All Things Nice
Gewurzhaus founders Eva and Maria Konecsny pick the spices they reckon everyone should have in the pantry, plus share favoursome tips on how to elevate home cooking
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Broadsheet Founder and publisher: Nick Shelton General manager: Sian Whitaker Publications director: Nick Connellan National editor: Michael Harry Melbourne food & drink editor: Audrey Payne Studio and strategy director: Roya Lines Media partnerships manager: Jessica Kirsopp
Broadsheet Editor: Jo Walker Assistant editor: Gitika Garg Design lead: Ben Siero Designer: Ella Witchell Sub editors: Miriam Kauppi, Barnaby Smith, Adeline Teoh, Annie Toller Writers: Claire Adey, Ruby Harris, Alice Jeffery, Chynna Santos, James Williams Photographers: Becca Crawford, Pablo Diaz, Amy Hemmings, Carys Huws, Phillip Huynh, Kaede James Takamoto, Lexi Laphor, Ashley Ludkin, Ben Moynihan, Jayden Ostwald, Jake Roden, Ed Sloane, Anna Varendorff, Hilary Walker, Jamie Zhou
Cover credits: Eva and Maria Konecsny shot by Hilary Walker
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We learnt a lot talking with Eva and Maria Konecsny for this week’s cover story – like the fact that we probably need to chuck out half of our current spice stash and invest in a really good microplane. The sisters behind Gewurzhaus are authorities when it comes to choosing, storing and using spices and they have a lot of wisdom to share. (They also have some shortcuts for making your dinners extra tasty without a heap of effort.)
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Neighbourhoods: Caulfield
14
NOW OPEN Sachi
64 Burwood Road, Hawthorn
Reki Reinantha spent six years behind the sushi counter at Lucas Group’s Japanese restaurant Kisume. Since leaving late last year, Reinantha launched Sachi, a casual pop-up specialising in chirashi bowls (vinegar-seasoned rice with thick slabs of sashimi arranged flower-like around a cured egg-yolk heart) and nigiri sushi.
After a successful residency at Carlton sake bar Leonie Upstairs, Sachi is now in the former Shizuku Ramen space on Burwood Road. It’ll stay there until October, when the team moves to a more permanent restaurant space at 179 Queen Street in the CBD.
Chirashi don remains at the core of the menu. It’s served with seasonal tsukemono (pickles) and nori, and patrons sip a fish-bone soup with their meal.
The Hawthorn pop-up also offers marlin burgers with spring onion relish, ocean trout katsu, and grilled swordfish topped with Yarra Valley caviar. The expanded menu also includes a sushi and sashimi omakase option for $150 per person. — CA
ADD TO CART
If this handcrafted butter bell from Melbourne ceramicist Adele Macer isn’t the best thing since sliced bread, it might come pretty close. The pleasingly minimalist contraption keeps butter fresh and spreadable without the need for refrigeration – just fill the lid with butter and the base with water, and seal. The ceramic material insulates the butter, keeping it soft, while the water stops oxygen from making it go bad. Available in a range of colours and sizes – and it’s dishwasher-proof. — JW
$85 to $110 / adelemacerceramics.com
IN
THE DIARY
The Bridal Lament by Rainbow Chan
Singer, producer and multi-disciplinary artist Rainbow Chan is coming to Arts House. Inspired by her Weitou heritage (the Weitou people were among the first settlers of Hong Kong), Chan will present a 70-minute audiovisual performance and song cycle drawing on the bridal lament – a Weitou ritual where newlywed wives weep and sing in grief in front of friends and family. The Melbourne-based creative’s contemporary interpretation will feature 13 original art-pop songs. Plus, take in a free installation of Chan’s silk paintings. — GG
From May 8–19 / Arts House, 521 Queensberry Street, North Melbourne / artshouse.com.au
SNACK BAR STREET STYLE
Thelatestin Melbourne foodnews
By Audrey Payne High Street, KewBistra, a new bistro in Carlton, brings back white tablecloths and early-2000s style dining culture – but this time it’s more casual. The kitchen’s led by Alex Nishizawa, a former Attica sous chef. Expect everything from French onion soup to Southeast Asian desserts. 157 Elgin Street, Carlton / @bistra.carlton
The team behind much-loved 14 -year-old Italian spot Scopri in Carlton has opened a sibling spot – Bar Olo – less than a minute’s walk from the original restaurant. Bar Olo (named for the Barolo wine region in Italy) is open for walk-ins and serves snacks alongside a wine list focused on drops from Piedmont. 165 Nicholson Street, Carlton / barolocarlton.com.au
