Restaurant Review: Paris Butter Is A Must-Visit If You Take Food Seriously

By Jesse Mulligan
Viva
Paris Butter is the brainchild of chef Nick Honeyman. Photo / Babiche Martens

PARIS BUTTER

Cuisine: Fine dining

Address: 166 Jervois Rd, Herne Bay

Phone: (09) 376 5597

Drinks: Fully licensed

Reservations: Accepted

From the menu: Menu du chef, $110 per person.

Rating: 20/20

Score: 0-7 Steer clear. 8-12 Disappointing, give it a miss. 13-15 Good, give it a go. 16-18 Great, plan

Feeling sorry for restaurants isn’t my job (I regard it as more of a hobby), but I do have some sympathy for places that can’t quite get things right in time for the reviewers to arrive, and then have to wait for a rebrand, new chef or a kitchen fire before any of us will go back and give them another shot.

The interior of Paris Butter. Photo / Babiche Martens
The interior of Paris Butter. Photo / Babiche Martens

Paris Butter was good when I first visited but chef/owner Nick Honeyman is better than good he's one of the best. Though he's popped up cooking in odd places hotels, pubs, Takapuna he was always, I think, destined to have a really first class fine dining restaurant where he called all the shots. Then when it arrived I was just a little bit disappointed. I left my initial meal there feeling unsatisfied and have spent the past three years dreaming that I would one day go back and discover that I was unlucky first time round and it's actually brilliant.

Well, lately the Instagram shots coming out of that kitchen have looked unbelievably good, and I couldn’t hold out any longer. I went back for a return meal and guess what? It was incredible. Like, easily a top 10 Auckland restaurant and possibly a top five. Nobody I know ever talks about Paris Butter, but they should. There’s something special going on in Herne Bay, and if you take your food seriously you need to drop in as soon as you can and experience the transformation.

Paris Butter is located on Jervois Rd. Photo / Babiche Martens
Paris Butter is located on Jervois Rd. Photo / Babiche Martens

This is Viva's sustainability issue and there are some lovely innovations in this kitchen that not only reduce food wastage but make the leftovers more delicious. Take white wine when a half empty bottle starts to lose its lustre the bar staff pour it out, restabilise the liquid, combine it with gin, sugar syrup and citrus oil then carbonate it and serve it up as the house bubbles. I tucked the word "restabilise" into the middle of that sentence hoping you wouldn't ask me to elaborate; even after it was explained to me I didn't really understand the process, but the results are delicious and uplifting.

There was not much New Zealand in the food the first time round, but now it is a menu that could only happen here. Early on is a cheffy take on the classic onion dip; later you get served “bottom of the Trumpet” essentially the tip of a cornetto cone filled with chocolate ganache, just like Tip Top do it but, you know, classier. A smidge of chicken liver parfait came pressed between two tiny Milo wafers. It worked, and there was no chance we were in France. One of the petit fours was a jelly baby made from whiskey you get a fright from the alcohol burn but it’s a clever way to end a meal.

Duck old and new. Photo / Babiche Martens
Duck old and new. Photo / Babiche Martens

The kitchen seems to be striving harder than ever for flavour intensity. It’s one thing to serve a “crossover course” (I hadn’t heard that term before, but I like it) of fennel sorbet, but it takes a special sort of dedication to smoke the bulb first, then juice it, before combining it with Seedlip to create this concentrated, complex aniseed treat.

The scallop was served sans roe as they do in Europe but, because this is New Zealand, they’d saved that tasty orange part and used it in a cultured cream on the side. Then they added a little inky XO sauce and dusted over some crumbled pork chicharron for that awesome pig-with-seafood flavour you can get elsewhere, though not often with this subtle elegance.

The scallop dish on the menu at Paris Butter. Photo / Babiche Martens
The scallop dish on the menu at Paris Butter. Photo / Babiche Martens

When I got home I wrote my notes like a James Joyce novel a sprawling, sometimes unreadable, stream-of-conscious internal monologue. It’s because everything in every dish has a long story, and when you’ve finished writing you have to look over at the thing next to it on the plate and start all over again. I’m running out of words for this review and still can’t choose between telling you about the “duck old and new” featuring a tiny cassoulet with a toasty crust of repurposed sourdough, or the barbecued hapuka, which tastes of clear beautiful charcoal smoke and was served with a single, perfect, caramelised asparagus spear.

The quality of wine service was as good as any other fine dining restaurant I’ve been to and they’ve searched hard for brands with a story from the Alsace “hospice” for abandoned wineries to the Central Otago vintner devoted to growing Spanish tempranillo.

The barbecued hapuka with asparagus. Photo / Babiche Martens
The barbecued hapuka with asparagus. Photo / Babiche Martens

Now when people ask me for a top end special occasion restaurant I'll add Paris Butter to the list that includes Sidart, The Grove, French Cafe, Pasture and Kazuya. Honeyman and the staff have really worked hard here, but they've kept the environment fun and creative.

Are they determined to stick with the name “Paris Butter”? Well, it’s not my job to tell restaurants what they should and shouldn’t be calling themselves. Definitely more of a hobby.

Auckland restaurants for a special occasion.

Ahi Offers Unsurpassable Artistry On A Plate. With its many finely spun parts, Ahi is simply flawless.

In Its New Home On Federal St, Cassia’s Food Is Still Faultless. But on service, there’s a bit of work to do.

The New Life & Long Reign Of Sidart. The fine dining restaurant is in great hands with its new chef-owner.

Inside Tala, The New Auckland Restaurant That’s A Samoan SophisticateThe restaurant brings refined Samoan food to Pasture’s old site, it’s due to open in October.

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