Melbourne Restaurants

Melbourne has fabulous food, and is known in some circles as Australia's food capital. The restaurants themselves are often exceptionally stylish and elegant—or totally edgy and funky in their own individual way. Some are even deliberately grungy. The dining scene is a vast array of cuisines and experiences that's constantly evolving. The swankiest (and most expensive) restaurants all have five- to eight-course degustation menus (with the opportunity to wine-match each course), but newer restaurants are opting for tapas-style or grazing plates. Flexibility is the new word in dining—restaurants are often also funky bars and vice versa.

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  • 1. A1 Bakery

    $ | Brunswick

    For the freshest rounds of Lebanese bread, go to the source of the best khobz (bread) in the city: A1 Bakery has been running the ovens here since 1992. Sit in for Lebanese pizzas and kibbe (deep-fried lamb mince in cracked wheat) or order a platter of dips and kofta and a falafel wrap to go. Don't forget the baklava.

    643--645 Sydney Rd., Melbourne, Victoria, 3056, Australia
    03-9386--0440

    Known For

    • Inexpensive
    • Baklava
    • Delicious bread
  • 2. Brunetti

    $$ | Carlton

    First opened in 1974, this iconic Romanesque bakery has moved around Carlton on several occasions, and the masses have followed. Its biggest undertaking is in the heart of Lygon Street and still filled with perfect biscotti, mouthwatering cakes, and great service. In addition to an expanded lunch menu, a wood-fire oven—specially imported from Italy—makes pizzas, and you can finish it all off with a perfect espresso or a thick European-style hot chocolate with a cornetto con crema (custard-filled croissant). Enjoy the same tempting delights at the beautiful, birdcage-like café in Flinders Lane, and at little outposts in the Myer department store in Bourke Street and Melbourne Airport (T4).

    380 Lygon St., Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
    03-9347–2801

    Known For

    • Chocolate eclairs
    • Decadent cake display
    • Italian-style espresso
  • 3. Café di Stasio

    $$$$ | St. Kilda

    This upscale bistro treads a very fine line between mannered elegance and decadence. A sleek marble bar and modishly ravaged walls contribute to the sense that you've stepped into a scene from La Dolce Vita. Happily, the restaurant is as serious about its food as its sense of style. Crisply roasted duck is now a local legend, and the pasta is always al dente. A seasonal lunch special (pasta with wine and coffee) for A$40 is a great value if you're nearby. For an informal drink before your meal, an adjoining bar has local wines and a light menu of the same high standards for those who failed to get a booking.

    31 Fitzroy St., Melbourne, Victoria, 3182, Australia
    03-9525–3999

    Known For

    • Expert staff
    • Long lunches
    • Crayfish omelet

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations essential
  • 4. Farmer’s Daughters

    $$$$ | City Center

    You’ll find your place in one of the three levels at Farmer’s Daughters, in the fine-dining restaurant, in the deli, or up on the rooftop---its focus is the produce drawn from the rich farmlands of Gippsland, a region the size of Switzerland, to Melbourne’s east. Share small plates in the deli or opt for the chef’s selection (A$70), choose the Gippsland Getaway set menu in the restaurant (A$110), or take a cocktail made with locally sourced spirits up on the roof, for a true farm-to-plate experience. Its pantry serves coffee from 7:30 am on weekdays.

    95 Exhibition St., Melbourne, Victoria, 3000, Australia
    03-9116--8682

    Known For

    • Locally grown ingredients
    • Excellent cocktails
    • Offers fine dining and a more casual deli

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun.
  • 5. Higher Ground

    $ | City Center

    Serving restaurant meals at breakfast and brunch, Higher Ground leads the pack for early morning dining. Grab a well-crafted pour-over and pastries, or linger over eggs paired with cauliflower, market fish, or the best ricotta hotcakes in town. The dinner service takes it up a notch with 12-hour lamb and a drinks menu that featuring Australian craft beers and wines. With its vast ceilings and raw brick walls, the decor is pure industrial chic. Avoid the busy peak periods.

    650 Little Bourke St., Melbourne, Victoria, 3000, Australia
    03-8899--6219

    Known For

    • Excellent coffee
    • Innovative food pairings
    • Soaring interiors

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No dinner Sun.--Wed.
  • Recommended Fodor’s Video

  • 6. I Love Pho

    $ | Richmond

    Tucking into a steaming bowl of pho (traditional noodle soup) at this Victoria Street restaurant is like channeling the backstreets of Hanoi and Saigon. Each order comes with a piled plate of Vietnamese mint, bean shoots, and lemon wedges, and there are bottles of chili paste and fish sauce on every mock-marble plastic table. Vegetarian pho is also available. This restaurant is crowded with Vietnamese and other pho lovers on weekends, so you often have to line up on the footpath, but turnover is fast so it's never long before you are seated and eating some of Melbourne's best—and cheapest—food. I Love Pho also has an outlet at the Melbourne Emporium food hall in the city center.