Chef Harry Mangat of Biji Dining and Rohit Singh of Avani Wines will join chef Mischa Tropp at his restaurant Toddy Shop to cook a three-course modern Indian meal on Sunday May 19. It’s $65 per person and bookings are essential. Rear/191A Smith Street, Fitzroy / @toddyshop.local
After a series of delays and cancelling its scheduled April 17 launch with only 10 minutes warning, Moon Dog’s 800-person Wild Westthemed bar in Footscray’s iconic Franco Cozzo building has finally opened to the public. There’s a mechanical bull, a “kid’s ranch” with a playground and old-school arcade games, and a desert-themed rooftop. 54 Hopkins Street, Footscray/ moondog.com.au
Twelve-year-old Italian restaurant Rosetta, owned by Hunter St Hospitality and previously run by top chef Neil Perry, will close on Sunday May 19 . It’s making way for The Henley at Crown Melbourne, a bar inspired by the Australian Henley Regatta. 8 Whiteman Street, Southbank / rosettarestaurant.com.au
Name: Sue Thompson Age: 75 Occupation: Clairvoyant Tell us about your outfit today. I got the pants from Vietnam and my top is from Thailand. The shoes are Puma. How does your style fit in with your lifestyle? I’ve got quite an eccentric lifestyle and I’ve got eccentric clothing. I like things that are a little bit out there. And I love glamour. What do you gravitate towards when shopping? Definitely silk – the rarest fabric in the world and my favourite. I love the feel of things and good quality textures. Also people –if you loved me, I’d buy anything you were selling.
Kew exemplifies a real estate landscape defined by luxurious homes, lush landscapes and a socially varied population. With its wealth and cultural charm, it’s a highly desirable place to call home.
Source:
THE INTERVIEW From Fashion to Ceramics, Henry Holland Makes Waves
Words by Alice JefferyPhoto by Carys Huws
Henry Holland “made himself redundant” in the early days of 2020. The British designer sold his fashion label House of Holland right as the Covid-19 pandemic shuttered stores and threw the industry into disarray. “I was burned out and a bit disillusioned,” Holland tells Broadsheet. “But I was still so passionate and proud of everything I had done. I wanted to walk away before I really tipped over the edge.” He didn’t really have a plan.
During the initial wave of lockdowns in the UK, Holland Instagrammed a picture of his lunch. It was sitting on a plate he and his partner had been gifted for their wedding. Recognising her work, the ceramicist responsible replied. A serendipitous friendship bloomed – and it changed Holland’s course.
He started taking ceramics classes when social distancing rules permitted, but when his teacher had to move back to Turkey, Holland took things into his own hands. “I ordered a bunch of clay and was really just playing around with hand-building,” he says. “I got the bug and started making everything at my kitchen table.”
Anyone familiar with House of Holland will know the brand as a frenzy of colour and prints. That audacious spirit is innate for Holland. “I was so used to creating patterns in fabrics through weaving or digital prints. But when I tried to add checks or stripes with a glaze, it [didn’t come] out how I was expecting.”
Determined to produce rich patterns and hues, Holland went down a Youtube rabbit hole and discovered the nerikomi technique from Japan, where the colour is in the clay itself, not the glaze. Coloured clay is stacked and sliced to create mesmeric patterns –a method that inspired Henry Holland Studio’s now-signature swirling designs.
There’s a water-like quality to the motifs adorning Holland’s newly released tableware
collection, made in collaboration with Australian homewares label Jardan. The green and blue “oceanic” colourway is specifically inspired by time spent around Bondi and Bronte in Sydney’s east. “I’ve been obsessed with Australia since I first visited in about 2010,” he says. This time, Holland was only in Sydney for 48 hours, for the launch of the Jardan collection. After his interview with Broadsheet wrapped, he was heading to do a coast walk.
Although it’s been a success, Holland didn’t intend to start a ceramics brand. But when the meditative hobby became a business opportunity, he ran with it. “My plan was to consult for brands. But I quickly realised that I really missed the process of physically making products.”
