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This intimate counter restaurant in Perth's CBD is a lesson in quiet sophistication

This intimate counter restaurant in Perth's CBD is a lesson in quiet sophistication

The Age21-04-2025

While the menu includes wagyu, snow crab and other luxury items, it's the humbler dishes that leave the biggest impression.
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Every pocket of Tokyo has its claims to fame.
Shibuya has the scramble crossing. Shinjuku houses the planet's busiest train station. Harajuku is legendary for out-there fashion. Ginza, meanwhile, epitomises Japanese worldliness and luxury.
Translating to 'silver mint' in Japanese, Ginza is synonymous with the finer things in life. The precinct is home to four Tiffany's boutiques; flagship Japanese department stores boasting more storeys than most Perth hotels; plus 29 Michelin-starred restaurants, including two of the capital's fabled three-starred dining rooms.
In short, if you harboured aspirations to open an ambitious Japanese eatery, Ginza would be a suitably fancy star to hitch one's wagon to, even if the said eatery is found halfway down a dark alley.
Welcome to Ginza Midai, one of the five venues inside the Japanese food Disneyland, Ginza Nana Alley. Pulling back the restaurant's mustard noren curtain reveals a sparse, tightly packed room built around a blonde timber counter with a dozen seats ringing an open kitchen. (And I do mean tightly packed. Getting in and out of your chair requires similar levels of neighbourly co-operation as going to the toilet on a plane.) But just as it is in-flight, the wisest play is to stay seated and try holding it in: you won't want to miss a moment of chef Midai Hatakeyama's nightly performances.
Both Hatekeyama and Ginza Midai are about kappo cuisine: a school of Japanese cookery where items are prepared to order and served in a cosy, intimate setting for maximum theatre, interactivity and – most pleasingly in a time where pre-prepared, room-temperature food is gaining in popularity – flavour. At one end of the kitchen is a gas stove crowded with pots, pans and a konro grill fuelled by Japanese binchotan charcoal. At the other is baby-faced Hatekayama, his slender yanagiba knife in hand, carefully slicing and preparing dishes for guests.
Dishes such as the minor miracle that is Kyoto-style freshwater eel: a seasonal wonder in which the creature's luscious flesh is 'minced' via intricate knifework, then patiently grilled till it blooms like a flower. Fresh eel is rare in these parts – most eel served at Perth Japanese restaurants is frozen – and the unexpected offer of an add-it-yourself shaker of black chilli powder fizzing with sancho pepper underscores that buzz of discovery.
Unsurprisingly, seafood features prominently with the restaurant serving both Japanese and Australian fish. Of course, there's sashimi and sushi, although the former only comes as a five-fish platter that might include fat, rosy hunks of tuna and squares of squid, quickly scored for tenderness and quickly charred. The solitary sushi option features fatty Japanese black bonito pressed atop vinegared rice and served with strips of nori for diners to assemble their own onigiri.
Meticulously handled seafood, naturally, comes at a cost: sashimi will set you back $88 while the sushi is $56 for two pieces. The price tags attached to the snow crab, wagyu and other high-end proteins may also stop diners in their tracks, although it's worth noting that dishes are designed to be shared between two.
But while luxury ingredients chime with the special occasion aspirations of the restaurant, it's the kitchen's work with humbler foodstuffs that denotes Ginza Midai as an operation of real substance.
The way that sweet, simmered conger eel celebrates the airiness of whipped potato and smoked daikon salad. Or the haunting, oceanic funk of chewy buckwheat noodles blanketed by an orange snowdrift of finely grated karasumi: salted mullet roe and Japan's answer to Italy's bottarga. Slow-cooking beef tendon in stock, sake and soy sauce renders the bovine offcut into an unctuous joy made even more memorable by its accompanying bowl of glossy potato loosened with butter and dashi: a starchy delight that's half mash, half puree.
But perhaps the most compelling of Midai-san's rags-to-riches cooking is his oden: a Japanese hotpot starring ingredients slowly simmered in broth. In Japan, our man spent years at a specialist oden restaurant specialising in Kyoto-style oden: a lighter soup base than the darker, soy-heavy version served at Tokyo oden restaurants and konbini stores.
It's this savoury fish and chicken broth that underpins Ginza Midai's choose-your-own oden adventure where guests can revel in soft-yolked eggs, crumbly chicken meatballs and chubby chunks of daikon cooked till just-so, lolling in said soup. When was the last time a radish rocked your food universe?
Among the minor criticisms I noted about dinner at Ginza Midai – I'd love to see the uneven, albeit well-intentioned service sharpened – my main gripe was with the dining format. In Perth, it's almost expected that a setting like this would offer omakase or set menu dining, especially considering the breadth of the menu. While Yuso Hirose – Ginza Nana Alley's operations manager – says that management may consider set menus in future, they're sticking to their guns for now.
'We know that doing a la carte is harder and it'd be easier for preparation and waste if we did omakase,' says Hirose. 'But we want people to be able to choose what they want to eat and drink and maybe check out some of the other venues while they're here. As long as they're happy with that, then we're happy to keep doing it this way.'
In an era where some restaurants ask diners to fit into their machine, this sentiment is a reminder that giving guests the luxury of choice remains a vital part of hospitality.

