logo
The $34 steak sandwich crowned best in Country WA

The $34 steak sandwich crowned best in Country WA

Perth Now24-06-2025
JunHwi Heo is looking forward to a good night's sleep after weeks of tossing and turning in bed wondering if his Asian twist on a pub staple would be enough to secure the title of WA's best steak sandwich.
But Mr Heo — the head chef at Treendale Farm Hotel — proved his unique recipe had what it takes to hand the Australind pub back-to-back titles.
The country category winner of the Australian Hotels Association WA and Little Creatures WA's Best Steak Sandwich competition was lost for words after his creation won the coveted crown.
'The last couple of weeks I couldn't go to bed, I was really stressed and nervous, but now I can go to bed,' he said.
'There's nothing more that I can say to express my emotion right now, I'm just so happy.'
He said his decision to steer away from traditional ingredients 'really paid off'. Treendale Farm Hotel winning steak sandwich. Credit: Andrew Ritchie
'I tried to make a different type of steak sandwich,' Mr Heo said.
'I used no fresh tomato, no rocket, no usual stuff,
'I focused on a rich smokey flavour, there is a side sauce for the chips that has smoked onion in it.
'And another stand out was the kimchi relish, which means that it's a little bit of Asian style so it was a little bit spicy.'
Mr Heo's winning sanga also featured a Turkish roll, South West black Angus scotch fillet, two slices of cheddar cheese, Rocky Ridge homemade BBQ sauce and sweet and spicy mayo.
It was served with smoked pickled onion coleslaw, crumbed green bean and chips.
Last year, The Treendale Farm Hotel's chef Gayan Dilruk Geeeganage's winning sandwich contained scotch fillet steak, cheddar cheese, bacon jam, aioli, Beerfarm pale ale brined crispy onions, rocket, tomato, and pickles, served with chips and a herb and mustard dipping sauce. Chef Jui Hwi Heo at WA's Best Steak Sandwich Competition where he took out first place. Credit: Andrew Ritchie
The pub has made more than 450 steak sandwiches a week since last year's win and visitors from far and wide are expected to keep rolling through to try its latest winning sanga
But Mr Heo is not resting on his laurels and is already excited to get started on a recipe for next year.
'This means a lot for our restaurant, it is a really big celebration for us,' he said.
'I can't wait to keep pushing and creating for next year with my Sou chef.'
The Treendale Farm Hotel was up against The Miners Rest Motel in Kalgoorlie, Margaret River's Settlers Tavern and the Exchange Hotel in Pinjarra.
Each chef had 13 minutes to make two steak sandwiches, one for the judges and one for the audience.
The winning steak sandwich was worth $34 — the most expensive of the lineup — and took the longest to make. Mr Heo finished cooking with just seconds to spare. Chef Jui Hwi Heo at WA's Best Steak Sandwich Competition where he took out first place Credit: Andrew Ritchie
The drooling audience celebrated loudly as his steak sizzled on the grill and salivated as Mr Heo's sandwich was passed through the crowd.
Judges were asked to assess each sandwiches presentation, originality, chips, sauces, flavour, value for money, and most importantly, the meat's tenderness.
AHA WA executive officer Bradley Woods was one of four judges who agreed the 'fangability' of the sandwich was crucial.
''Fangability' is the tear factor, you don't want the sandwich to fall apart when you bite into it,' he said.
'I also don't want sauce running down my hands, the chefs have to balance everything just right.'
Mr Woods said the annual competition puts not just the winner but all competitors 'on the map'.
'The great West Australian steak sandwich competition is alive and well in our country pubs,' he said.
'All the chefs did an amazing job and I congratulate them all.'
The competition — which has been running for 18 years — was held inside the Crown Towers ballroom as part of the 2025 AHA hospitality expedition.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Miles Franklin Award makes history with 2025 winner, Siang Lu
Miles Franklin Award makes history with 2025 winner, Siang Lu

Sydney Morning Herald

timea day ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Miles Franklin Award makes history with 2025 winner, Siang Lu