Holland and his team (he works with about nine ceramicists) build all the pieces by hand in a studio in Hackney, London. Working in ceramics has taught Holland to live at a new pace, he says. And to have lots of patience. “Fashion teaches you to work like a donkey. But with ceramics, it’s much slower and there’s so many parts of the process that can fail.”
Another element that Holland has borrowed from his previous career is a focus on function. “I want the pieces to be used. They’re beautiful and decorative but they’re also functional.”
If you look closely at the pieces, you’ll realise they’re all formed from a few core shapes. For example, the Profumo vase is essentially two bowls stacked with two mugs. “I’m not a big planner,” he laughs. “I like to create in the moment, building things and trying things out. Sometimes I’m halfway through a piece before I really know what the outcome is going to be”.
Jardan is the exclusive retailer of Henry Holland in Australia.
Top Melbourne Pilates Studios To Break a Sweat In
By Chynna SantosLITTLE MANDARIN While this inclusive studio offers two levels of reformer Pilates (and even a class in Mandarin), what sets it apart is the aerial yoga classes that use a hammock hanging from the ceiling. Or join the ropes class, which has you strapped to the walls to strengthen your form. Blackburn, Burwood East, Camberwell and CBD locations / littlemandarin.melbourne
FLUIDFORM A decade after launching in New South Wales, this Aussie brand opened a Melbourne location in 2022. Flooded with natural light, the open-plan studio has intimate sessions for just four people, personalised to your own movement needs using both reformer and mat Pilates, as well as the Cadillac workout. 22 Glenferrie Road, Malvern / malvern.fluidformpilates.com
LOVE ATHLETICA The California-inspired studio combines Pilates (on the reformer or on a mat in a heated room) with an upbeat soundtrack of Frank Ocean and Beyonce to move along to. The studios are also calming, with crisp whites and pastel accents complemented by plants. Hawthorn East, Malvern East, Richmond and Prahran locations / loveathletica.com.au
PEACHES PILATES You’ll be feeling peachy after a class here, which proves you don’t need a reformer to feel the burn, get stronger and build up your endurance. Peaches Pilates hot mat classes crank up the room to 34 degrees using infrared heating panels. Other classes sometimes make use of dumbbells, ankle weights, bands and other tools, and there’s barre on offer, too. Fitzroy and Windsor locations / peachespilates.com
JOYFUL PILATES Seasoned Pilates princesses (or princes) and reformer rookies alike will find the right class at this studio offering classes designed to pump you up with HIIT and jump boards or slow things down. The zen classes also combine Pilates with yoga and meditation for a blissful reset. 2A Kingsway, Armadale / joyfulpilates.com.au
UPSTATE STUDIOS Rapidly (and mindfully) expanding across Victoria, this sister-owned chain of neon-lit studios has energising reformer and hot mat Pilates to strengthen your core, yoga to stretch it out and intense boxing to release pent-up energy. Member perk: you can attend classes at every location, not just where you sign up. Ascot Vale, Balaclava, Fitzroy and Torquay locations / upstatestudios.com.au
HOME OF THE WEEK
A family oasis in the inner east
Words by Anders FurzeHere is a house that illustrates the magic that can occur when tranquillity and creativity go hand-in-glove. ARM Architecture’s Jesse Judd has envisioned a one-of-a-kind oasis for the family that values creative design, flexible family living and proximity to Melbourne’s enviable inner-east lifestyle.
Curved walls, copious natural light and natural materials underfoot all create a sense of calm but with a contemporary design twist.
The entry takes you past a home office with plenty of built-in storage, and the laundry and a powder room are tucked around to your right. But it’s the north-facing rear living zone that’s the standout feature of the ground floor.
Bathed in natural light, the open-plan living and dining room includes a built-in day lounge. Framed by glass that provides leafy views, it’s the perfect spot for relaxed family time. Built-in cabinetry makes for an ideal location for the TV, and a sliding partition connects to the generous kitchen and secondary dining zone.
Hanging lights and the considered use of green and cream make for a fresh, modern
kitchen. The island is huge and has plenty of storage and breakfast-bar seating.
The integrated V-ZUG appliances include a steam oven and pull-out pantry storage.
Both zones open to the solar-heated saltwater pool, which sits enticingly in the leafy backyard setting. A barbecue makes al fresco entertaining a breeze.
You’ll find all five bedrooms upstairs, as well as two retreats and an upper terrace.
