or search restaurant name


Advanced Restaurant Search
Browse Location

Chefs
Restaurants
Food
Wine
Bars
The Arts
Travel
Name Title

George Biron

April 1998

George Biron, Chef Owner of Sunnybrea

Between now and the end of August, George Biron is doing some 60 country cooking classes at Sunnybrae, his restaurant and cooking school at Birregurra. It's a great place to learn about cooking and produce. George and partner Diane Garrett have a huge vegie garden around the restaurant which they started seven years ago. They serve weekend lunches and dinners in the charming old cottage throughout the year and are open right through summer. .

But Sunnybrae is about much more than restaurant meals. It's about a complete lifestyle and communicating knowledge about the pleasures of food and of how to prepare it. Both George and Diane have teaching experience and, at Sunnybrae, have a complete program for food lovers at all levels of knowledge and expertise. There are classes on antipasto, pasta & risotto, salmon, duck, coffee (with GianCarlo Guisti of Grinders Coffee on May18), seafood, bread, curries, cassoulet, winter desserts, stocks & sauces, classic one pot meals, the special dishes of the Aeolian Islands (with John Portelli of Enoteca Sileno on June 22). They also recruit some of Australia's finest chefs, such as Philippe Mouchel and Tony Bilson, as resident chefs for weekends.

But what do people really like doing? 'Getting dirty foraging for fungi' always books out. On April 25 you can still get in to the restaurant for the Feast at night but, the mucky part, out in the fields, under the guidance of Dr Tom May, fungus expert at the Royal Botanic Gardens, is already booked out.

Dr May hopes to be showing people how to identify saffron milk caps, slippery jacks and some field mushrooms. These are the only wild fungi which he recommends for eating. Although there are many other fungi out there, he warns people not to pick anything else. "It is too dangerous, you can't just go out there and pick what you think looks nice. The worrying thing is that there are people who think that varieties here are the same as in Europe and guess from their previous experience. This guesswork results in death. Two years ago a man died from eating mushrooms he collected from a nature strip in Sandringham." Dr May said that the man had not eaten a large amount, but that the variety, the Death Cap (pictured), is highly toxic. And what's worse, the symptoms are delayed. "You don't feel ill for about 24 hours. By the time you think you might need to see a doctor, the liver is irrevocably damaged."

The message is clear. Don't collect anything which you do not know with absolute certainty to be an edible variety. If you want to try fungi, go and eat with the experts at restaurants such as Sunnybrae 03 5236 2276 or if you want to cook it yourself, go to the market either to Cameron Russell at the Queen Victoria Market (9329 3909) or to Damian Pike at the Prahran Market (9824 0805). There's very little fungi around now, the weather has been too dry. Come May and there should be pine mushrooms, slippery jacks, shaggy ink caps, wood bluat, field mushrooms and, for a very limited season, the rare beef steak mushroom available for sale at these market stalls. Price depends on scarcity but count on at least $12 a kilo.

If you can't join the Sunnybrae Feast on April 25, you might get a place on Cameron Russell's Mushroom Tour (April 26, booked out, but probably another tour on Sunday May 3) which will travel from the city by mini-bus to an unidentified location (you won't be blindfolded but almost) do the picking and return to the Hotel Spencer where chefs Janelle and Peter will cook your pickings. (book for this on 9525 8263)

Then in May, you will have another chance to eat wild fungi at Sunnybrae. George Biron is giving two classes May 4 and 26 in which he will demonstrate a number of recipes for wild mushrooms. One of George's favourite recipes follows --



White polenta with braised leeks and saffron milk caps

Serves 6

2 Lt light chicken stock

300 f white polenta

12 small leeks, cleaned

350 gm fresh saffron milk cap mushrooms (Lactarius Deliciosus)

80 gm finely ground parmesan

20 gm unsalted butter

1) slowly braise the leeks whole in 1/2 litre of chicken stock.When soft, add well cleaned saffron milk caps, cut into rough pieces. Cook for about 10 mins. Reduce to a light unctuous sauce.

2) cook polenta by drizzling into the remaining stock slowly and stirring for 35-45 mins on very low heat (reserve some hot stock in case the mixture is too heavy - it should be light and fluffy and able to pour from the pot)

3) when the polenta is finished, add the knob of butter and Parmesan. Season.

4) pour into wide, shallow serving dish. Pour the leek and mushroom mixture on top and serve.

This dish is also wonderful with fresh Italian white truffle (Tuber Magnatum Pico)

George says this he uses saffron milk caps for this dish for their great nutty flavour and because they retain their crunchy texture with long cooking. The soft leeks are a good sweet foil and the colour is spectacular against the white polenta. Use only the best Parmesan and butter.



Mietta O'Donnell

This first appeared in the Herald Sun on 6th April, 1998.
©Mietta's 1998.

Or perhaps ...