Siang Lu has won the 2025 Miles Franklin Literary Award for his novel Ghost Cities, becoming the first male Asian writer to take out the coveted $60,000 literary prize. 'I had never allowed myself to think that this was possible, could be possible or was even a remote possibility,' the Brisbane-based author says. 'When I heard I was longlisted I was overjoyed and also scared, but the joy was 'wow, I didn't expect that' … then, when I heard I was shortlisted, it was that magnified. So I can't even properly describe how I feel right now, other than that it's the same feeling but so much bigger that I can't even see it.' Ghost Cities is about a young Chinese-Australian man who works at the Chinese consulate as a translator. But it subsequently turns out that he is, in fact, monolingual and has been relying on Google Translate. The 39-year-old author says he grew up like that character, speaking only English. Lu's family emigrated from Malaysia to Brisbane in the 1990s when he was four. He studied law and journalism at university ('law very badly', he says) and the one class he loved was creative writing. There were signs earlier, which his dad recently reminded him about. 'He told me that when I was in high school, maybe [age] 13 or 14, I went to a writer's camp and the writers had clearly done their job of instilling passion and excitement... According to my dad, and it's become family lore, I came home and said I wanted to be a writer.' Loading Lu's wife Yuan is also Chinese. While he had been to China before, when they got together he travelled there more frequently, to visit her family. 'It's always been in the back of my mind that I wasn't approaching my culture in the correct way. I first had to embrace the fact that I am of multiple cultures, and that's not an easy thing … for someone growing up in a dominant culture where everything you see on TV or read is from the white perspective,' he says. 'It sort of makes you want to be white and I had to reconcile with that in my writing. I was foregrounding white characters without knowing why.

Miles Franklin Award makes history with 2025 winner, Siang Lu
Miles Franklin Award makes history with 2025 winner, Siang Lu

The Age

timea day ago

  • The Age

Miles Franklin Award makes history with 2025 winner, Siang Lu

Siang Lu has won the 2025 Miles Franklin Literary Award for his novel Ghost Cities, becoming the first male Asian writer to take out the coveted $60,000 literary prize. 'I had never allowed myself to think that this was possible, could be possible or was even a remote possibility,' the Brisbane-based author says. 'When I heard I was longlisted I was overjoyed and also scared, but the joy was 'wow, I didn't expect that' … then, when I heard I was shortlisted, it was that magnified. So I can't even properly describe how I feel right now, other than that it's the same feeling but so much bigger that I can't even see it.' Ghost Cities is about a young Chinese-Australian man who works at the Chinese consulate as a translator. But it subsequently turns out that he is, in fact, monolingual and has been relying on Google Translate. The 39-year-old author says he grew up like that character, speaking only English. Lu's family emigrated from Malaysia to Brisbane in the 1990s when he was four. He studied law and journalism at university ('law very badly', he says) and the one class he loved was creative writing. There were signs earlier, which his dad recently reminded him about. 'He told me that when I was in high school, maybe [age] 13 or 14, I went to a writer's camp and the writers had clearly done their job of instilling passion and excitement... According to my dad, and it's become family lore, I came home and said I wanted to be a writer.' Loading Lu's wife Yuan is also Chinese. While he had been to China before, when they got together he travelled there more frequently, to visit her family. 'It's always been in the back of my mind that I wasn't approaching my culture in the correct way. I first had to embrace the fact that I am of multiple cultures, and that's not an easy thing … for someone growing up in a dominant culture where everything you see on TV or read is from the white perspective,' he says. 'It sort of makes you want to be white and I had to reconcile with that in my writing. I was foregrounding white characters without knowing why.

Top stars to attend high-powered Venice Film Festival
Top stars to attend high-powered Venice Film Festival

