logo
Slow burn: Belmont's Riwayat brings the story (and flavours) of Pakistan to life

Slow burn: Belmont's Riwayat brings the story (and flavours) of Pakistan to life

The Age15-05-2025

Three men walk into a former strip club and turn it into a buoyant Pakistani restaurant serving cooked-to-order karahi, roghni naan, and other lesser-seen dishes from home.
Previous SlideNext Slide
Pakistani$$$$
I really should have eaten at Riwayat a long time ago.
The restaurant has been on my Google Map of Perth-places-to-eat-at for almost two years. It's around the corner from the gym. And whenever I chat to Pakistani rideshare and taxi drivers about where they eat when they're homesick, Riwayat's name almost always comes up.
But more important than any of this: the main reason I really should have eaten at Riwayat a long time ago is because it's home to some outstanding, uncompromising Pakistani cooking.
In Urdu, 'riwayat' means history; an origin story. Riwayat's riwayat started in late 2020, when Mubeen Shahzad, Hassan Shahzad (no relation) and Aamir Sohail opened a modest, 35-seat Pakistani restaurant in Huntingdale.
The restaurant soon outgrew its original address and the three pals from Pakistan's Chakwal region began scouting for a new home. This search ended in December 2021 after the trio chanced on a cavernous abandoned eatery on the outskirts of the Belmont Business Park.
I don't think it's unkind to say that Riwayat won't be winning awards for its design any time soon. The wooden flooring is battle-scarred, the furnishings are functional and all those hard surfaces amplify the roar of the dining room something wicked. A small al fresco is beautified with fake grass and white-painted pots and planters: an unusual decor choice, perhaps, for a Pakistani restaurant.
Equally surprising: Riwayat isn't the first hospitality business that's traded out of this unexpected location. In the late '60s, this site housed Nanking, one of Perth's few places serving Chinese food at the time. Nanking then gave way to Studio 7: a strip club that offered, I hear, a decent male revue show.
Nowadays, the only meat is chicken and baby goat (although the latter is listed on the menu, South Asian-style, as 'mutton'). As Pakistan is an Islamic nation, Riwayat is a pork-free establishment, but guests can BYO. ('Would you like a wine glass or a whisky glass?' asked the waiter when I mentioned that I'd brought my own drinks. Single malts and Pakistani food: the next big thing?)
Beef, interestingly, is also absent. While beef might be halal, it's not eaten by Hindus and Sikhs: two other religious groups practising in the subcontinent's north. In the name of inclusivity, Riwayat's owners – who are also its cooks – chose not to put beef on the menu so that more people could dine there. In light of the region's history of religious conflict and the recent stand-off between Pakistan and India, this gesture feels especially thoughtful.
Similar consideration is also applied to the preparation of said meats, not least when it comes to the signature karahi. Named after the stainless-steel hubcap of a pan that it's cooked in, karahi is a primal, unairbrushed curry marrying the lush viscosity of cooked dairy (yoghurt, dairy) to the bite of ginger and black pepper.
Crucially, every karahi – full– or half-serve, chicken or bone-in goat – is cooked to order until the contents of the pan have surrendered into a murky, oily and deeply satisfying mass. This style of a la minute cookery, naturally, can't be rushed. Our mutton karahi took almost 40 minutes to be ready after we ordered it. Curry in a hurry this ain't.
Riwayat regulars, however, know the thing to do is to pre-order karahi for a particular time. Now you know too. I also know that the glorious roghni naan – a puffy, crisp-bottomed flatbread studded with white sesame seeds, glazed with butter and urgent with smoke from the tandoor – is a carby pleasure that transcends the usual one-per-person guidelines. Next time, I'll go hard on them straight out of the gate.
The tandoor also works its smoky alchemy on grilled meats including the Reshmi chicken seekh kebab: plush, ribbed fingers of mildly spiced mince that are juicy and charry in all the right places. Made with freshly baked wholewheat parathas, the lunchtime-only chicken tikka roll and Riwayat 'burrito' condenses the best of both these tandoor worlds into convenient, on-the-go formats.
Considering Pakistan's proximity to (northern) India, it's no surprise that both countries have dishes in common. (Fun fact: Pakistan is an acronym made up of the regions that came together in 1947 to form this new nation. The P stands for Punjab.)
If you're not au fait with Pakistani cooking, you may be across the joy of hefty vegetable samosas that you might like to try chaat-style (that is, doused in raita, cucumber and chutney). Melty butter chicken is low in tomato and food colouring but high in sweetness from its dairy namesake.
Cooked using split desi chickpeas – they're smaller than the plumper kabuli chickpeas - channa daal's innocuous appearance makes the vegetal sting of its green chilli stowaways all the more surprising. For anyone that's been let down by one gluggy, leaden biryani rice too many, Riwayat's fluffy, high-definition rendition will restore your faith in the genre.
Like every restaurant, Riwayat has areas it could work on – a little more engagement from some staff would go a long way; the onion salad, a side plate of sliced red onions plus a wedge of lemon, is only a salad because it believes it is – but the highs outnumber the lows. For anyone curious about a strain of cooking that's on the rise out west, Riyawat would be a fine first chapter.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘What do you mean?': Half-naked trend you are allowed to be intimidated by
‘What do you mean?': Half-naked trend you are allowed to be intimidated by

