Restaurant Guide

Serai: Restaurant review

Serai feels like instant fun – of the fire-fuelled, Filipino-flavoured kind.

REVIEW

With its concrete floor, shared tables, bar seating and stacked shelves of natural wine, Serai feels like instant fun – of the fire-fuelled, Filipino-flavoured kind. Clever cocktails mix Pinoy staples like calamansi, pandan, coconut and ube into all kinds of thrilling new combos. A Ponso Sour, for example, shakes gin, toasted coconut, chardonnay, lime and egg white into a shiny pandan-green treat. A kinilaw of kingfish and calamansi is a winner, as are fried noodles topped with spanner crab and pineapple. Chef Ross Magnaye's take on lechon is a platter of pork belly – crisp on the outside, fatty within – covered in funky, sweet-sour smoky palapa sauce. His ode to halo-halo, meanwhile, arrives as a Paddle Pop mined with coconut, jackfruit, cornflakes, jelly and purple yam. Expats and in-the-know locals have quickly formed a strong fan base, but when the good times and sense of adventure are this contagious, there's no doubt newbies will quickly catch on.

ABOUT

Serai
Filipino
7 Racing Club La, Melbourne
(03) 9600 0016
seraikitchen.com.au
Chef Ross Magnaye and Shane Stafford
Price guide $
Bookings Recommended
Wheelchair access No
Open Lunch Thu-Sun; Dinner Tue-Sat
This review was written independently for the Gourmet Traveller Restaurant Guide. The guide's reviewers visit unannounced and pay their way. To learn more about the process, head over here.