CarltonGardens

Melbourne’s primacy as a global capital of coffee and cool shows no sign of slowing. We fell in love on our first visit, for the 2013 World Barista Championship, and have since significantly expanded our coverage of the city by establishing a City Desk there, helmed by Eileen P. Kenny. Melbourne is a city of distinct neighborhoods – suburbs, technically – and in the coming months we’ll be exploring several of them for the best places to drink coffee, eat dinner, have a stroll, and soak it all in.

Carlton is up first. Like much of Melbourne it was first established in the 1850s, during the Victorian Gold Rush, and its Victorian roots are still on display in its series of European-style garden squares and terraced housing blocks. It’s here where Melbourne’s cafe culture has its ancestral home, owing to the vibrant cluster of Italian cafes and restaurants on Lygon Street. Carlton is home to heaps of shopping and retail options, great cafes, and some of Melbourne’s best restaurants. Squint a bit and the long, sloping boulevard of Rathdowne Street could be Dolores Street in San Francisco.

Your options for fun and coffee here are varied and marvelous. Here’s a few stand-out favorites.

Coffee

Assembly Coffee & Tea
60 Pelham St
assemblystore.com

Assembly by Sprudge

Assembly holds a bit of a special place in our hearts here at Sprudge, thanks to its unique combination of aesthetic beauty, solid concept, and a carefully selected range of high quality products. They source their coffee from roasters all over the world, and their tea offerings are given space to thrive–something thatโ€™s rarely seen in the Australian specialty coffee industry. You can read more about this gorgeous coffee boutique in this piece from when theย Sprudge editorsย visited last year.

Seven Seeds
114 Berkeley St
sevenseeds.com.au

via top100experiences.com.au
Photo via top100experiences.com.au

Opened in 2009, Seven Seeds is a hub of action: in front, the cafe is a flurry of activity, serving the many students, businesspeople, and general coffee fanatics – while in the back, all of the roasting for Seeds, Brother Baba Budan, and Traveller is going on in their beautiful roastery. With a small but delicious selection of food offerings, as well as a pretty spectacular coffee service, Seeds (as itโ€™s affectionately known) has firmly established itself as a Carlton institution.

Market Lane
176 Faraday St
marketlane.com.au

Photo by Armelle Habib for Australian Design Review
Photo by Armelle Habib for Australian Design Review

The third store for Market Lane Coffee is located in what was formerly a residential living roomโ€”no, really, just have a look at the sweet fireplace thatโ€™s still thereโ€”that looks out onto Faraday St. This outpost has the smallest offering of the three (one espresso only, standard filter options, no food), however with Baker D Chirico next door to fulfill your culinary cravings, a cup of quality coffee is all you really need!

Campos
144 Elgin St
camposcoffee.com

advert but first coffee cookbook now available

 

Photo via Melbourne Magazine's The Coffee Army
Photo via Melbourne Magazine’s The Coffee Army

Campos, originally from Sydney, isnโ€™t a spot that is to every specialty coffee enthusiastโ€™s taste, however it definitely has its place in Melbourneโ€™s coffee scene. Their coffee is typically roasted darker than most places that call themselves specialty, but lighter than your old-school Italian types. Think of it as a gateway drug: it moves people towards the specialty coffee world with distinctive origins, while still giving them that milky, chocolaty โ€˜cino that theyโ€™re craving. This store is their Melbourne flagship, so itโ€™s definitely worth a look.

Food

Baker D Chirico
178 Faraday St
bakerdchirico.com.au

Photo by Peter Bennetts for Broadsheet.com.au
Photo by Peter Bennetts for Broadsheet.com.au

Situated on Faraday Street, just off the main Lygon Street stretch, “Baker D” is home to a range of tasty baked goods โ€“ from sweet little pillows of lemon and ricotta to large, delicious Casalinga loaves to feast on at home. Their sourdough game is one of the best in town (not to mention the amazing brie sandwiches and orange marmalades they also sell), and itโ€™s always worth getting a freshly-baked loaf for a snack on the way home. Even if you donโ€™t like bread, the design is stunning, so make sure you take a wander past.

Yo Chi
194 Faraday St
yochi.com.au

Photo by Mel J Phelps on Urbanspoon.
Photo by Mel J Phelps on Urbanspoon.

The froyo craze has definitely found its home in Melbourne, and the folks at Yo-Chi are to be held largely accountable for this. After opening their first store in the southern suburb of Balaclava, people travelled far and wide to partake in their delicious self-serve yoghurt with multiple-topping indulgences (myself included). This chic new store is their second location, which opened a few short months ago, and north-siders have been rejoicing ever since.

Middle Fish
122-128 Berkeley St
middlefish.com.au

Photo by Hocking Stuart.
Photo by Hocking Stuart.

