Phone: (09) 929 2790
Libertine.co.nz
Cuisine: Modern NZ
From the menu: Oxtail $18, Crayfish rice $22, Plate of pig $28, Rotisserie beef $32, Apple & quince $14, Cheesecake $14
Drinks: Fully licensed
Rating: 7/10
It takes more than a terrific chef to make a restaurant truly sing. Libertine is proof of that. Newly appointed chef Sean Marshall (Matterhorn, Roxy) is talented enough but an evening of eating out reaches beyond what our tastebuds experience. What we want, whether we're conscious of it or not, is coherence. From walking in and taking in the surrounds for the first time, to being welcomed, to the initial impression of the menu and onwards from there, we're hoping that everything stacks up to a solid impression of what a place is all about. Is it fine dining or more casual than that, a bistro perhaps? Or a bar with food, or a smart brasserie?
Though it's harder to be prescriptive with labels nowadays, our brains still need it to be something, and that something needs to appear unified. You get the impression at Libertine they haven't yet fully understood what it is they're trying to achieve and no one - or perhaps too many people - have connected the dots and settled on just one style.
The space is casual and a bit bar-like but, despite being cavernous, still manages to feel cosy enough on a winter's night. The staff are upbeat and efficient. They know their stuff and don't hover unnecessarily. With the change of chef, they've given up on the Latin American bent the restaurant began with two years ago and Marshall has deemed his new menu a "bistro menu". It's not - the food is far more sophisticated than that.
A braised oxtail is finely crafted with gently smoked oysters, cauliflower thinly sliced and crisped as well as reduced to a smooth and heavenly dollop, the earthiness of a beet puree swinging the dish one way and an explosive shower of freshly grated horseradish the other. A bowl of wet crayfish risotto is intensely musky with grapes and verjuice rescuing the dish from being too rich, and pearly morsels of perfectly cooked crayfish meat scattered on the puddle of creamy rice.