The main bedroom suite is the height of luxury. Accessible via a sizeable parental retreat – which has a built-in desk, making it an ideal space for working from home – it also has an en suite and a private balcony boasting city views.
The four other bedrooms line the eastern edge of this floor. They all have built-in wardrobes and desks and share two bathrooms between them.
There’s another retreat, and the rooftop terrace adds even more space to this property’s outdoor footprint.
Throughout the house, you’ll find hydronic heating, split-system heating/ cooling, carport parking for three cars, and
a secure garage with rear laneway access –there’s even a paved basketball area.
It’s a short stroll from the leafy delights of the Yarra Trail. Cross the river, and you’re at Victoria Gardens Shopping Centre.
The lifestyle highlights of Richmond’s Church Street precinct are easily accessible, and heavy-hitting eastern suburbs schools –Xavier, MLC, Carey, Preshil and Trinity – are close. It all adds up to the perfect opportunity for a family wanting some design pizzazz, lots of light and space to hang out together.
Hawthorn
3 Oak Street
$5.5 million-$6 million
5 3 4
Auction: Noon, May 18
Agent: Jellis Craig, Richard Winneke 0418 136 858
Hover your camera over the code to see Domain listings in Hawthorn
WHAT THE AGENT SAYS
“A wonderful, architectdesigned home with an abundance of natural light. A flexible floor plan means everyone in the family can find space for themselves or come together.”
The highest recorded house price for Hawthorn (past 12 months) was $21.41 million for 2 Yarra Grove in June 2023. RECENT SALES
$4.82 million 14 Elgin
SPICE WORLD
Gewurzhaus founders Eva and Maria Konecsny are seasoned professionals. Here they share how to best select, store and use spices –and elevate your kitchen game. Plus, the 12non-negotiable favours they’ll always have in their pantries.
Before launching Gewurzhaus Spice House, sisters Eva and Maria Konecsny spent the best part of a year in the kitchen perfecting flavour profiles for everything from guacamole to apple cakes to Bavarian roast chicken. “We were just cooking, cooking, cooking, cooking,” Maria recalls. “Coming up with the recipes for all of our different spice blends.”
The culinary marathon led to the pair’s first shop in Carlton in 2010 . In the years since they’ve opened 12 more stores across Australia, including five in Melbourne and one each in Healesville and Daylesford. All sell spice blends the sisters mill and mix themselves, and feature self-scoop tubs alongside prepackaged jars and sachets.
“It’s really about home cooking and inspiring people,” Maria says. “Especially when people come in to lift the lids and smell and get hungry and excited about what they can do in the kitchen.”
Last year the sisters released a cookbook – Kindred: Recipes, Spices & Rituals to Nourish Your Kin – which draws on their German heritage. “So many recipes have been handed down through family, and a lot of those have Eastern European influences,” Eva explains. “That’s a beautiful element – melding rituals and nurturing and connecting that back into the book.”
You could say their lives are infused with spice. It’s their business and their heritage and their everyday. Eva and Maria use spices in cooking and baking, preserving fruit and veg, and flavouring stocks. They steep them in hot water for teas and use them in mulled wines and hot toddies. Spices are used for infusing homemade alcohol and added to cocktails for an extra kick. And when that gets too much, there are medicinal uses too: clove for toothache, fennel seed for upset stomachs, chamomile for restless nights.
(Fresh and dried herbs are also used enthusiastically. If you’re wondering what the difference is, “A herb is the leafy part of a plant – so think parsley, thyme, rosemary – whereas the spices are generally the seed or the bark,” Eva says.)
These days Eva lives in Melbourne. Maria’s made her home in Healesville where she has a large, well-tended kitchen garden and plenty of space for cooking – and enormous spice racks.
Spices have treated the sisters well, and they’ve learnt to treat them well in return – something not all of us do. Storage, for
instance, requires some thought. Protect your spices from sunlight and humidity by stashing them in the pantry, or keeping them in ambercoloured glass jars. (Paper will suffice for whole spices.) And please don’t empty them straight into the pan when cooking.
“A really common [mistake] is to get your spice jar and tip it into your pot over the stove, then the steam from the pot comes up and stays in your jar. It’s really important to use a spoon to get the spice out of your jar, or tip it onto your hand and then put it into the pot,” Maria advises.
Even stored carefully, ground spices won’t last forever. That’s why Maria and Eva opt for the self-scoop format at their shops – so customers can buy small amounts and replenish frequently.