The Advertiser

time2 days ago

  • The Advertiser

Top stars to attend high-powered Venice Film Festival

Hollywood stars, Oscar-winning directors, Asian heavyweights and European auteurs will vie for top honours at this year's stellar Venice Film Festival, all looking to make a splash at the start of the awards season. Running from August 27 to September 6, the 82nd edition of the world's oldest film festival will showcase a rich array of movies that spans psychological thrillers, art-house dramas, genre-bending experiments, documentaries, and buzzy studio-backed productions. Among the leading A-listers expected to walk the Venice Lido's red carpet are Julia Roberts, Emma Stone, George Clooney, Dwayne Johnson, Emily Blunt, Andrew Garfield, Oscar Isaac, Cate Blanchett and Amanda Seyfried. A who's-who of global directors will also be premiering their latest pictures at the 11-day event, including US filmmakers Kathryn Bigelow, Jim Jarmusch, Noah Baumbach and Benny Safdie, alongside top Europeans Yorgos Lanthimos, Paolo Sorrentino, and Laszlo Nemes, and Asia's Park Chan-wook and Shu Qi. Netflix, which skipped Venice last year, returns in full force in 2025 with a trio of headline-grabbing titles, including Guillermo del Toro's "Frankenstein", a new take on the classic horror tale starring Isaac, Jacob Elordi and Mia Goth. Baumbach's comedy-drama Jay Kelly, starring Clooney, Adam Sandler and Laura Dern, is also in the main competition and on the Netflix slate, alongside the geopolitical thriller A House of Dynamite, with Idris Elba and Rebecca Ferguson, and directed by Bigelow, who won an Oscar in 2010 for The Hurt Locker. Venice fires the starting gun for the awards season, with films premiering on the Lido in the last four years collecting more than 90 Oscar nominations and winning almost 20, making it the place to be seen for actors, producers and directors alike. In the past nine editions of the Oscars, the award for Best Actress or Best Actor has gone eight times to the protagonists of films first seen in Venice, including Stone for her role in Poor Things in 2024. Stone returns to Venice this year, teaming up again with Poor Things director Lanthimos in an offbeat satire, Bugonia. The indie icon of US cinema, Jim Jarmusch, will be showing his Father Mother Sister Brother, a three-part tale exploring fractured families with a cast that includes Blanchett, Vicky Krieps, Adam Driver and Tom Waits. European auteurs are well-represented, with Paolo Sorrentino's La Grazia, starring Toni Servillo, selected as the festival's opening film, while Hungary's Nemes presents the family drama Orphan and France's Francois Ozon showcases his retelling of Albert Camus' celebrated novel The Stranger. One standout is the new thriller by Olivier Assayas, which centres on the rise of Russian President Vladimir Putin. The Wizard of the Kremlin will be shown in competition. Jude Law plays Putin, with Alicia Vikander and Paul Dano also starring. The story is told from the perspective of a fictional adviser. A film that looks certain to raise emotions is Kaouther Ben Hania's The Voice of Hind Rajab, which uses original emergency service recordings to tell the story of a five-year-old Palestinian girl who was killed in Gaza in 2024 after being trapped for hours in a vehicle targeted by Israeli forces. "I think it is one of the films that will make the greatest impression, and hopefully (won't be) controversial," said the festival's artistic director, Alberto Barbera, his voice trembling as he recalled the movie. Hollywood stars, Oscar-winning directors, Asian heavyweights and European auteurs will vie for top honours at this year's stellar Venice Film Festival, all looking to make a splash at the start of the awards season. Running from August 27 to September 6, the 82nd edition of the world's oldest film festival will showcase a rich array of movies that spans psychological thrillers, art-house dramas, genre-bending experiments, documentaries, and buzzy studio-backed productions. Among the leading A-listers expected to walk the Venice Lido's red carpet are Julia Roberts, Emma Stone, George Clooney, Dwayne Johnson, Emily Blunt, Andrew Garfield, Oscar Isaac, Cate Blanchett and Amanda Seyfried. A who's-who of global directors will also be premiering their latest pictures at the 11-day event, including US filmmakers Kathryn Bigelow, Jim Jarmusch, Noah Baumbach and Benny Safdie, alongside top Europeans Yorgos Lanthimos, Paolo Sorrentino, and Laszlo Nemes, and Asia's Park Chan-wook and Shu Qi. Netflix, which skipped Venice last year, returns in full force in 2025 with a trio of headline-grabbing