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The contradiction between listener sentiment and behaviour could be the basis of a campaign for actively discovering local music - a bit like the 'Life. Be in it' health campaign of the 1980s - suggested Music Australia director Millie Millgate. "We can remind Australian audiences what these bands are doing overseas and encourage them not to miss out - like, don't miss out on your own party," said Millgate. "There's no one single bullet, but if audiences can be mobilised to do their part and really seek out Australian new music, it would go an incredible way." And the Music Australia research suggests we could potentially Aussify Spotify: listeners like the idea of a dedicated Australian music streamer, with 42 per cent saying it's something they would pay for. 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While 71 per cent of listeners love to hear Australian tunes, and two thirds want to hear more, only one in three music fans make an effort to seek out new Australian music. It's a big contradiction revealed in landmark research by Music Australia, the federal government's music development and funding body. A massive 98 per cent of local listeners discover musicians via streaming, but more than half (51 per cent) don't think about whether an artist is Australian when they are looking for new tunes. Of the top 10,000 artists streamed in Australia during 2024, just eight per cent were Australian, while more than half were from the US, according to entertainment analytics firm Luminate. It seems the sheer convenience of personalised playlists delivered via an algorithm might be stopping music fans discovering Australian artists - and that's a problem for musicians like Sara Storer. The ARIA-award winning country musician is releasing her eighth solo album titled Worth Your Love, and says the music industry has completely transformed since her first release back in 2001. "For a young person, especially a young Aussie artist trying to get out there, I'd be terrified. Where do you start?" she said. Despite building an inter-generational audience over decades, the Darwin-based musician can no longer rely on album sales, and even solid streaming figures don't add up to a viable income. "There's no income from streaming. It looks good on paper and you think, well, I should be making a few bucks, but you don't see anything," said Storer. "All my money is made through live performance. I rely heavily on ticket sales, which is like a roller coaster." The contradiction between listener sentiment and behaviour could be the basis of a campaign for actively discovering local music - a bit like the 'Life. 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It's a big effort to demonstrate a sense of national pride - but it seems many Aussie musos are actually getting more love overseas, with more than 80 per cent of royalties for local musicians coming from international listeners in 2024, according to figures from Spotify. The research also found radio still plays a role. A quarter of music fans still tune in to discover new music, with ABC station triple j a popular source. An economic snapshot of the local sector showing a direct contribution of almost $3 billion to the national economy was part of three industry research reports released on Thursday. Aussie music lovers feel a sense of pride when they hear Australian music, but their playlists are actually dominated by pop from the US and Britain. While 71 per cent of listeners love to hear Australian tunes, and two thirds want to hear more, only one in three music fans make an effort to seek out new Australian music. It's a big contradiction revealed in landmark research by Music Australia, the federal government's music development and funding body. A massive 98 per cent of local listeners discover musicians via streaming, but more than half (51 per cent) don't think about whether an artist is Australian when they are looking for new tunes. Of the top 10,000 artists streamed in Australia during 2024, just eight per cent were Australian, while more than half were from the US, according to entertainment analytics firm Luminate. It seems the sheer convenience of personalised playlists delivered via an algorithm might be stopping music fans discovering Australian artists - and that's a problem for musicians like Sara Storer. The ARIA-award winning country musician is releasing her eighth solo album titled Worth Your Love, and says the music industry has completely transformed since her first release back in 2001. "For a young person, especially a young Aussie artist trying to get out there, I'd be terrified. Where do you start?" she said. Despite building an inter-generational audience over decades, the Darwin-based musician can no longer rely on album sales, and even solid streaming figures don't add up to a viable income. "There's no income from streaming. It looks good on paper and you think, well, I should be making a few bucks, but you don't see anything," said Storer. "All my money is made through live performance. I rely heavily on ticket sales, which is