Light Years team brings its ‘neighbourhood Italian’ to Brisbane

2 hours ago 3

Plenty of small-town operators have tried and failed to take on the big smoke. Newstead’s Bar Monte shows how to do it right.

Matt Shea

How do you take a restaurant group from a tourist town to a city? It’s not easy.

There’s a different style of diner, of course, and more competition.

But also different produce, different suppliers, different landlords, different staff.

Bar Monte opened in Newstead earlier this month.
Bar Monte opened in Newstead earlier this month.Markus Ravik

Australian food and beverage is littered with stories of small-town stars who took on the big smoke and swiftly had their backsides handed to them.

But if you had to bet on anyone making it work, it’s Arcade Agency, the hospitality “collective” best known for Light Years, which originated in Byron Bay. And perhaps it already has, opening a Light Years in Perth in April; thus far, that restaurant has been a hit.

Now comes Bar Monte in Brisbane. It’s the second Bar Monte after the Gold Coast original, which opened in December.

“One thing that’s really convinced us to open in Brisbane was the impact Light Years has had in Perth,” co-owner Lorenzo Toscani says.

Bar Monte has transformed the old Allonda digs on Longland Street.
Bar Monte has transformed the old Allonda digs on Longland Street.Markus Ravik

“The vision with Light Years before I was with them was always to be in coastal towns – start in Byron Bay and then obviously move up to the Gold Coast, and then Noosa. And then right in the middle of COVID they came up with Newcastle, which was a big step-up in terms of capacity.”

This gradual approach has served Arcade Agency well, and it’s taken place against the background of a food and beverage scene where – since the pandemic, in particular – the ties between the cities and the regions, between farmers and producers and the city eateries they serve, have become stronger and stronger.

Bar Monte’s menu is much the same as Miami, with clever twists on familiar classics.
Bar Monte’s menu is much the same as Miami, with clever twists on familiar classics.Markus Ravik

“When we opened on the Gold Coast we already had Brisbane in mind, as well,” Toscani says.

“Brisbane is growing so fast at the moment, there will be the Olympics.

“As an Italian who landed in Australia in 2012 and his first city was Brisbane, when I went back a couple of years ago, I really fell in love with how much it had changed. We saw the opportunity and wanted to be part of it.”

Vodka paccheri with nduja and stracciatella.
Vodka paccheri with nduja and stracciatella.Markus Ravik

Bar Monte opened mid-September in the Longland Street tenancy previously occupied by Allonda.

The bones of the place are the same, with the staircase to the right of the long bar that faces the entrance and laneway that runs between Longland and Wyatt streets.

The fit-out by Studio Plenty is moodier and more intimate and playful than Allonda, with dark tiling and marble counters, timber panelling and clever feature lighting. The treatment is modern but nostalgic, and suits the restaurant’s slightly hidden location.

Yellow fin tuna with pineapple, green chilli, lemon and koji mayonnaise.
Yellow fin tuna with pineapple, green chilli, lemon and koji mayonnaise.Markus Ravik

“[Bar Monte] is ‘neighbourhood Italian’, so we wanted to make it look a little bit retro but with a trattoria feeling – that Italian feeling,” Toscani says.

The menu is similar to the Miami original, with engaging twists on familiar Italian items, particularly when it comes to snacks and entrees.

Beef carpaccio with truffle mayo, fried capers, shallots, reggiano.
Beef carpaccio with truffle mayo, fried capers, shallots, reggiano.Markus Ravik

A burrata entree is spiked with nduja and cashew pesto, Ortiz anchovy toast is given a glow-up with smoked tomato butter, and there’s a mortadella bun with pickled green chilli and limoncello aioli that’s become a minor star at the Miami restaurant.

The pastas are all unctuous numbers that range from a cacio e pepe and prawn and chilli linguine, to mezze maniche served with pork sausage and Tuscan kale, and a vodka paccheri that tosses in nduja and is finished with a liberal dose of stracciatella.

The restaurant retains the basic layout of Allonda before it but has been given a completely new look by designers Studio Plenty.
The restaurant retains the basic layout of Allonda before it but has been given a completely new look by designers Studio Plenty.Markus Ravik

There’s also a short menu of mains that spruces up classics such as bistecca, veal cotoletta, and a diavola chicken.

For drinks, there’s a fun, savoury-focused cocktail menu (caprese martini, celery margarita, that kind of thing) and a 100(ish)-bottle wine list compiled by award-winning sommelier Andrea Martinisi that focuses on Australian, Italian and French drops.

The restaurant is tucked away on a small laneway just off Longland Street.
The restaurant is tucked away on a small laneway just off Longland Street.Markus Ravik

In short, if you’re going to add to Brisbane’s packed market of Italian restaurants, Bar Monte is a good way to do it.

“In coastal towns there’s a lot of competition, too, but because they get so busy during certain periods, especially during school holidays – you know you’re going to be full no matter what,” Toscani says.

“With the city, you need to bring your right game. It’s about creating that consistency.”

Open Wed-Sun 12pm-late.

17 Longland Street, Newstead.

barmonte.com.au/newstead

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Matt SheaMatt Shea is Food and Culture Editor at Brisbane Times. He is a former editor and editor-at-large at Broadsheet Brisbane, and has written for Escape, Qantas Magazine, the Guardian, Jetstar Magazine and SilverKris, among many others.

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