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

‘What do you mean?': Half-naked trend you are allowed to be intimidated by

'What do you mean we're not wearing pants anymore?' It was a sentence uttered to me by a friend over a $35 breakfast. He was wearing a puffer jacket, because it was a Saturday, and he is a white man, and he was also beginning his journey into the five stages of Millennial fashion grief — starting with denial. While trying not to dip my boxy blazer sleeve into my smashed avocado, I had to gently tell him that this was the new world order. He then swiftly moved into anger, 'Well, that's ridiculous,' and then onto bargaining, 'Are you sure it isn't just shorter shorts?' Then he sadly spiralled straight into depression, 'I'm getting too old for these trends, and who can pull it off?' Then, eventually, he got to acceptance, 'Maybe with a trench, it'd look cool, or will I just look like a creep?' I'd just dropped quite the bombshell on him by solemnly delivering the news that pants, much like flavoured lip-gloss and berets, unless you're in Paris, not just because you've watched Emily in Paris — are out. It was better he heard it from me than discover it at the local shopping centre, in a few months. There's nothing more confronting than discovering what is cool by what the Cotton On mannequins are dressed in. It's how so many discovered the return of the mico-mini skirt. It is downright embarrassing to learn what is trendy again in the unflattering lighting of a shopping centre. It can make anyone feel like a sad middle-aged woman, no matter how young and hot they are! Not that I would know, of course. I've been grappling with the no-pants news for the last fortnight, but it has been brewing for a while. I've been treating it like an electricity bill and ignoring it, but at this point, I'm going to accept it because celebs are going everywhere without pants! They're at dinners, on Instagram, swanning around fashion events, and heading to red-carpet events. I can't stress enough that they're doing all this without pants! Hailey Bieber was seen rocking a trench without pants, and Kristen Stewart has been doing the no-pants dance. Dakota Johnson was seen ditching pants just after her reported break-up with the man Gwyneth Paltrow consciously uncoupled from, Chris Martin. Oh yeah, and he is in Coldplay too. Even Charli XCX has been known to leave her pants at home, and we all know whatever she's doing is cool; this is the woman who managed to reference her birth control in a song, and it wasn't cringe. We should have seen it coming when Sabrina Carpenter, under the instruction of Pharrell Williams, wore no pants to the Met Gala. Pants much like a footballer's career after a knee injury are over. I don't have any problem with celebrities not wearing pants, like they're celebrities, if they're being weird, I'm more entertained, so go for it, but I know what happens when a trend goes mainstream. It goes from something you see looking edgy on red carpets to something you see looking wrong on someone at Kmart. While my friend may have reached acceptance. I think I'm still in the bargaining phase. 'Okay fine no pants are in, but can we just please not see anyone wearing them at the supermarket?' Everyone's got a line, mine is drawn at no pants in the frozen section.