titles, including Guillermo del Toro's "Frankenstein", a new take on the classic horror tale starring Isaac, Jacob Elordi and Mia Goth. Baumbach's comedy-drama Jay Kelly, starring Clooney, Adam Sandler and Laura Dern, is also in the main competition and on the Netflix slate, alongside the geopolitical thriller A House of Dynamite, with Idris Elba and Rebecca Ferguson, and directed by Bigelow, who won an Oscar in 2010 for The Hurt Locker. Venice fires the starting gun for the awards season, with films premiering on the Lido in the last four years collecting more than 90 Oscar nominations and winning almost 20, making it the place to be seen for actors, producers and directors alike. In the past nine editions of the Oscars, the award for Best Actress or Best Actor has gone eight times to the protagonists of films first seen in Venice, including Stone for her role in Poor Things in 2024. Stone returns to Venice this year, teaming up again with Poor Things director Lanthimos in an offbeat satire, Bugonia. The indie icon of US cinema, Jim Jarmusch, will be showing his Father Mother Sister Brother, a three-part tale exploring fractured families with a cast that includes Blanchett, Vicky Krieps, Adam Driver and Tom Waits. European auteurs are well-represented, with Paolo Sorrentino's La Grazia, starring Toni Servillo, selected as the festival's opening film, while Hungary's Nemes presents the family drama Orphan and France's Francois Ozon showcases his retelling of Albert Camus' celebrated novel The Stranger. One standout is the new thriller by Olivier Assayas, which centres on the rise of Russian President Vladimir Putin. The Wizard of the Kremlin will be shown in competition. Jude Law plays Putin, with Alicia Vikander and Paul Dano also starring. The story is told from the perspective of a fictional adviser. A film that looks certain to raise emotions is Kaouther Ben Hania's The Voice of Hind Rajab, which uses original emergency service recordings to tell the story of a five-year-old Palestinian girl who was killed in Gaza in 2024 after being trapped for hours in a vehicle targeted by Israeli forces. "I think it is one of the films that will make the greatest impression, and hopefully (won't be) controversial," said the festival's artistic director, Alberto Barbera, his voice trembling as he recalled the movie. Hollywood stars, Oscar-winning directors, Asian heavyweights and European auteurs will vie for top honours at this year's stellar Venice Film Festival, all looking to make a splash at the start of the awards season. Running from August 27 to September 6, the 82nd edition of the world's oldest film festival will showcase a rich array of movies that spans psychological thrillers, art-house dramas, genre-bending experiments, documentaries, and buzzy studio-backed productions. Among the leading A-listers expected to walk the Venice Lido's red carpet are Julia Roberts, Emma Stone, George Clooney, Dwayne Johnson, Emily Blunt, Andrew Garfield, Oscar Isaac, Cate Blanchett and Amanda Seyfried. A who's-who of global directors will also be premiering their latest pictures at the 11-day event, including US filmmakers Kathryn Bigelow, Jim Jarmusch, Noah Baumbach and Benny Safdie, alongside top Europeans Yorgos Lanthimos, Paolo Sorrentino, and Laszlo Nemes, and Asia's Park Chan-wook and Shu Qi. Netflix, which skipped Venice last year, returns in full force in 2025 with a trio of headline-grabbing titles, including Guillermo del Toro's "Frankenstein", a new take on the classic horror tale starring Isaac, Jacob Elordi and Mia Goth. Baumbach's comedy-drama Jay Kelly, starring Clooney, Adam Sandler and Laura Dern, is also in the main competition and on the Netflix slate, alongside the geopolitical thriller A House of Dynamite, with Idris Elba and Rebecca Ferguson, and directed by Bigelow, who won an Oscar in 2010 for The Hurt Locker. Venice fires the starting gun for the awards season, with films premiering on the Lido in the last four years collecting more than 90 Oscar nominations and winning almost 20, making it the place to be seen for actors, producers and directors alike. In the past nine editions of the Oscars, the award for Best Actress or Best Actor has gone eight times to the protagonists of films first seen in Venice, including Stone for her role in Poor Things in 2024. Stone returns to Venice this year, teaming up again with Poor Things director Lanthimos in an offbeat satire, Bugonia. The indie icon of US cinema, Jim Jarmusch, will be showing his Father Mother Sister Brother, a three-part tale exploring fractured families with a cast that includes Blanchett, Vicky