Phone: (09) 631 7520
Cuisine: Laos-influenced
From the menu: Sticky rice and dips $6, Tofu spring rolls $19, Prawn and squid $22, Pho (beef) $13, Pork belly and watercress $22, Sticky date pudding $14, Berry brulee $14
Drinks: Fully licensed
Rating: 8/10
Hope. That's what I hold when a new eatery opens where those before it have repeatedly struggled. I hold my breath and hope that, this time, it'll work out. Of course any successful and sensible restaurateur will tell you that hope is not a plan, and Sip Mounlath, owner of Bolaven, seems to know this.
Mounlath and her team, in their stylish, Matt Nash-designed uniforms, have done an extraordinary job of designing and executing a simple fit-out for this eatery, so much so that it is almost impossible to recall the dreary, stiff space it was before. It's been steaming along since it opened a few months ago, wowing the local cafe crowd with its delightful mix of brunch favourites alongside Laos-inspired dishes, honouring Mounlath's family background. When I heard they were opening for evenings (Thursday-Saturday) and that the dinner menu was entirely Laos-style dishes I wasted no time in checking it out.
I adore reading through a menu that is temptingly full of the types of dishes that you just know, if done well, are going to tingle and excite your taste buds; chicken fried with hot sweet chilli sauce, steamed fish infused with lemongrass and lime leaf, pork belly with watercress, a sirloin served quite simply with iceberg salad and a peanut sauce - the list at Bolaven goes on.
We plump for sticky rice with dips to begin with which, once you get your head around diving into a bamboo basket full of piping hot rice with your bare hands, is marvellously novel and beats bread and butter hands down. Then it's on to a plate of bing moo, pork skewers with cubes of the softest, juiciest pork you can imagine, accompanied by a bravely spicy tamarind dipping sauce.