“It’s like coffee,” Eva says. “A whole coffee bean lasts a lot longer than ground coffee … Once the spices are ground, that’s when they’re at their most potent. They don’t go off, but they lose their top notes and potency. So, similar to coffee, you want to get as little as you need and use it up as quickly as possible. Unless you’re grinding it at home.”
Spice blends are the Gewurzhaus stock-intrade, a way for home cooks to elevate their dishes and bakes without too much extra effort. And the range gets bigger all the time, currently running to everything from Quick Butter Chicken and Laksa Lemak to Egyptian Dukkah and Mayan Chilli Chocolate. “It’s as simple as a protein, some oil and a spice blend, and you’ve got an awesome meal,” Eva says.
Plus, there’s always room to experiment.
“Having blends is a really great entry. But if you have a blend that you really love, have a look at what’s in there, and then buy one of those spices in a single and just start playing around with it,”
Maria says. “Most of the time spices are pretty forgiving … Just add – maybe in quarter teaspoon amounts – and taste. Don’t be afraid. I think people are way too afraid of spices, and they really don’t need to be.”
Maria and Eva’s book Kindred: Recipes, Spices & Rituals to Nourish Your Kin is out now through Pan Macmillan Australia. Shop their spice blends at Gewurzhaus stores – including outlets at Chadstone, South Melbourne Market and the Block Arcade – or online at gewurzhaus.com.au
EVA AND MARIA’S 12 PANTRY MUST-HAVES:
CHILLI: According to the sisters, the best use for chilli is “everything” – just choose your heat levels. Aleppo peppers are great for a fruity kick that won’t knock your socks off, gochugaru gives medium heat with flavour, while habanero is probably for chilli lovers only. “Because we’ve got kids, I tend to have to cook mild,” Eva says. “I can never be bothered making multiple meals, so I just spoon on chilli oil or sprinkle on chilli salt to get the heat in my serve.”
CORIANDER SEEDS: “Coriander is kind of a base for almost every spice blend,” Eva says. “It’s one of those spices that helps to bring the other spices together. You can also use them individually – they have a beautiful nutty, almost lemony flavour.”
CUMIN: A strong defining flavour. Use a little to bring balance to “big bold flavoured things”, like fat-rich roasts, or use a lot for “very punchy strong cumin-flavoured dishes”, Maria says. Great for breads and baked goods, honey carrots and curries. Buy pre-ground or crush the seeds at home to release the oils.
TURMERIC: For Maria, “turmeric is a nonnegotiable in a spice pantry”. A sturdy, predictable spice, “it doesn’t change that much flavour-wise and aroma-wise when you cook it”, and it’s almost impossible to overuse. Use in curries partnered with coconut cream or coconut milk.
NUTMEG: Buy whole and use a fine microplane to grate fresh for each meal. “Anything with cream is a beautiful match with nutmeg,” Eva says. “Like bechamel on lasagne. Or a mushroom dish with thyme and cream. It just gives a depth of flavour.”
PAPRIKA: Choose from hot paprika, sweet paprika (for Euro flavours like goulash or roast chicken with lemon) and smoked paprika (best for Spanish dishes like paella and great with slow-roast lamb and barbeque). Use generously, and make sure you’ve got the good stuff, Maria says. “The source is important. If you’re making something like a goulash and you’re using crappy paprika, you might as well not bother. It can really make or break.” Freshly ground is best – this is one to purchase frequently.
CLOVE: “Clove is probably one of my favourite spices. I reach for it a lot,” Maria says. Potent and sweet with an “almost medicinal flavour”, it’s used
a lot in preserving and goes great with tomatoes in ketchups and pickles. Can also be used medicinally. Steep six to 12 cloves in a mug of hot water overnight for a throat gargle that helps combat coughs and colds.
VANILLA: Scrape the seeds from vanilla beans for desserts and baking, then place leftover pods in your sugar jar for vanilla sugar, or pop in the saucepan when making mulled wine. (They’re also great for flavouring spirits.) Vanilla extract can be added to drinks and desserts, though steer clear of vanilla essence, Maria says. “Extract is actually vanilla; essence is artificially fabricated.”