like a roller coaster." The contradiction between listener sentiment and behaviour could be the basis of a campaign for actively discovering local music - a bit like the 'Life. Be in it' health campaign of the 1980s - suggested Music Australia director Millie Millgate. "We can remind Australian audiences what these bands are doing overseas and encourage them not to miss out - like, don't miss out on your own party," said Millgate. "There's no one single bullet, but if audiences can be mobilised to do their part and really seek out Australian new music, it would go an incredible way." And the Music Australia research suggests we could potentially Aussify Spotify: listeners like the idea of a dedicated Australian music streamer, with 42 per cent saying it's something they would pay for. Melbourne rock band Amyl and the Sniffers are one act making it big on the global stage, and when the band appeared on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon recently, singer Amy Taylor's top was made from two classic Aussie thongs. It's a big effort to demonstrate a sense of national pride - but it seems many Aussie musos are actually getting more love overseas, with more than 80 per cent of royalties for local musicians coming from international listeners in 2024, according to figures from Spotify. The research also found radio still plays a role. A quarter of music fans still tune in to discover new music, with ABC station triple j a popular source. An economic snapshot of the local sector showing a direct contribution of almost $3 billion to the national economy was part of three industry research reports released on Thursday. Aussie music lovers feel a sense of pride when they hear Australian music, but their playlists are actually dominated by pop from the US and Britain. While 71 per cent of listeners love to hear Australian tunes, and two thirds want to hear more, only one in three music fans make an effort to seek out new Australian music. It's a big contradiction revealed in landmark research by Music Australia, the federal government's music development and funding body. A massive 98 per cent of local listeners discover musicians via streaming, but more than half (51 per cent) don't think about whether an artist is Australian when they are looking for new tunes. Of the top 10,000 artists streamed in Australia during 2024, just eight per cent were Australian, while more than half were from the US, according to entertainment analytics firm Luminate. It seems the sheer convenience of personalised playlists delivered via an algorithm might be stopping music fans discovering Australian artists - and that's a problem for musicians like Sara Storer. The ARIA-award winning country musician is releasing her eighth solo album titled Worth Your Love, and says the music industry has completely transformed since her first release back in 2001. "For a young person, especially a young Aussie artist trying to get out there, I'd be terrified. Where do you start?" she said. Despite building an inter-generational audience over decades, the Darwin-based musician can no longer rely on album sales, and even solid streaming figures don't add up to a viable income. "There's no income from streaming. It looks good on paper and you think, well, I should be making a few bucks, but you don't see anything," said Storer. "All my money is made through live performance. I rely heavily on ticket sales, which is like a roller coaster." The contradiction between listener sentiment and behaviour could be the basis of a campaign for actively discovering local music - a bit like the 'Life. Be in it' health campaign of the 1980s - suggested Music Australia director Millie Millgate. "We can remind Australian audiences what these bands are doing overseas and encourage them not to miss out - like, don't miss out on your own party," said Millgate. "There's no one single bullet, but if audiences can be mobilised to do their part and really seek out Australian new music, it would go an incredible way." And the Music Australia research suggests we could potentially Aussify Spotify: listeners like the idea of a dedicated Australian music streamer, with 42 per cent saying it's something they would pay for. Melbourne rock band Amyl and the Sniffers are one act making it big on the global stage, and when the band appeared on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon recently, singer Amy Taylor's top was made from two classic Aussie thongs. It's a big effort to demonstrate a sense of national pride - but it seems many Aussie musos are actually getting more love overseas, with more than 80 per cent of royalties for local musicians coming from international listeners in 2024, according to figures from Spotify. The research also found radio still plays a role. A quarter of music fans still tune in to discover new music, with ABC station triple j a popular source. An economic snapshot of the local sector showing a direct contribution of almost $3 billion to the national economy was part of three industry research reports released on Thursday.

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