Restaurant Guide

Sixpenny: Restaurant review

An elegant and exceptional experience, housed in a discreet corner of Sydney's inner-west suburbs.

REVIEW

Two years into his tenure, chef Tony Schifilliti's fervent interest in fermentation has reinvigorated Sixpenny, dovetailing with chef-owner Dan Puskas's vision seamlessly. Just look at a dainty tartlet of goat's curd and Roman beans, jolted by a dressing flavoured with preserved lime and an egg-white garum. Or a fatty tranche of roasted Berkshire pork loin, rubbed in galangal-fragrant fermented pork paste, and served with a carrot cooked in barley koji oil. Indeed, every dish in the seven-course dégustation comes across with the same humble and effortless elegance as the bijou corner site, belying the Byzantine labour intensiveness behind it. Long-standing signatures like a malty slice of "yesterday's sourdough" and the magical mead-vinegar custard maintain their relevance in the slow and steady procession, too. All the while, the tight-knit staff's eyes for detail never blink, right till the very end when sudachi madeleines land with the bill, still warm.

ABOUT

Sixpenny
Australian
83 Percival Rd, Stanmore, NSW
(02) 9572 6666
sixpenny.com.au
Chefs Daniel Puskas and Anthony Schifilliti
Price guide $$$
Bookings Essential
Wheelchair access No
Open Lunch Sat-Sun; Dinner Wed-Sat
This review was written independently for the Gourmet Traveller Restaurant Guide. The guide's reviewers visit unannounced and pay their way. To learn more about the process, head over here.