I've decided to start the year off in French. A commiseration for the downgrading of their economy, perhaps? Or maybe just because I love the place, and what it has done for cuisine, the word itself a french invention.
Cuisine has not just stayed in France - it has grown through the world as hard and fast as a weed, yet as welcome as a herb. It is a word that has been absorbed into other languages, transferring cooking from simply nourishment into art. It has influenced our cooking in more ways than we can imagine, and yet adjusted itself with the ages. Haut cuisine, then Nouvelle cuisine, and France even brought us the father of molecular gastronomy, Hervé This.
A couple of weeks ago, I visited La Petanque, a country restaurant just out of Melbourne (Australia). It has been awarded one "hat" by The Age Good Food Guide, Australia's answer to an absent Michelin Guide, and a very reliable marker - the hats fairly much replicate the standards of stars in the Michelin Guide. Last month I reviewed one of Dubai's top restaurants, La Petite Maison, not altogether as favourably as everyone else seems to have. And my question after this is - "What makes the difference between a good French restaurant and a great one?"
The owners are french, as are several of the waiters. Diners could easily feel they are in the creases of the hills behind the Cote d'azur, and practice their french with the sommelier. The dishes themselves all come with a distinct French flavour, but also remain quintessentially regional. It's very clever.
I started with the sweetbreads. My brother was about to order them until my Mum nicely declared they were sheep gonads (they aren't - they are lymph glands). I had to change my choice from the rabbit terrine, to prove a point to him, and I'm glad I did. Perfect tiny titbits of tender and sweet meatiness, served with crispy lardons and al dente baby corgettes. The highlight though was the strip of hazelnut crumble and deep fried baby capers alongside - a trick I will definitely try at home. My father had the rabbit, which he kindly shared - a good terrine and lovely rillets. My brother and mother didn't - scallops and radishes pretty as a necklace, and crab that disappeared before I could photograph it.
We drank White wine from Lirac - neutral yet honeyed on the finish, and a strong reminder of provincial vacations, and Pinot, both a light and fruity village wine from the Bourgogne to partner the pork, and a spicy number from local Foxey's Hangout for the duck.
As I strolled out onto the pitch, glass in hand in the late afternoon, to per-lonk my petanque balls inexpertly, I questioned my love over this restaurant as compared with my experience at La Petite Maison recently. One, I loved, the other... well, it was just a restaurant. My question after dining at La Petite Maison was - would this restaurant still be so very well received if you plonked it back in France? My answer was no. But I believe that if you transported La Petanque back there, it would be noticed by Michelin for sure.
----------------------------------------
La Petanque
+61+ 3 5931 0155
Website
Email The Restaurant
1208 Mornington Flinders Road
Main Ridge Vic 3928
Map
Lunch Daily 12 - 3pm
Dinner Friday & Saturday 6.30pm till late
(reduced hours in winter)