    264 Victoria St., Melbourne, Victoria, 3121, Australia
    03-9427–7749

    Known For

    • Best pho in town
    • Rice-paper rolls
    • Friendly service
  • 7. Lune Croissanterie

    $ | Fitzroy

    Locals and tourists alike can be found queueing outside Lune each morning for the city's most beloved pastries including what some say are the world's best croissants, which take three days to create. Not afraid to experiment, seasonal flavors may include pumpkin pie or Persian love cake. Inside a Brutalist concrete warehouse, croissants and cruffins fly out of the oven and into the hands of eager customers until there are none left. The pastries are best consumed with Lune's excellent coffee. A city outpost is located at 161 Collins Street.

    119 Rose St., Melbourne, Victoria, 3065, Australia
    03-9419–2320

    Known For

    • World-famous croissant flavors
    • Great coffee
    • Legendary kouign amann
  • 8. ShanDong MaMa Mini

    $ | City Center

    At one of a series of hole-in-the-wall diners in busy Centre Place, pull up a stool and load your little table with stewed pork-belly buns, made from a family recipe employing 10 different spices. The little diner and its mother restaurant, in the Midcity Centre arcade, are also justly famed for their dumplings filled with a fine mackerel-and-coriander mousse. Wash it all down with an Australian craft beer. The queues move quickly, and it's worth the wait.

    5 Centre Pl., Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
    041-1666--2992

    Known For

    • Pork-belly buns
    • Craft beer
    • Quick service
  • 9. Big Esso by Mabu Mabu

    $$ | City Center

    This all-day bar and kitchen brings Indigenous food and culture to the center of the city. First Nations chef Nornie Bero draws on her upbringing in the Torres Strait Islands to create a menu loaded with uniquely Australian herbs, spices, and teas. Seeking to use sustainable and social enterprise suppliers, try the house damper and wattleseed coffee, and get adventurous if you find emu fillets or pickled watermelon salad on the menu.

    Flinders St. and Swanston St., Melbourne, Victoria, 3000, Australia

    Known For

    • Indigenous music
    • Artworks by First Nations artists
    • Supporting social enterprises
  • 10. Lona Misa

    $$ | South Yarra

    Vegan and vegetarian fare is the focus of this restaurant, set in the new Ovolo South Yarra hotel. With a strong Latin American vibe, choose the vegan versions of chicken tamales, the Brazilian seafood stew moqueca or the queso con chorizo, and vegetable dishes from its charcoal oven. The hotel restaurant is an all-day affair, morphing into a wine bar later in the evening, with cocktails with Latin zing. For more plant-based goodness by pioneer chef Shannon Martinez, try her vegan belwether restaurant and deli  Smith & Daughters, in Collingwood.

    234 Toorak Rd., Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
    03-9116--2000

    Known For

    • Vegan dining
    • Some vegetarian options
    • Some alcohol-free options
  • 11. Monarch Cakes

    $ | St. Kilda

    Past the yoga rooms and juice bars, Acland Street's timeless drawcard is its old-school cake shops, and Monarch has been doling out its creamy glories since 1934. Fresh cakes and slices are displayed behind glass windows that lure the crowds, before being packed carefully in boxes to go, for an instant picnic treat. Most recipes give an indication of the founders' Eastern European origins: make the difficult choice from its array of Polish baked cheesecakes, chocolate kooglhoupf, strudels and the ubiquitous custard vanilla slice.

    103 Acland St., Melbourne, Victoria, 3182, Australia
    03-9534--2972

    Known For

    • Monarch's famous plum cake
    • Cupcakes of all hues
    • Glorious window displays
  • 12. Pellegrini's Espresso Bar

    $ | City Center

    With one of Melbourne's first espresso machines installed here in 1954, it was the beginning the city's love affair with both Italian coffee and Pellegrini's. Take a stool at the bar or the table in the kitchen and choose from such classics as lasagna or cannelloni—servings are fast and vast—then let the staff talk you into a slab of strudel to finish.

    66 Bourke St., Melbourne, Victoria, 3000, Australia
    03-9662--1885

    Known For

    • Iconic diner
    • Huge serves
    • Neighborhood vibe

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun.
  • 13. The Stables of Como

    $ | South Yarra

    There's a Gallic devil-may-care attitude to brunch in these former stables, with Bloody Marys and Mumm champagne listed beside the granola and eggs on sourdough. Or you could try matching its cocktails—espresso martinis or a Pimms with the French toast and croque fromage. Highlights include the lemonade scones with Chantilly cream and the Wagyu beef cheeseburger. Follow with a walk around the gardens of Como House, built in 1847. Picnic lovers note that The Stables also prepares picnics for lawn lounging.

    Williams Rd. at Lechlade Ave., Melbourne, Victoria, 3141, Australia
    03-9827--6886

    Known For

    • Lunches to go for picnics
    • Lemonade scones
    • Cocktails

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