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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
Lifestyle
Ann Ding

I spent the day eating like Nigella Lawson – and lived to tell the tale

Ann Ding surround by the day's food
‘It’s easy to work out how Nigella Lawson might eat for a day in Sydney judging from her social media – and that’s just what I did.’ Composite: The Guardian/Getty Images

Everybody loves Nigella Lawson. And Nigella? Well, she loves Australia, and has long been a frequent visitor. She has previously said she feels “gorgeously at home” here and dreams of spending three months a year down under. (She has been here since the beginning of May, so perhaps she’s making the dream a reality.)

As you’d expect, while she’s in Sydney, Nigella’s eating schedule is studded with the city’s greatest hits – Sean’s Bondi, Fratelli Paradiso, Bourke Street Bakery – as well as buzzy favourites including Porkfat, Cafe Paci and Ragazzi. It’s inner city-heavy, yes, but that’s hardly surprising for a culinary celebrity staying in Potts Point.

Thanks to Nigella’s fastidious documenting of her dining destinations on social media, it’s easy to work out how she might eat for a day in Sydney – and that’s just what I did.

10am: breakfast at Small’s Deli, Potts Point, $40.48

A toasted panini sandwich filled with roasted pork
Saucy and maximalist: the porchetta panini from Small’s Deli in Potts Point. Photograph: Ann Ding/The Guardian

I start the day at Small’s Deli. My tightly planned eating schedule is nearly derailed by a banking mishap, and eating like Nigella can’t be done on a $0 budget – but my breakfast companion, Sally, saves the day.

I’m hoping to order the meatball sandwich. The owners, Emily van Loon and Ben Shemesh, tell me Nigella ate it when she visited in 2022; this time around, she “literally came from the airport … straight to us, because she really wanted the meatballs again”.

The shopfront of a Sydney cafe, Small’s Deli, with a customer waiting inside
Small’s Deli in Potts Point, home to the meatball sandwich – a much-loved order for Nigella Lawson. Photograph: Ann Ding/The Guardian

“Luckily, we had them back on! We’d just put them back on the menu as a special,” Van Loon says. The meatballs stayed on the menu for three weeks longer than usual, too, as Nigella fans made their pilgrimages.

Unluckily for me, I’ve missed them by just three or four days, so instead we order the porchetta with caraway-roasted apples, radicchio and tarragon sauce on a panini. It’s no meatball sandwich but it’s saucy and maximalist in a way I think Nigella would have gravitated towards. The sandwich is a festival of textures – melting pork fat and yielding meat with caramel-gold edges, squishy cooked fruit, crunchy-yet-tender leaves, and the robust, crusty panini holding it all together.

The flavours are surprising in their contrasts: the apples are assertive in their sweetness, the sauce is herbaceous and grassy – even a little medicinal thanks to tarragon’s anise edge combined with the caraway and gently bitter radicchio. But it works wonderfully.

Noon: lunch at Icebergs Dining Room and Bar, Bondi, $172 (drinks not included)

Composite image showing before and after shot of pasta and a plate of fish and chips
‘It’s my first time eating at this Bondi institution’: the before and after of the kangaroo ragù and beer-battered dory and chips, with Ann’s dining companion, Rio. Composite: The Guardian

On Instagram, Nigella wrote, “Are you even in Sydney if you don’t go to @icebergsdiningroomandbar?” Despite living in Sydney all my life, it’s my first time eating at this Bondi institution for beautiful people. I think this may be because – while the food is delicious and looks sexy – Icebergs occupies that juncture of “modern Australian dining” which mostly just means “Italian”, and I don’t really need to go to Bondi for that.

Still, the view is as stunning as you’d expect. They’ve seated me and my lunch friend, Rio, at a table next to the glass doors of the balcony. (One of the staff, Ben, tells me Nigella was given a similar spot.) Even before we sit down, the Icebergs team is already across my order – it’s Nigella’s exact order – so all we have to do is sit back and drink in the sunlight.

First up are beef tartare and gamberetti. The tartare is mixed tableside, which is fun and theatrical, and comes with a near-dangerously crisp rye cracker that is glossy and blistered. The gamberetti, or school prawns, with crunchy fried shells is another masterclass in texture. Rio and I discuss whether the aioli is sufficiently garlicky to distinguish it from mayonnaise.