CINNAMON AND CASSIA: Often lumped together simply as “cinnamon”, these flavoursome dried barks are similar, though not identical. Cassia has a stronger taste and comes whole in a stick; cinnamon is more delicately flavoured and comes in a quill, with smaller bits of bark rolled together like a cigar. “Curries use true cinnamon to not overpower the other spices,” Eva says, “but a lot of baking uses cassia. What we call a ‘cinnamon scroll’ is a cassia scroll, essentially.”
THYME: “You need to have at least one dried herb in your spice kit,” Maria says. “Dried thyme gives quite a distinct flavour over the fresh herb – it’s so much more intense.” It’s versatile in its uses, teaming equally well with baked apple and custard as it does with chicken and lamb. Also goes “almost universally well with vegetables” – try it with everything from soup stocks to fried potatoes.
STAR ANISE: Bought whole or ground, star anise is “sort of life-affirming”, Maria says. Use whole for infusing hot toddies or preserving stone fruit (it’s a “really great match” for plums). Use ground in Chinese cooking and baking – especially Christmas treats. “It has a beautiful vibrancy and freshness … and gives a really nice kick to things.”
SAFFRON: While Maria is not a fan, Eva rates saffron as one of her most-used spices, adding it to risotto, seafood pasta and “anything with chicken stock or butter – all of those French flavours do well with saffron”. This spice can get “a bit soapy” if overused, so Eva advises steeping the threads in boiling water for 30 minutes before use, then adding the liquid to taste.
LIKE A LOCAL
Caulfield
By Ruby HarrisIf you’re going to find just one reason to visit Caulfield, make it a stop at Sebby’s Scrolls. Technically just over the border in Caulfield South, the tiny North Road bakery pumps out upwards of 5000 gooey cinnamon and cheesymite scrolls a week. You’ll likely know you’ve arrived by the smell.
The bakery goodness doesn’t stop there. Over in Caulfield North, cult operation Baker Bleu sits on Hawthorn Road, just around the corner from the very lush Caulfield Park. Our recommendation? Grab a Baker Bleu sourdough country roll, a coffee from Goodies on Balaclava Road and head into the park for a morning of leisure. There’s also a Green Cup outpost on the same strip, so in terms of filling up a lazy morning with things to do (and eat), you’re spoilt for choice.
For lunch, head back down Hawthorn Road to The Pita Man for fresh pockets filled with house-made falafel, tahini and its signature hummus. Better yet, it offers catering, if you’re planning to have guests over. It’s also open till 8pm most nights if you’re craving a quick, hearty dinner.
Of course, Caulfield locals know that the best place to spend the first Sunday of each month is at the Caulfield Racecourse Community Market. Open from 9am to 2pm, swing by for one-off products from makers, bakeries and fresh produce alongside plenty of food trucks. And, like all good markets, dogs are very welcome.
When it comes time for dinner, there are a few go-to options. On Glen Huntly Road, Matsuzaka offers up a choice of teppanyaki or à la carte dining – as well as a private room for up to 25 people. Or head to Farro on Kooyong Road in Caulfield North for sourdough pizza and pasta made with organic spelt flour. You might go for a lamb ragu tagliatelle, lemon pesto gnocchi or the patate e tartufo pizza with black truffle cream, mozzarella, potato and garlic. Close out the night with desserts like Nutella calzone and crème brûlée.
Once abundant in springs and cattlemen’s routes, Caulfield is now a quiet, affluent suburb. With diverse architecture, a strong Jewish community, and proximity to Melbourne attractions, it offers a rich lifestyle.
Average Age 42
Median Weekly income $2,143
“Most
Hike, Quaff and Get Cosy in the Grampians
By James WilliamsIt’s a three-and-a-half hour road trip from Melbourne to Halls Gap in the heart of the Grampians, where emus trek the pastures and people trek the Wonderland Loop to Lake Wartook. Outdoorsy visitors come to sweat it up the ranges, but if your idea of a holiday looks more like afternoons ambling between wineries and paddock-toplate restaurants, that’s fine too. The craggy bluffs are an impressive backdrop to all forms of unwinding. It all looks best from above on The Pinnacle walk, the friendlier (and more travelled) path which ends with a terrific panorama of Grampians National Park.