Sydney Sweeney spotted without pants on
Sydney Sweeney spotted without pants on

News.com.au

time2 days ago

  • News.com.au

Sydney Sweeney spotted without pants on

Sabrina turned the Met Gala into her own power play and proved she's not afraid of a bold hemline. She was reportedly told by Met Gala co-chair Pharrell Williams she should go pantsless because of her short stature. Picture: Angela Weiss/AFP Only Kristen Stewart could make knit underwear on the streets of NYC look like a high-fashion moment. Picture: Gotham/GC Images And another. Photo byfor TAS Rights Management And another. Photo: AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko, File And another. Photo by Gareth Cattermole/TAS24/Getty Images for TAS Rights Management Similarly, the woman behind Brat Summer, Charli XCX is not afraid to show off what she's got. This was after winning Artist of the Year, Song of the Year, Album of the Year and Dance Act during The 2025 BRIT Awards. Photo byAnd she did it again in this viral pic from Coachella alongside Troye Sivan, Lorde and Billie Eilish. Picture: Instagram At the Met Gala, Charli continued the trend, wearing a see-through skirt to show off some leg. Photo by Jamie McCarthy / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP The newcomers are equally loving the trend. Chappell Roan has often performed with either elaborate gowns or in barely there short shorts. Photo byChappell Roan showed some skin at the 2024 MTV Video Music Awards. Photo byAnd Chappell Roan at the Outside Lands Festival 2024, wearing the outfit she dons in the music video for Hot To Go. Photo: Steve Jennings/FilmMagic) But Beyonce often performs with the pantless look as well. Photo by Alex Slitz / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / AFP And wouldn't you if you were Beyonce? Here she was performing at halftime of the 2013 Super Bowl with her Destiny's Child bandmates. Photo byBeyonce wore $4000 Prada sequin hotpants for her husband Jay-Z's 54th birthday. Picture: Instagram/Beyonce And she hasn't held back for her Cowboy Carter era. Photo: BLAIR CALDWELL Or for celebrating Team USA. Even a pregnant Rihanna shared the look at the Dior Womenswear Fall/Winter 2022/2023 show as part of Paris Fashion Week in March 2022. Photo by Stephane Cardinale – Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images Doja Cat is also a fan of the look — at The Daily Front Row's 8th Annual Fashion Los Angeles Awards in April 2024. Photo byDoja also looked great at the 2025 Met Gala. Photo by Dia Dipasupil / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP And Doja took a different spin on it at iHeartRadio's 102.7 KIIS FM Wango Tango in May. Photo bySinger Camilla Cabello rocked this look at the BAFTAS. Photo: Instagram Lady Gaga put her own spin on it at her Chromatica Ball Summer Stadium Tour in 2022. Photo byfor Live Nation Coi Leray turned heads at the 66th GRAMMYS in a barely-there body shirt and -high stilettos, accessorised with a lime green, fluffy jacket on the carpet. Picture:Lisa made a glam case for logo tights at the 2025 Met Gala, teaming a lace black blazer with a matching Louis Vuitton handbag and Pamela inspired updo. Picture:Mrs Justin Bieber, Hailey Bieber was spotted walking down the street in an outfit leaving very little to the imagination. Photo: BACKGRID Hailey on her way to an afterparty after the Met Gala. Picture: BACKGRID And at the Met Gala – she kept the same style. Photo by Dia Dipasupil / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP Actress/model Olivia Culpo at the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit new issue launch and model search winners celebration in 2018. Photo byfor Wynn Nightlife The sheer dresses can't hide the pantsless trend there Olivia Culpo. Photo byfor Matter Wicked star Cynthia Erivo looked stunning at the 2025 Met Gala. Photo byfor The Met Museum/Vogue Julia Fox served Wild West meets runway model as she attended Coachella in this jaw-dropping leather and lace-up look. Picture: Rachpoot/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images Brooklyn and Nicola Peltz Beckham matched in sharp suiting as they stepped out for the ethereal Cloud23 launch party. Picture:Nicola Peltz leaves little to the imagination on a dinner date with her husband Brooklyn Beckham in 2023. Photo: BACKGRID Anya Taylor-Joy at the Hollywood Walk of Fame Star Ceremony honouring her Mad Mad: Furiosa co-star Chris Hemsworth. Photo byAnya Taylor-Joy brought drama to the trend in Paris, pairing opera gloves with a sheer fringe skirt and a deadly stare that could cut glass. Picture:Anya Taylor-Joy isn't afraid to show off her legs, and her fashion sense. Actress Lupita Nyong'o lit up at the Empire State Building while promoting A Quiet Place: Day One, serving power suit energy with a twist (no pants, just fishnets). Picture:Actress Emma Corrin made a bold case for granny chic meets no-pants rebellion at Venice Film Festival in olive knitwear, sheer tights and brogues. Picture:Emma Corrin delivered tuxedo-core with a twist at The Crown finale, pairing a sharp white blazer with sheer floor-length tulle and knee-high boots. Picture:Willow Smith owned the red carpet at the GRAMMYS in a crystal-studded lingerie set and dramatic black coat, pairing bold glamour with sky-high platforms. Picture:Lisa Rinna turned rocked the pink carpet at the LA LGBT Center Gala, with a fierce power-shoulder blazer, sheer stockings, and no pants. Picture:Naomi Campbell turned heads at Milan Fashion Week in a lace-up leather body shirt and thigh-high boots, bringing iconic supermodel energy to the Dsquared2 runway. Picture: Daniele Venturelli/WireImage Kendall Jenner's 2023 Halloween outfit was perfection! She's not concerned about show off what she's got on the red carpet either. Photo byKendall Jenner attends Stuart Weitzman Spring Celebration 2019 in 2019. Photo byfor Stuart Weitzman Emma Chamberlain served Matrix-core at GQ's Men of the Year bash, rocking a leather blazer body shirt, sheer tights, and super-sized sunnies. Picture:Emma Chamberlain attends the Valentino Haute Couture Fall/Winter 2023/2024 show in 2023. Photo by PascalThis might not be pantsless but it's almost the exact opposite from Emma Chamberlain — pantsfull dare we say?!? Photo byBillie Piper brought boardroom drama to the Scoop premiere, pairing pinstripes with sheer tights and a peek of polka dots. Picture: Eamonn M. McCormack/Getty Images Billie Piper at the 2025 BAFTA Television Awards. Photo by Stuart C. Wilson/Getty Images Singer-songwriter, record producer and actor Chloe Bailey, who goes by the stage name Chlöe, isn't afraid of showing off her legs either. Photo: Instagram Former Orange is the New Black star Laverne Cox also reps the trend. Photo by Manoli Figetakis / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP Laverne Cox at the 2019 Casamigos Halloween Party. Photo byfor Casamigos And on the Grammys red carpet. Photo byReality TV star Paige DeSorbo went to Variety's 40 most powerful women in reality TV with a skirt that was hardly covered up. Photo: Instagram American singer-songwriter Kelsea Ballerini went the more subtle look. Photo byfor Michael Kors New Zealand model Georgia Fowler at the 2022 GQ Men Of The Year Awards. Photo by LisaUS model Lourdes Leon attended the 2023 Victoria's Secret New York Fashion Week kick-off event with almost nothing on. Photo by ANGELA WEISS / AFP She was similarly undressed at the Saint Laurent Menswear Fall-Winter 2025/2026 show as part of Paris Fashion Week in January. Photo: BACKGRID Miss Universe Australia 2020 winner Maria Thattil attended the 2022 ARIA Awards wearing very little. Photo by