Abla Ahmet
An interview with Abla Amad, the owner-chef of Melbourne\'s best Lebanese restaurant, Abla\'s

Apprentice Chefs Compete
The Daryl Cox Memorial Trophy - a judges perspective of the young chefs striving for excellence

Beer and Food
At the end of the day most chefs reach for a beer. But here they cook with it - matching food and beer flavours

Bill Marchetti 1997
An interview with Bill Marchetti, owner-chef of Marchetti\'s Latin and Matchetti\'s Tuscan Grill

Chris Talihmanidis
An interview with Chris Talihmanidis at Beacon Point. Chris has been responsible for many of Lorne and the Surf Coast\'s best restaurants

Donlevy Fitzpatrick
An interview with Fitzpatrick Donlevy who is relieved to be out of the George and back in the Dog\'s Bar.

Donovan Cooke 1997
An interview with Donovan Cooke, chef and partner in est est est, one of Melbourne\'s best restaurants.

Don Dunstan
Don Dunstan, ex-premier of South Australia, and his partner and the chef, Stephen Cheng, have opened a magnificent new restaurant in Norwood, Adelaide. It\'s called Don\'s Table

Dur-e Dara
An interview with Dur-e Dara, then a partner in Stephanie\'s Restaurant.

Garry Farrell
Next week Gary Farrell will represent Australia in the first individual cooking championship to find the world\'s best chef.

George Biron 1998
Sunnybrae has more than liesurely sunday lunches it also has fungi. Georges Biron assisted by fungus expert Dr May take you foraging. George\'s recipe for white polenta and saffron milk caps is included.

Gilbert Lau 1997
An interview with Gilbert Lau of the Flower Drum, Melbourne\'s best Chinese restaurant and one of the best restaurants in Australia.

Greg Brown
An interview with Greg Brown, ex-restaurateur and now a baker talks about his empire, his cooking classes and finding pleasure in food

Home Dinner Party
The chefs who come to your home as part of the Herald Sun Home Dinner Party are organized than that - they come well prepared so you\'ll get a great meal served to your guests and afterwards all the evidence is cleaned up and taken away.

Hong Kong to Melbourne
Interviews with a number of Hong Kong Chinese who had worked at Mietta\'s a chefs and waiters and who now own their own businesses

Introduction Chefs
Interviews with Australian chefs written by Mietta O\'Donnell for the Melbourne Herald Sun between 1996 and 2000.

Ivana\'s Pasta
An interview with Ivana Dela Maria that deals with making pasta and gives her recipes for zucchini soup and potato gnocchi

James Tan 1997
An interview with James Tan chef and partner in the Duck, just before it opened. James is one of Melbourne\'s best exponents of the use of Asian dishes with Western influences.

Jeremy Strode 1998
A look at chef Jeremy Strode\'s brand new enterprise, Pomme, the classy, chic restaurant in Toorak Road, serving fine classically based food

Jimmy Shu 1997
An interview with Jimmy Shu chef-owner of Near East in Melbourne and Haniman in Darwin. He is one of Melbourne\'s best exponents of mixed Asian cuisines

Jimmy the Original
An interview with Jim Papadimitriou - Jimmy the Original - the man who started many of Melbourne\'s best known Greek restaurants

Kuni Ichikawa 1998
An interview with Kuni Ichikawa the god father of Melbourne\'s Japanese restaurants talks about introducing Melburnians to Japanese food

Mario's Cafe
An interview with Mario De Pasquale and Mario Maccarone of Mario\'s and the Continental and the true story of the \'all day breakfast\'

Melbourne Food and Wine Festival
So many meals, so many chefs demonstrating, so many products to taste in the gastronomic marathon known as the Melbourne Food & Wine Festival

Nouria Salehi
An interview with Nouria Salehi the physicist who started an Afghan restaurant to provide work for her Afghani compatriots

Pelligrini 1997
An interview with Sisto Malaspina, Nino Pangrazia and Emma Sellito of Pelligini\'s, Melbourne\'s most loved coffee bar

Phillipe Mouchel 1997
An interview with Phillipe Mouchel, then chef at Restaurant Paul Bocuse in Melbourne. He is now chef and partner in Langton\'s Restaurant and Wine Bar with Phillipe Mouchel.

Phu Huo Pham
An interview with Phu Huo Pham who fled Vietnam, made his way to Australia, worked unbelievably hard and now owns several restaurants. It includes his recipe for Banh Xeo - Vietnamese Pancake

Scheherezade
An interview with George and Elizabeth Szarach of Sheherezade, a Melbourne icon in Acland Street St Kilda that still uses the original homestyle recipes which came from Poland

Silvana Palmira 1997
An interview with Sylvana Palmira of Borsato, then (1997) Melbourne\'s best Italian restaurant.

Simon Goh and Baby Thomas
An interview with Simon Goh who owns and operates the Chinta Ria Malaysian restaurants and Baby Thomas of Haveli one of Melbourne\'s best Indian restaurants

Supper Inn 1997
An interview with Grace and Steve Lau, the father and daughter team that runs the Supper Inn a Melbourne institution open until 3am daily serving good quality Cantonese food.

Vlado Gregurek
An interview with Vlado Gregurek of Vlados - the red meat specialist talks about steak and the fire that cooks it

Walter Bourke
An interview with Walter Bourke, chef owner of Walter\'s Wine Bar and other enterprises that traces his move from ballet to restaurants


-->