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Locals are flocking to Italian restaurant Decca, where a top chef is dishing his greatest hits

Locals are flocking to Italian restaurant Decca, where a top chef is dishing his greatest hits

The Agea day ago
Restaurateur and former Tonka and Coda chef Adam D'Sylva has lived in Melbourne's north-eastern suburbs for 26 years. He's nailed Alphington's needs with Decca.
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Sad tales about hospitality's hard times appear to have been exaggerated. That's the impression you get at Decca, anyway, where people are still dandling babies on their laps at 10pm on a rainy Wednesday night.
Restaurateur and chef Adam D'Sylva has lived in Melbourne's north-eastern suburbs for 26 years and he's nailed Alphington's needs: somewhere you can drop in for pasta or steak, find a happy meeting place for pals from Toorak to Templestowe, gather for pinot noir and pepperoni pizza, book a 70th birthday in the function room or lug the littlies for dinner, knowing there's kids' spag bol for $18.
Setting aside a COVID-19-era consulting gig at W Hotel, this is D'Sylva's first restaurant since Tonka in 2013, the hot Indian place that followed on from the even hotter multi-Asian Coda in 2009. Back then, D'Sylva was fresh off winning The Age Good Food Guide's Young Chef award in 2007 and not long out of high-flying mod-Oz innovator Pearl, where he was head chef. Over the years, he developed a style that plucks from his Indian-Italian heritage and Aussie training. Decca ties it all together.
'I grew up with curry and pasta together on the table. It all works.'
Adam D'Sylva
A dish from the Pearl days is betel leaf piled with Thai-spiced prawn meat, battered in tapioca flour and fried into a translucent flavour bomb. That's followed up with Italian-style calamari, a dish that's easy to come by, but you need a plate like this – fresh, thinly sliced, expertly fried – to remind you why it's special.
The menu is more Italian than anything else – there's pasta, pizza, salumi and cannoli – but it's eclectic. As D'Sylva tells me when I call to check facts, 'I grew up with curry and pasta together on the table. It all works.' Decca diners are proving him right every day.
Paccheri are short, fat pasta tubes, perfect for hugging pork ragu made with sausage mince from local butcher Brenta Meats and cooked with mushrooms, thyme and cavolo nero. The dish is bold and brash and I only share it because I need a swap for my mate's duck curry, served as a maryland, which makes it ideal for one person, or so she tries to tell me. The meat pulls apart, the coconutty yellow curry sauce heady but not hot: tick.
Between restaurants, D'Sylva launched Boca Gelato, which is available by the scoop and in a frozen tiramisu dessert. This isn't my favourite, a bit fridge-y and the biscuit layer dry, but I'd come back for the classic creme brulee served in a broad, shallow dish so there's more burnt sugar crust.
Decca is in the Alphington Paper Mill development, a half-built mess that's been waiting for a supermarket for years. I miss the obscure sign to underground parking and end up leaving the car on a mudflat before trudging to the restaurant. It's a beacon, curvy glass framing ruffled half-curtains,
and spilling with golden light.
Inside, the room flows past an open kitchen where D'Sylva finally has the pasta extruder and charcoal grill of his dreams. Waiters know the menu backwards and care whether you're enjoying it.
The eight-page wine list offers such value I wonder if some prices are errors. To pull out one, Domaine Gautheron Chablis 2023 is $86 here and $75 online; usually, you'd expect a 100 per cent mark-up in a restaurant.
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Nighttime Economy Minister John Graham said the funding would help collectives generate "self-sustaining" initiatives to boost local offerings and promote the visitor economy. Venue owners in Newcastle's Midtown precinct between Steel and Union streets say the injection of almost $800,000 in state grants will help launch more vibrant events like the West Best Bloc Fest to boost the city's nightlife. The state will funnel around $770,000 into three inner city venue collectives, including Midtown - a group of around seven members; the East End group, and the villages of the Throsby basin, as well as the Shoaly Collective at Shoal Bay, to promote inter-venue cooperation. It represents the third round of the state government's Uptown grants program, and the first time that regional venues outside of Sydney have been beneficiaries. The Hunter's slice comes from a pie of some $5.5 million in state funding aimed at growing a 24-hour hospitality and entertainment economy. Midtown venue owners say they will use their allotment to bring in a local coordinator who can leverage opportunities for venues to cooperate on larger-scale events while remaining "authentic to Newcastle". "This night-time economy is going to boom from this little hit," Mad Poet owner Dylan Oakes said. As the landscape of the city's hospitality economy changes in the long shadow of lockout laws, COVID, a cost-of-living crisis and increases to supply costs, venue owners say coordinating with their neighbours has helped them navigate rolling headwinds. "The Midtown project is not to give us any more sugar rushes," Bernie's Bar venue manager Patrick Fisher said. "We have Saturday night for that. We're here to boost the long-term prospects of the precinct. "And by having a year-long coordinator, we think we will be really well placed to do that." Newcastle MP Tim Crakanthorp, who announced the grant winners on Friday afternoon, said the funding follows legislative changes to better mediate between venues looking to capitalise on a vibrant nighttime economy and residents living in those precincts. "In certain precincts where there are bars and restaurants and clubs, there will be music and clatter and noise. That is a good, vibrant 24-hour economy. That's what we want. But people need to know that precinct is where it's going to happen." "(Newcastle) is not a retirement village. It's the second biggest city in the state ... It's all part of a vibrant and active city, and people understand that. And if they don't know, they need to certainly do a bit of research before they move in." Grace Frey, a director of Bernie's Bar, said years of disruptions to the city's going-out economy had changed its make-up, but said the injection of state funding would help smaller, niche venues compete and meet patron needs. Nighttime Economy Minister John Graham said the funding would help collectives generate "self-sustaining" initiatives to boost local offerings and promote the visitor economy.

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