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Spice Temple

  • Restaurants
  • Sydney
  • price 2 of 4
  • 5 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended
  1. Spice Temple (Photograph: Supplied)
    Photograph: Supplied
  2. Photograph: Daniel Boud
    Photograph: Daniel Boud
  3. Photograph: Daniel Boud
    Photograph: Daniel Boud
  4. Photograph: Daniel Boud
    Photograph: Daniel Boud
  5. Photograph: Daniel Boud
    Photograph: Daniel Boud
  6. Photograph: Daniel Boud
    Photograph: Daniel Boud
  7. Photograph: Daniel Boud
    Photograph: Daniel Boud
  8. Photograph: Daniel Boud
    Photograph: Daniel Boud
  9. Photograph: Daniel Boud
    Photograph: Daniel Boud
  10. Photograph: Daniel Boud
    Photograph: Daniel Boud
  11. Photograph: Daniel Boud
    Photograph: Daniel Boud
  12. Photograph: Daniel Boud
    Photograph: Daniel Boud
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Time Out says

5 out of 5 stars

A regional Chinese restaurant with a casual, fun environment – what more could you want?

October 2023 update: From Sichuan to Yunnan and Guangxi, Spice Temple is renowned for putting a spotlight on China’s regional cuisines – and has been consistently heralded as one of Sydney’s finest Chinese restaurants since it opened in 2009.

If you’re craving a delicious Chinese seafood feast, we say come along to this excellent fiery restaurant and get your pinchers on $99 mud crabs. That’s right, it’s mud crab season at Spice Temple – and there is nothing crabby about that.

You can get Queensland-sourced premium mud crabs without the eye-watering price tag now until the end of December. Loved for its luxurious, sweet and clean-tasting meat, mud crabs are a perfect show-stopping centre dish for your summertime entertaining. Choose to order your crustacean paired with one of five traditional sauces: four chillies; salted olive and black bean dressing; black bean and salted chilli; ginger and shallot; and XO sauce. And yes, licking your fingers is allowed.

Spice Temple executive chef Andy Evans said: “Mud crabs are often considered a luxury, but the real treat for our guests this season is the limited-time $99 price, which makes them an affordable option for the family and group dining experience.”

You heard it here first. Round up your gang and share these fab crabs (you don’t want to be shellfish, after all).

- Avril Treasure 

Read on for our original review of Spice Temple from 2009 by Myffy Rigby

*****

Rather than choosing some airy harbourside venue with Opera House views, Neil Perry's gone subterranean in the city for Spice Temple. "I'm asking people to go down a number of steps and come underground in beautiful Sydney," says Perry. "To do that, I felt I had to have something really special."

And special it is – a Chinese restaurant that does not serve any Cantonese dishes. Instead, you'll find a menu that roams China from Sichuan to Yunnan to Guangxi. But the question tingling on everyone's lips is the chilli factor. "The dishes [on the menu] that are in red, they're hot," explains Perry. "Chilli isn't just about blowing people's minds out. It really is about adding that flavour and mouth-feel and excitement." Go with a bunch of friends and try as many different dishes for the table as you can. You're guaranteed to taste something here that your mouth has never experienced before. In a very, very good way.

The room has a bit of a swingin' Shanghai gentleman's club atmosphere with rich red carpet, deep, chubby leather banquettes, vases of bamboo and curtains that look like giant matchsticks. The service is breezy yet professional, and if you don't want to sit down straight away there's a bar out the front serving cocktails named after the animals of the Chinese zodiac.

Start with some pickles and cold cuts - the smashed cucumbers with garlic and ginger are a refined version of the classic cucumber salad, and the pickled cabbage and radish is a great way to refresh your palate. Hot and numbing white cut chicken is less scary than it sounds. Cold poached chicken, with its thrilling gelatinous quality, provides respite from the lava-like sauce, enriched with peanuts and sesame. It's a very interesting dish: a big hit of incredibly complex flavour very gradually turns into a long, cool burn that eventually numbs your mouth. Or try the more innocuous steamed-then-shredded chicken with garlic and spring onion oil (we couldn't help thinking it would make an awesome chicken sandwich). The lamb and cumin pancake is a table favourite - thin, crisp salt-flaked sheets of Chinese-style pancake with a scattering of cumin-scented lamb sandwiched in the middle. We're keen to try the cat's ear noodles with peppers and chilli sauce on our next visit.

Three shot chicken sounds exciting on paper. A hot pot of chicken, mushrooms and carrot is placed on a portable burner at the table; the idea is that you pour the individual shots of beer, chilli and soy into the hot pot. Unfortunately, the romance of everything else happening at the table is disrupted by the clunky gas burner. Better is the tasty mess of bacon, pork, garlic shoots and chives stir fried with smoked tofu and spiked with chilli - vegetarian food made fun with meat!

Dish of the evening, though, goes to the quail stir fried with peanuts served over steamed egg custard. It's all about texture in Chinese food and here the squish, crunch and sigh all work together with chilli that emphasises rather than bullies.

Feeling the heat? Cool down with the watermelon granita (pictured) – it's sweet, looks pretty and does a great job of killing a chilli burn. Or go the creamy mango mousse topped with a thin sheet of sesame nougatine. Or the delicate, gelatinous island of shaved ice layered with sago and condensed milk and perfumed with rose syrup. Or the caramel ice cream with coffee granita served with a couple of chewy chocolate cookies... Oh boy.

There are 100 different wines on offer. And did you know Spice Temple features its own bar where the cocktails are based on signs of the Chinese zodiac? The Monkey is definitely worth a nudge (ginger beer, vodka, lime) but you might also like to check out the Dog (pisco, salted agave, lemon juice egg white). Abstaining? Spice Temple also feature a range of house-made sodas including the excellent lemongrass and rosewater number. Of course, if you’re here, you can’t look past the pork burger – sandwich stuff of legends. A soft bun holds slices of crisp roast pork, pickled cucumber, peanuts and chilli sauce. Oh. Mama. 

Spice Temple is an exciting restaurant – not just because it's Neil Perry's amazing food in a casual, fun environment. It's unlike anything Sydney's seen before. Bravo.

Read our exclusive interview with Neil Perry

Recommended:

The best Chinese restaurants in Sydney

In the area? Check out where to drink and dine in Circular Quay

Keen on seafood? Have a look at these fresh seafood restaurats

Written by Myffy Rigby

Details

Address:
10 Bligh Street
Sydney
2000
Opening hours:
Mon-Fri noon-3pm, 6-11pm; Sat 6-11pm
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