Parisienne-style restaurant served with a twist: red paint running down naked bodies
Parisienne-style restaurant served with a twist: red paint running down naked bodies

Sydney Morning Herald

time2 days ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Parisienne-style restaurant served with a twist: red paint running down naked bodies

Top restaurateur Chris Lucas and his wife Sarah wanted a Parisienne-style feel in their new four-level Melbourne dining house Maison Batard. The pair gave Mills Gorman Architects and interior designers Mitchell & Eades a functional brief – make three different restaurants and a nightclub in the basement of a building in Bourke Street using design cues from the Lucas' trips to Paris. 'These cues came from a variety of places, from high-end hotels to boutiques, including boutiques such as Balmain and Chanel,' says architect and interior designer, Hayley Mitchell, co-director of Mitchell & Eades, who spent her earlier career based in London and regularly travelled to Paris. 'It wasn't about just reproducing a Parisienne experience, but importantly, creating a certain ambience that would connect to patrons here,' adds Mitchell, who worked closely with interior designer Stef Marsh, an associate of the practice. Maison Batard is thoughtfully concealed behind a fully restored heritage-listed Romanesque Revival facade at 23 Bourke Street that was designed by architect William Salway in 1901 and once housed the former Society restaurant, which opened there in 1932. 'It's been an eight-year project, including working with the heritage facade, a heritage-listed chimney and also creating an entirely new basement,' says architect Craig Gorman, who was mindful from the outset that any addition didn't 'overwhelm the host building' (a phrase used by council and those working in the heritage field). A steel-clad top level enclosing the venue's more informal terrace is only visible from nearby Windsor Place. Beyond the reeded glass windows and steel front door, patrons are immersed immediately in the world of Maison Batard – with travertine floors and aged mirrors on the walls, created by Outlines. The mirrors are aged and rusticated with miniature brass flowers at each corner. There's a high level of detail at every turn including over-scaled lanterns, deep velvet banquette-style seating and armchairs, and a coffered ceiling.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store