Car parks can fill up quick, so get in early. On the descent back to Halls Gap, swing by the Grampians Wine Cellar for some local drops, or head straight to the source at Pomonal Estate and Fallen Giants wineries. On long weekends, the local primary school hosts a market that attracts a big crowd for its arts and crafts, and picnic-ready produce. On the Grampians southernmost edge, seasoned walkers climb Mount Sturgeon for its mighty view of Dunkeld. Back at the base, Stoneycroft Cottage – a converted 19th-century farmhouse – is a great spot to call home for a night. It’s a former shearers
quarters revamped into a boutique bluestone B&B. Or stay 20 minutes down the road at the Royal Mail Hotel for direct access to its renowned restaurant Wickens and the more relaxed offshoot Parker Street Project.
A road trip is never complete without bakery treats and a crumb-dusted lap. Dunkeld Old Bakery has been operating since 1887 and its bakers still use the original woodfired oven. Top up on gourmet pies, sourdough loaves and preserves to take home, or take some time and sit by the fire for locally blended coffee or brunch.
LUXURY
Words by Joanne Brookfield & Kay KeigheryBrighton 16 Norwood Avenue
$6.5 million-$7 million
6 3 4
Expressions of interest: Close 1pm, May 14
Agent: Marshall White, Simon Monnier-Penny 0404 283 551
This address has Brighton Beach at the end of the street, and adding to its prestige is one of the true hallmarks of the bayside elite – a tennis court in the backyard. Championshipsized and flood-lit, the Modgrass court at the back of this grand, sympathetically renovated and extended Californian bungalow is also fitted with a basketball ring. A swim-spa is nearby. Inside are several formal and informal rooms, with bedrooms on both levels and abundant storage.
Armadale
367 Dandenong Road
$8 million-$8.8 million
6 4 6
Expressions of interest: Close 2pm, May 14
Agent: Marshall White, Fraser Cahill 0400 592 572
Here’s a rare gem. Extended on 1930s origins to create roomy family accommodation, this captivating home pairs its original joys (think bay windows, window seat, ornate fireplace) with statement modernisation. The lounge is large and lovely, the dining room is regal and the kitchen stuns in super-white dolomite. Out of doors and accessible through the open-plan hub, an L-shaped deck addresses the pool and tennis court and encourages al fresco dining and post-match pool parties.
Toorak
37 Irving Road
$10 million-$11 million
4 2 2
Expressions of interest: Close 3pm, May 9
Agent: RT Edgar, Anthony Grimwade 0418 382 226
For its eight-figure price tag, you can live a very comfortable contemporary life within the walls of this large home with elegant interiors that wraps itself around an azure pool with a hedged-wall backdrop. There’s sufficient space for luxuries such as formal rooms, a mirrored gym zone, an independent butler’s pantry and finishes such as travertine and herringbone parquetry. The home is on 800 square metres on the corner with Grant Avenue, and has no heritage overlay.
Brighton 15 Rothesay Avenue
$5.5 million-$5.8 million
5 3 4
Auction: 1.30pm, May 11
Agent: Kay & Burton, Matthew Pillios 0408 145 982
Minimalist vibes, awash with soft neutral tones, allow the sculptural ribbon staircase and circular sky window to take centre stage when you enter this luxuriously appointed family home. Attempting to upstage it is the glass-enclosed wine cellar, set for intimate wine tastings with a marble bench to complement the calacatta marble in the kitchen and bathrooms. There are also the high-end must-haves of a cinema room, a home office, a pool and an outdoor fireplace.
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
Words by Kay Keighery, Richard Cornish & Shae WiedermannClearance Rate of 63%*
Source: Domain Group
DrNicola Powell
Chief of research & economics“Melbourne’s slow and steady pricing recovery went into reverse over the first quarter and is still struggling to cement a recovery. There will come a time when Melbourne will be perceived as undervalued.”
Source: Domain House Price Report, March quarter 2024
Hampton 24 Villeroy Street
$2.8 million-$2.9 million
4 3 2
Auction: 10am, May 11
Agent: Belle Property Sandringham, Jenny Dwyer 0418 528 988
This beautifully restored Californian bungalow sits on a large garden block in the old Castlefield Estate. Past the jacaranda and flowering gum, the broad verandah leads to a finely detailed home with herringbone oak floors, wainscoting, open fires and hydronic heating. At the rear is a large, bright, open living, dining and kitchen area flowing through to a lawn secluded by hedging.