Krieps, Adam Driver and Tom Waits. European auteurs are well-represented, with Paolo Sorrentino's La Grazia, starring Toni Servillo, selected as the festival's opening film, while Hungary's Nemes presents the family drama Orphan and France's Francois Ozon showcases his retelling of Albert Camus' celebrated novel The Stranger. One standout is the new thriller by Olivier Assayas, which centres on the rise of Russian President Vladimir Putin. The Wizard of the Kremlin will be shown in competition. Jude Law plays Putin, with Alicia Vikander and Paul Dano also starring. The story is told from the perspective of a fictional adviser. A film that looks certain to raise emotions is Kaouther Ben Hania's The Voice of Hind Rajab, which uses original emergency service recordings to tell the story of a five-year-old Palestinian girl who was killed in Gaza in 2024 after being trapped for hours in a vehicle targeted by Israeli forces. "I think it is one of the films that will make the greatest impression, and hopefully (won't be) controversial," said the festival's artistic director, Alberto Barbera, his voice trembling as he recalled the movie. Hollywood stars, Oscar-winning directors, Asian heavyweights and European auteurs will vie for top honours at this year's stellar Venice Film Festival, all looking to make a splash at the start of the awards season. Running from August 27 to September 6, the 82nd edition of the world's oldest film festival will showcase a rich array of movies that spans psychological thrillers, art-house dramas, genre-bending experiments, documentaries, and buzzy studio-backed productions. Among the leading A-listers expected to walk the Venice Lido's red carpet are Julia Roberts, Emma Stone, George Clooney, Dwayne Johnson, Emily Blunt, Andrew Garfield, Oscar Isaac, Cate Blanchett and Amanda Seyfried. A who's-who of global directors will also be premiering their latest pictures at the 11-day event, including US filmmakers Kathryn Bigelow, Jim Jarmusch, Noah Baumbach and Benny Safdie, alongside top Europeans Yorgos Lanthimos, Paolo Sorrentino, and Laszlo Nemes, and Asia's Park Chan-wook and Shu Qi. Netflix, which skipped Venice last year, returns in full force in 2025 with a trio of headline-grabbing titles, including Guillermo del Toro's "Frankenstein", a new take on the classic horror tale starring Isaac, Jacob Elordi and Mia Goth. Baumbach's comedy-drama Jay Kelly, starring Clooney, Adam Sandler and Laura Dern, is also in the main competition and on the Netflix slate, alongside the geopolitical thriller A House of Dynamite, with Idris Elba and Rebecca Ferguson, and directed by Bigelow, who won an Oscar in 2010 for The Hurt Locker. Venice fires the starting gun for the awards season, with films premiering on the Lido in the last four years collecting more than 90 Oscar nominations and winning almost 20, making it the place to be seen for actors, producers and directors alike. In the past nine editions of the Oscars, the award for Best Actress or Best Actor has gone eight times to the protagonists of films first seen in Venice, including Stone for her role in Poor Things in 2024. Stone returns to Venice this year, teaming up again with Poor Things director Lanthimos in an offbeat satire, Bugonia. The indie icon of US cinema, Jim Jarmusch, will be showing his Father Mother Sister Brother, a three-part tale exploring fractured families with a cast that includes Blanchett, Vicky Krieps, Adam Driver and Tom Waits. European auteurs are well-represented, with Paolo Sorrentino's La Grazia, starring Toni Servillo, selected as the festival's opening film, while Hungary's Nemes presents the family drama Orphan and France's Francois Ozon showcases his retelling of Albert Camus' celebrated novel The Stranger. One standout is the new thriller by Olivier Assayas, which centres on the rise of Russian President Vladimir Putin. The Wizard of the Kremlin will be shown in competition. Jude Law plays Putin, with Alicia Vikander and Paul Dano also starring. The story is told from the perspective of a fictional adviser. A film that looks certain to raise emotions is Kaouther Ben Hania's The Voice of Hind Rajab, which uses original emergency service recordings to tell the story of a five-year-old Palestinian girl who was killed in Gaza in 2024 after being trapped for hours in a vehicle targeted by Israeli forces. "I think it is one of the films that will make the greatest impression, and hopefully (won't be) controversial," said the festival's artistic director, Alberto Barbera, his voice trembling as he recalled the movie.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store