Shakahari Vegetarian Restaurant is a local institution. When it opened in 1972 I guess that there would have been very little in Melbourne in the way of vegetarian restaurants and/or restaurants offering interesting vegetarian dishes. When I started going there in the 1990s that was certainly the case. These days the competition is tougher but it remains a sentimental favourite.
E and I had dinner at Shakahari's a few weeks back. The weather was mercifully cool. Last time we ate there it was 43 C and the air conditioners struggled so much that I found it hard to enjoy the food. This time I really enjoyed my meal. Even so, the food felt a little less exciting than in the days when good vegetarian restaurant food was hard to come by. (Just check out these examples of today's great Melbourne cafes/restaurants.)
It must be hard to keep up with the changing world of restaurant food when you have been in the business this long. Yet Shakahari has a mixture of old favourites and some new modern dishes. They include lots of vegan and gluten free options. I love the lovely terrace house with warm mustard yellow coloured walls and minimal zen furnishings. My one problem with it is that it is really noisy. Which wasn't great on this recent visit with E's soft voice and his blocked ears. Next time I book I might ask for the tables towards the back which seem quieter.
We shared a starter called Avocado Magic. Wedges of avocado and red capsicums are rolled in thin eggplant slices then 'tempura' fried in a rice batter and served with a gorgeous green sesame coriander puree. The crispy tempura batter contrasts beautifully with the creamy avocado. It tastes amazing and frying avocado in batter is something I would never dare attempt at home. In fact I think it was my favourite dish of the night.
For main course I had the quinoa croquettes. These croquettes are made of yam, dark quinoa, buckwheat, macadamia nuts and diced vegetables. They were crunchy on the outside but soft and pillowy on the inside like mashed potatoes but with lots of interesting textures that hovered on the tip of my tongue rather than dominating.
This is the sort of comforting old school dish that I might have expected to find in the 1970s when Shakahari opened. Yet like a lot of Shakahari, it had been modernised with add-ins that would have been unusual a few decades back. As well as quinoa and macadamia in the croquettes, they were served with kim chee, steamed greens and a mild chilli onion wasabi puree.
I am not familiar with kim chee. It certainly gave the dish a kick, while the broccoli and green beans were nicely cooked so they still had some crunch, though a bit cold. As a chilli wuss, I cringe at the suggestion of chilli and wasabi in my dinner. So I consider it a triumph that the mild chilli onion wasabi sauce was so good that I wanted to eat it by the spoonful.
E chose the Rasaan Vindaloo. It was a mild vegie curry accompanied by turmeric rice, chutney, cucumber pickles, yellow split pea dhal and pappadam. I had a taste and then wanted more. E wasn't keen to share! Both of us were surprised it was not very spicy given that it was called a vindaloo. But we were not disappointed by the dish. All the components came together in a most pleasing way.
We both found our desserts disappointing but sharing them made them work. E chose a vanilla soy ice cream. He found it a little bland on its own.
As there was no warm chocolate pudding on the menu (sob), I chose the Avocado Chocolate “Cheesecake”. It is a "raw cheesecake with a walnut and date base filled with a mixture of avocado, Calibut chocolate powder, maca powder (‘Peruvian ginseng’), coconut sugar and vanilla bean (Non-dairy, gluten free, raw)." The chewy base was very good but I found the chocolate filling rather bitter (and not at all like a cheesecake). It was served with a lot of mango which I didn't fancy.
Fortunately the tart was very good with some of E's ice cream. And he really enjoyed his ice cream with some of the tart mixed through it. They worked so well together than we might have yelled out "teamwork" and given each other a high five. But we are not that demonstrative and beside we were finding it so hard to hear each other it probably would have gone "Teamwork", "What's that you say?" "Come again?" "Who's going beserk?" Besides we were busy signalling a waiter for our bill so we could rush off to the cinema.
Shakahari was very busy. No table seemed to be empty long. Given the amount of diners, the service was friendly and prompt. We managed to eat three couses in the one and half hours before our movie. I got a little nervous we would be late and asked a waiter we had time for dessert. In response it was brought out promptly. We got to the Imitation Game in plenty of time. Which was just as well because it was an amazing movie. A lovely night out while Sylvia was on a sleepover!
Shakahari Vegetarian Restaurant
201-203 Faraday Street (near the corner of Lygon St)
Carlton
Tel: 03 9347 3848
(Also Shakahari restaurants in South Melbourne)
shakahari.com.au
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That looks like an amzing place and all the food is so beautifully plated! It's really cool that they've been open for so long already!
ReplyDeleteThanks Mihl - I am happy that they are still open because it has always been a place to go for a nice meal.
DeleteShakahari is an old favourite of mine too. I agree, it can be so noisy in there - on a nice night I have enjoyed sitting out in the courtyard away from the rest of the diners. They definitely have a good reputation for themselves - every time I go they seem to be full!
ReplyDeleteThanks Caeli - I did wander what the courtyard would be like - don't think I have ever eaten out there
DeleteLoud ambiance notwithstanding, everything sounds fabulous!!
ReplyDeleteI liked the happy dessert story - there's nothing worse than ordering a dessert when you're out and having it disappoint! I love kimchi, sadly the only versions I ever see around here are non-veg*n. I'll enjoy yours vicariously!
ReplyDeleteThanks Joey - lovely to order food at a vegetarian restaurant and know nothing is off limits - I wondered if the mango was meant to sweeten the dessert.
Deleteoh wow i miss that place, i also hate loud restaurants where i can't hear the person i am sitting with, I really struggle with surrounding noise
ReplyDeleteThanks Cate - yes it was something I used to think about fondly when I lived overseas
DeleteAll looks delish! I've been to this place both times I came to Melbourne and loved it. Loved The Imitation Game too! That was the movie I saw on my own :)
ReplyDeleteThanks Kate - The Imitation Game is just the sort of movie I would love to see alone at the cinema - so intense and triumphant and sad
DeleteI can't believe I still haven't been there! If I have been it was yeeeeeeears ago. I did go past once when I was in the area but it was closed and the second time I went to make a booking they were closed then too. I've seen a few fried avocado dishes here and there and haven't tried it yet, it looks great though!
ReplyDeleteThanks Veganopoulous - oh you must try it out - though sounds like the fates have been against you - I associate it with going to the Cinema Nova so perhaps if you have a chance to go there you might make a booking
DeleteFrom the outside it looks like a lovely cosy restaurant. I love the sound of your dessert but what a shame it was bitter. All the food sounds innovative and interesting xx
ReplyDeleteThanks Charlie - the food is very good but nobody's perfect - I did wonder about suggesting they serve the tart with ice cream but it might be cheeky - and maybe my lack of interest in mango meant it was more bitter than they intended
DeleteI'm giggling at the possible 'teamwork' scenario going downhill against restaurant noise. It does sound like you solved the lacklustre desserts perfectly though, and I'm quite sure I'd enjoy some of the cheesecake against soy ice cream. I love the sound of your quinoa croquettes too. This sounds like a fantastic place to have to return to over the years.
ReplyDeleteThanks Kari - I haven't had maca before and wondered if this was what I found bitter. The cheesecake with ice cream was great! It was really lovely to have this place for a special dinner when I went vegetarian and now it is lovely it is still there and holding its own in a rapidly changing culinary world.
DeleteI can never go past the avocado magic on my occasional visits!
ReplyDelete