Andronikos.

From hot sauce to onions (grilled or fresh), pickles (five to be exact) and even tomatoes, everything is optional. All the extras are “free” (read: built into the price of the base burger) so whatever toppings you go for, it will cost the same as your mate’s order.

All the extras are “free” so whatever toppings you go for, it will cost the same as your mate’s order.

The team has calculated this system means there are 250,000 burger variations on its menu.

The same make-it-your-own philosophy applies to milkshakes, which can be elevated with pieces of banana, Oreo or even bacon. BLTs, grilled cheese and vegetarian-friendly grilled mushroom and pepper sandwiches make up the rest of the menu.

Five Guys claims its other point of difference is freshness and old-school attention to detail, whether it’s hand-cut potatoes or patties made fresh each day. They also famously claim there are no freezers in their stores.

Established in 1986, Five Guys started franchising in 2003. Local outfit Seagrass Hospitality, who also own The Meat and Wine Co, Ribs & Burgers, and The Butcher and the Farmer, are the master franchisee in Australia.

More stores across Melbourne and Sydney are on the way, with the next Melbourne location likely to open early next year in a central area with strong footfall. Seagrass plan to open 20 Five Guys stores on the eastern seaboard before tackling the rest of the country and New Zealand.

Each burger is purposely kept plain so the diner can choose which of 15 toppings they want to add.

Each burger is purposely kept plain so the diner can choose which of 15 toppings they want to add. Photo: Supplied



Open from August 8, daily 11am-10pm

3 Freshwater Place, Southbank, 03 9938 8805, fiveguys.com.au

.