Melbourne is a city of brunch spots, with smashed avocado and poached eggs as far as the eye can see. In this scene, Middle Fish is an oasis of something a little different. Located right next to Seven Seeds on Berkeley Street, here youโ€™ll find some spectacular Thai breakfasts, like kao tom gai (brown rice soup with chicken balls, poached egg, coriander, and spring onions), or congee, a delicious savoury rice porridge popular throughout SE Asia. They also do a really delicious lunch offering, but that brown rice soup just gets me every time.

The Town Mouse
312 Drummond St
thetownmouse.com.au

Photo via Venue Magazine.
Photo via Venue Magazine.

One of the newer additions to Carlton, The Town Mouse is one of a new breed of restaurant/bars which sit neatly between fine dining and the casual wine-after-work territory. The menu offerings are โ€˜Hungryโ€™ and โ€˜Thirstyโ€™, with the drinks list almost twice the length of the food menu โ€“ the way itโ€™s meant to be. Everything is ridiculously tasty here, and itโ€™s a great way to finish off a long day.

D.O.C. Pizzeria
295 Drummond St
docgroup.net

Photo by Josie Withers for Broadsheet.com.au
Photo by Josie Withers for Broadsheet.com.au

Just putting it out there, D.O.C. is some of the best pizza in Melbourne, if not the very best. Made with love from a range of imported Italian ingredients (like San Daniele Prosciutto), this is a place where settling in with a bottle of wine and ordering the simplest pizza on the menu will serve you well because the quality of the raw ingredients speak for themselves. The waiters yelling to each other in Italian also adds a distinctive something-or-other.

University Cafรฉ
257 Lygon St

Photo via GreatAussieHolidays.com.au
Photo via GreatAussieHolidays.com.au

Carltonโ€™s Lygon Street stretch is known far and wide as a little piece of Italy, with many Italian migrants settling in and developing the area not long after World War II. Founded over sixty years ago, University Cafรฉ was one of the original restaurants that contributed to making Lygon Street (and the suburb of Carlton) what it is today. It fuels the Italian community and plethora of uni students with its large plates of traditional, homestyle Italian pasta and more. (To learn more about Lygon Streetโ€™s fascinating history, check out this great documentary.)

Pidapipรณ Gelateria
222 Faraday St
pidapipo.com

Photo via Pidapipo.
Photo via Pidapipo.

Located next to boutique grocer King & Godfree, Pidapipรณ is a gelato test lab open only during the summer. Here youโ€™ll find Italian standbysโ€”like chocolate & hazelnut bacioโ€”alongside some rarer flavours like ricotta, cinnamon & honey, or mojito. Melbourneโ€™s been pretty warm this summer, so a cool, refreshing gelato on a hot evening is a welcome addition to the neighbourhood.

Drinks

The Beaufort
421 Rathdowne St
thebeaufort.com.au

Photo via Bartours.com.au
Photo via Bartours.com.au

Ahhh The Beaufort. Most people, local or not, have spent at least one boozy night here, whether itโ€™s because of the delicious beers on tap (Lord Nelsonโ€™s Three Sheets Pale Ale is a standout), the strong cocktail offerings (thanks to the quality bartending pedigree behind the bar), or the pickleback – the glorious pairing of a shot of whisk(e)y followed by a shot of pickle juice. Itโ€™s super laidback, thereโ€™s a solid menu of food that goes splendidly with beer, and you should go to there. This is Sprudge.com’s go-to taxi drop off when first arriving in Melbourne.

Carlton Wine Room
172-174 Faraday St
thecarltonwineroom.com.au

Photo by Chic Traveller.
Photo by Chic Traveller.

Carlton Wine Room is a lovely little restaurant and wine bar that has a delightful range of food, however, as the name suggests, the wine is the definite attraction here. The offerings here are Italian leaning (with either imported wines or those made locally with traditionally Italian grape varietals), but thereโ€™s also a good range of other European offerings and wines from Australia and New Zealand. You can also purchase carafes of the house wines, and feel as comfortable as if you were in your own living room – but youโ€™re actually in public, so leave your pants on.

Attractions

Cinema Nova
380 Lygon St
cinemanova.com.au

Photo via Cinema Nova.
Photo via Cinema Nova.

Home to a range of arthouse and โ€˜upmarket commercialโ€™ releases (their words, not mine), Nova is a pretty special cinema. Known throughout Melbourne for its discount Mondays ($6 per ticket pre-4pm, $9 afterwards), itโ€™s a favourite amongst university students, hospitality folk, pensioners, and cheapskates alike.

Carlton Gardens, Lincoln Square, Argyle Square, University Square

The Royal Exhibition Building in the Carlton Gardens. Photo by Toby Ord on Wikipedia.
The Royal Exhibition Building in the Carlton Gardens. Photo by Toby Ord on Wikipedia.

Lovely gardens in which to wander after eating and drinking and seeing everything. [Top photo via YarraBUG.]

Eileen P. Kenny (@EileenPK) is a Sprudge.com staff writer in Melbourne, and the author of Birds Of Unusual Vitality, speciality coffee’s premiere interview publication. Read moreย Eileen P. Kennyย here.ย 

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