Time Out Sydney / Issue 33: June 25 - July 1, 2008

Bar Zini

Sydney is being taken over by a whole new generation of young chefs - and all of them under 30. Bring it on, says Myffy Rigby, as she introduces young guns Gianni Chicco and Charlie Bruyer at Bar Zini
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Bar Zini

This red-hot new restaurant is proof that youth aint wasted on the young

First came Dan Puskas at Oscillate Wildly (a rosy 26). Then there was Dan Hong at Lotus (a tender 25). Now to this precociously talented group we can add Gianni Chicco and Charlie Bruyer, both 25, who are running their own incredibly successful Pyrmont café, having slogged it out at some of Sydney's top restaurants.

Open since December last year, the duo's focus is on fresh produce with an eye to simple Italian dishes. "It's our first venture," says Chicco who works the floor and also acts as barista, "and it's a lot of work - Ultimo's a hard area to crack."

The pair met on set at the once too-cool-for-school Italian restaurant La Sala. But both have a string of fancy restaurants on their CVs - Chicco having worked front of house at Otto and Icebergs, and Bruyer at Aria then as sous chef at La Sala.

All that time in fancy Italian restaurants seems to have rubbed off. The food at Bar Zini is really exceptional with the housemade pasta a big standout. Firm ribbons of perfectly seasoned fettucine hold a sweet, rich sauce of tomato and pancetta and a touch of chilli that adds enough sass to be noticed but not enough to be offensive and a scanty shave of parmo - it's a dish often seen but rarely pulled off.

The salads are dazzling, too. The specials change daily and, on the day we visit, boiled egg halves with saffron coloured yolks share a plate with whole roasted baby beets, sticky-sweet roasted halves of spring onion, a judicious scattering of mixed leaves and a cream dressing pepped up with chives. A good salad is a thing of beauty where balance is all, and here it's achieved with elegance and integrity.

The pizette is a great version of a café classic: a thin base holds slices of tomato and salami topped with parmesan - great with a little greenery on the side. Because of their locale, they're big with the office workers who dash in and out for crema-fat coffee and panini (there's a mortadella, olive tapenade and tomato version we'll be back for) but it's well worth the walk over the footbridge from the city for a Friday lunch. They've also just begun opening on Saturdays, too.

Charlie makes all his own pasta, biscotti and occasionally his own bread if there's a soup on the menu (otherwise it's from that baker to the stars, Sonoma). Because of their space limitations, they pretty much have to keep ordering modestly and use what they have which means everything is fresh - a rare thing.
In short, Bar Zini rocks. Get there and get eating.

Bar Zini, 78 Harris St, Pyrmont 2009. (02 9660 5718). Not licensed. Mon-Fri 7am-3pm, Sat 8am-2pm

The bill (for two)

Barbabietole $14
Salad $15
Pizette $8
Total $37

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