Review: Barangaroo gets a Byzantine update with new laneway bar and eatery Baharat

Baharat
Images: Steven Woodburn

Settle in for a string of drinks and snacks at this new Turkish eatery by acclaimed chef and restaurateur Somer Sivrioğlu.

Blink and you’ll miss it among the many eateries lining the city-to-harbour passageways between Barangaroo’s office towers. But Baharat (literally meaning “spices”) is a bit of a hidden treasure, with its ultra-casual street food menu alongside an ambitious cocktail suite.

A baby brother to the indoor-outdoor harbourside Anason round the corner, Baharat has been designed as a grazing kind of place, Turkish style. Anyone who’s had the great fortune of visiting Istanbul, for example, will understand its appeal. Afternoon to evening in the Turkish capital can be a progression of drinks and snacks across a number of venues, known as meyhane. Or a long, slow, convivial hangout in just one location, simply ordering as you feel the urge.

Baharat's Somer Sivrioglu, Arman Uz, Amre Bilgin. Source: Steven Woodburn

Whether the concept is truly working Sydney-side is perhaps another question. Our server confesses night-time service can be quiet here while lunch trade is definitely peak hour. A midday kebab or pide, anyone? That said, as midweek diners in a pretty empty space, we have a very pleasant time dipping in and out of the menu – a mix of meze and snacks, those pide (flatbreads baked with various, mostly meaty toppings) and of course, truly Turkish, quality kebabs.

The look is low-key also – a shiny bar backed with bottle-laden shelves, simple timber seating spots, a domed oven and mosaic-y wall just visible from the dining room. Necklaces of dried chilli and other veg hang behind a glass wall scrawled with lunchtime specials – reminiscent of the crowded spice shops in Auburn, Sydney’s premier Turkish neighbourhood. And those of the homeland, of course, like Istanbul’s iconic Grand Bazaar.

Baharat falafel and condiments Source: Steven Woodburn

With Istanbul on our mind, we order a glass of raki, the aniseed-like grape-based spirit served chilled – in this case, in a stainless steel glass-holder, with ice and iced water on the side. Dropping in a couple of cubes and a slosh of water, we raise a toast to what’s to come. First up, a platter of honeydew melon and sliced feta – a classic raki accompaniment, the menu advises. It’s definitely a wonderful combination, tickling our appetites ahead of what turns out to be a copious spread.

Cosy clay plates deliver a house-baked bread round, flecked with sesame seeds, black and white. Just the thing for scooping up fluffy humus, splashed with chilli-laced oil seeping from cubes of sujuk (cured Turkish sausage) on top. Minced lamb kebabs, Adana style, arrive with long green chillies on a more slender flatbread base. And a classic lahmacun, a mince- topped baked pide, comes with a bowl of parsley, roasted red onion, pickled chillies and squeezy lemon slices on the side. Just the thing for added zing.

A Turkish-inspired cocktail or two – the cutely named Belly Dancer, for example, riffs on mezcal, grapefruit, allspice and more of that racy raki – heightens that Bosphorus-meets-Mediterranean magic. For a moment there, we’re transported to the spices, charcoal smoke and pide toastiness of an Istanbul excursion. All that’s missing is the heaving buzz of a busy Byzantine back alley.

Related review: Discover the vibrant plant-based fare of the Aegean at this new Sydney hotspot 

100 Barangaroo Ave Barangaroo NSW 2000

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