Middle Park 18 Fraser Street
$3.5 million-$3.8 million
4 2 1
Auction: 11.30am, May 11
Agent: Marshall White, Oliver Bruce 0409 856 599
Close to Albert Park and Lake, this free-standing Edwardian house has a repointed brick facade and an extension to the rear. The front has period character, with a traditional hallway and two bedrooms with open fireplaces. Carry on to the modern, open-plan living-dining domain, which has a marble kitchen and a concealed bar. Upstairs is a courtyard that links a home office with the main bedroom, which has floorto-ceiling windows with automated exterior blinds.
Agent: Chisholm & Gamon, Torsten Kasper 0428 454 181
Behind a stone fence and manicured hedge lies this quaint 100-year-old house. The single-storey home has four bedrooms; the main at the rear has access to the verdant garden via a private porch. Feature fireplaces in the formal lounge and dining rooms, plus a builtin library shelf in the family area, give the interior a timeless feel. Elwood Beach and the Elster Canal Path are within easy access.
Auction: 11am, May 18
Agent: Kay & Burton, Scott Patterson 0417 581 074
This double-fronted Victorian house is conveniently close to St James Park and Hawthorn Station. A central hallway splits the front interior: one side has a main bedroom (with en suite and walk-in wardrobe), and the other has a bedroom with a fireplace and a study with a built-in desk. To the rear, the kitchen and dining area connect to the living room through the hall.
Hampton East
25 Carrington Street
$2.5 million-$2.7 million
4 3 3
Auction: 11.30am, May 18
Agent: Buxton, Adam Gillon 0418 313 354
Highett
Sitting pretty on a double block, this single-level house impresses with a five-metre, timber-lined ceiling over its substantial open-plan hub, where three sets of glass doors marry the interior with a side patio and a beaut outdoor room sporting a barbecue and a fireplace. Step on from here to terracing around the sun-loving pool. Kew
53b Tibrockney Street $1.45 million-$1.55 million 4 3 3
Auction: 11.30 am, May 11
Agent: Jellis Craig, Spiro Vasiliadis 0404 534 566
This modern home has space and places for a busy family, from the upstairs study to the large garage and expansive lawn and garden. It has a hidden powder room, integrated bookshelves, a Scandi-style staircase, and a spacious modern kitchen with Miele appliances. Set in one of Highett’s best locations.
3 3 3
Auction: 11am, May 18
Agent: Jellis Craig, Lloyd Lawton 0403 229 433
Nestled in bushy riverside surroundings, flowing around a spiral staircase, and enveloping its occupants in timber, earthy tiles and exposed brick, this mid-century masterwork by Chancellor and Patrick offers serenity oh so close to the city. A retreat with clerestory windows sits on the top floor.
Tuscan Villa in the Heart of Fairfield
Architecturally Striking with Amazing Views
12 Harr�son Crescent, Hawthorn
4 3 2
Award Winning Town Residence
80A St Helens Road Hawthorn East
4 3 2
Auct�on
Saturday 18 May 10.30am
Open for Inspect�on
Thursday 11.00am -11.30am and Saturday 12.45pm-1.15pm
Ham�sh Tostev�n 0408 004 766
John Bong�orno 0418 328 056
Sham�t Verma 0401 137 597
Auct�on Saturday 11 May 11.30am
Dav�de Lett�er� 0414 018 707
N�kk� McCarthy 0410 236 200
Tom Rogan 0400 595 527
Open for Inspect�on Thursday and Saturday 11.00am-11.30am
Innovative Design in Idyllic Location
Auct�on
Expressions of interest
Viewing
Wednesday 12-12:30pm & 6:30-7pm
Saturday 11-11:30am
Expressions of interest
Close 27 May at 5pm
Viewing
Wednesday 1-1:30pm
Saturday 12-12:30pm
Peter Kudelka 0418 319 439
James Paull 0430 338 348 7/2 STANHOPE COURT
Auction: Saturday 25th May at 12pm
Thursday 12-12:30pm & Saturday 10-10:30am
Your Private Garden Sanctuary
G04, 2 Bruce St, TOORAK VIC 3142
Introducing G04/2 Bruce Street, Toorak – an exclusive 3BR garden apartment designed by renowned architect Jolson and landscape designer Paul Bangay. Experience unparalleled luxury, blending spatial mastery with timeless decor. Private basement garage, a dedicated concierge service all in an unrepeatable Toorak location. The meticulously designed courtyard offers privacy, exclusive to this residence. Welcome to a lifestyle of distinction at Como Toorak, where luxury knows no bounds.
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