Phone: (09) 600 1333
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Cost: Entrees $14-$26; mains $20-$38; sides $7-$12; desserts $15.
The Vietnamese taught the French a trick about filled rolls. France was the colonial power in Indochina for almost a century and left its mark in the good coffee and good bread. But in Saigon, they took the baguette and ham that Parisians call jambon-beurre and made magic. The banh mi is a sandwich supreme, usually featuring pork belly and pork-liver pate, with crunchy fresh greens including carrot, cucumber and coriander leaf.
At Next Door Bistro, chef Bryan McGruer, who has run kitchens both good (The Grill, Jervois Steak House) and otherwise (Nomad), has deconstructed the banh mi. "Deconstructed" is a word that usually makes me flinch - McGruer's "Caesar basket", which I ate at Nomad when it first opened, was probably the silliest single dish I have ever eaten - but the Flavours of Banh Mi, which he does here, is bloody marvellous.
It's the sandwich without the bread, made with belly of those black Spanish pigs that yield the jamon iberico you get in good tapas places - the elite feed on acorns in their latter days. The meat is densely flavourful, full of silky fat that doesn't taste a bit greasy, cut with the astringency of pickled vegetables and topped with a big glob of pate - of chicken, not pork, liver, I think. It's the most arresting treatment I can remember of a cut that has become something of a restaurant cliche.