Next is maccheroncini with kangaroo ragù and beer-battered dory and chips. The battered fish is like one gigantic nugget of gold, jewelled with sparkling flaky salt, while the chips (skins on) are deeply satisfying and flavoursome – remarkably so for fried potato.

But Rio and I agree the ragù is the star of the meal – subtly spicy, rich yet not overly so, with pasta as al dente as it comes. It comes dusted with a potent forest-green herb powder, which I am told is kale, spigarello and sage.

2.50pm: afternoon snack at Flour and Stone, Woolloomooloo, $31.50

A selection of cakes and pastries in cardboard trays in the afternoon sun
‘The afternoon snack is compulsory’: panna cotta lamingtons, lemon, almond and ricotta cake, and a slice of brown butter tart from Sydney’s Flour and Stone. Photograph: Ann Ding/The Guardian

Rio and I walk away from Icebergs stuffed but I tell him the afternoon snack is compulsory, so we head to Flour and Stone. At first, in my post-lunch haze, I take us to the Pantry, where they sell jams, crackers, sweet cream biscuits and other, well, pantry items.

A couple of doors down, however, is the Annexe, where all their beautiful baked goods are housed. Nigella had the lemon dream and the raspberry, rose and pistachio cake, but they don’t seem to be around – perhaps her fans snapped them all up? – so we walk away with a slice of brown butter tart and a piece of lemon, almond and ricotta cake.

And, on Nigella’s recommendation, two panna cotta lamingtons (they kindly give me an extra one free of charge, since they were preparing to close for the next couple of days).

Given our limited stomach space, we decide to split the tart and the cake, and leave the lamingtons as a potential late-night treat . As we lounge at the edge of the botanic garden, I take a bite of the cake – the lemon curd and whipped cream is like eating a mouthful of the afternoon winter sun.

6.30pm: dinner, a Hetty McKinnon recipe at my house, $11.80

Egg-drop pasta soup in bowls, with a plate of fried Spam slices on the side
‘To the tongue’: pea egg-drop macaroni soup by Hetty Lui McKinnon, posted by Nigella Lawson, and cooked by Ann Ding Photograph: Ann Ding/The Guardian

After a day of indulgence, it’s a relief to return to my own kitchen. I’ve picked a recipe Nigella posted about, Hetty Lui McKinnon’s pea egg-drop macaroni soup, which feels appropriate for two reasons: it’s a light, unfussy meal, perfect to conclude a day of richness; and McKinnon is Australian.

Once I have my ingredients prepped, the meal comes together in less than half an hour. I invite a few friends over to help me eat, sweetening the offer with the promise of those panna cotta lamingtons. The soup hearkens back to the cha chaan teng menus of Hong Kong, so I supplement it with a plate of fried Spam slices.

The macaroni soup is a time-sensitive thing, something I learn as my friends trickle into my house over the course of 20 minutes. As the elbow macaroni sits in the hot broth it continues to soften, going from being “to the tooth” – you know, al dente – to “to the tongue”, as one friend puts it.

We finish the night eating, and marvelling at, the lamingtons – “the very stuff of dreams”, Nigella calls them. The sponge is soaked in vanilla panna cotta – a genius move – before being layered with berry compote and covered in chocolate and coconut.

I tell my friends it is ridiculous that I get to eat like this for my job. Somehow, though, it’s also sort of stressful eating like Nigella for a day. I had worried about being underdressed at Icebergs (one staff member told me a lot of their clientele were summering in Europe). I came close to missing my stop on the train home after dozing off while leaning against the window, full of cake and pasta.

Nigella might not eat like this every day; it’s a punishing schedule. Expensive too. Like many food-loving travellers, she’s making the most of Sydney’s best dining spots while she can, and is being richly rewarded from breakfast through to dinner. Having eaten like one of the world’s most famous gastronomic tourists I was grateful, at the end of the day, to relax and lounge in ways that aren’t possible at a sandwich bar, a bakery or a swish seaside restaurant. To eat with my friends in my own home. Just like Nigella.

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