Asado | Argentinian BBQ - Bar & Grill

Asado | Argentinian BBQ - Bar & Grill

South American food with a Spanish focus.

Asado | Southbank offers contemporary Argentinian barbecue with a share-style menu in a dramatic 250-seat venue.

Tapas to start includes pan con tomate (toast smeared with olive oil and fresh tomato); salt cod croquettes; charred baby octopus; and a bowl of artichoke hearts, chunky and creamy, served with cherry tomatoes and vinegar - a dish that'll have you dreaming of markets in the south of Spain.


The Herald Sun Digital Edition: No siestas in Southbank

The group behind the CBD's South American faves, San Telmo, Pastuso and Palermo, have fired up their fourth venue in Southbank.

Asado, named after the open fire pit that's the centrepiece of its kitchen, will offer contemporary Argentinian barbecue with a share-style menu in a dramatic 250-seat venue.

Whole beasts - such as O'Connor beef, Gippsland lamb and Western Plains Pork - will grace the asado as well as a 3m charcoal parrilla grill overseen by executive chef Ollie Gould (ex-Stokehouse ).

Empanadas, ceviche and dulce de leche desserts will also feature prominently, as well as gourmet canned seafood imported from Spain, including varieties of mussels, tuna and octopus not found in Australia.

'The tuna is just out of this world, it melts in your mouth,' co-owner Renee McConnell said.

'The mussels are different as well. I love mussels and thought 'why eat them out of a can?' but the boys went over to Spain for a reconnaissance trip to where the seafood comes out of the water and straight to the cannery, and it's family run and so, so fresh.'

Drinks stick to theme, too, with sangria and Argentinian wines, including exclusive imports from the Mendoza region.

McConnell said Asado was the group's first restaurant 'hiding in plain sight' . 'All the others have been backstreet, laneways or a bit hard to find ... so we're making a statement here that 'we're here' ,' she said.

'We have the most windows we've ever had in any venue so everyone's feeling good about working here - fresh air and sunlight.'

The corner site has had a handsome fit-out , with cow hide feature panels, plump leather booths, a giant mosaic wall depicting a gaucho, and, to come, a feature chandelier made from vintage soda siphons.

It will also have a dedicated bar space, a private dining area for up to 50 and an outside area evoking Buenos Aires' cobblestone streets.

A separate side 'sandwicheria' offering steak sandwiches with chimichurri, choripan (hot dogs) and coffees to nearby workers is due to open in coming weeks.

MEGAN MILLER | HeraldSun

broadsheet.com.au: Asado Bar and Grill

The team behind San Telmo, Pastuso and Palermo has something of a monopoly on South American food in Melbourne. Each of their restaurants follows a well-oiled formula of grilled meats, big flavours - and cowhide. In August 2018, they added Asado to the domain.

The other three restaurants are designed to feel rustic, trinkets co-owners David and Michael Parker collected from Argentina part of the fit-out. But beyond Asado's huge red neon sign on Southbank's polished concrete boardwalk there are no trinkets, just a modern, tan-leather-filled dining room.

While similarly focused whole-beast barbeque restaurant Mjølner invests in one-of-a-kind handmade steak knives, Asado feels more like a gleaming hotel bar, with every detail matching a theme. Tables are set with identical, Asado-branded knives.

Asado is also bigger than its sibling venues, with 250 seats inside and out, a private dining room and, on the other side of a wall of Argentinian wines, a takeaway sandwich shop.

Unlike the traditional Argentinian food of San Telmo and Pastuso, and Palermo that nods to Argentina's Italian influences, Asado has a Spanish focus. Tapas to start includes pan con tomate (toast smeared with olive oil and fresh tomato); salt cod croquettes; charred baby octopus; and a bowl of artichoke hearts, chunky and creamy, served with cherry tomatoes and vinegar - a dish that'll have you dreaming of markets in the south of Spain.

Beef tongues are brined for a day, cooked for 12 hours, then sliced thinly, skewered and flamed on an intensely hot, custom fine-mesh grill (similar to a Japanese Hibachi).

The custom stainless steel asado fire pit (used in Argentina to barbeque, usually outdoors) and charcoal parrilla (pronounced 'pa-ri-sha', a flat grill over coals) are each roughly a metre and a half in width, and used about half of the long menu.

The fire pit fits two whole animals, and more - sometimes whole chickens or vegetables - on the rack above.

Of the group's four restaurants, Palermo, which opened in 2017, was the first of the group's four restaurants to use the asado fire pit as well as the parrilla. Executive chef Ollie Gould, formerly of Stokehouse, Gould is now a confident asador (pit-master).

The outrageously tender pork is carved so each portion has a mix of cuts: ribs, some loin, belly, and squares of crackling on top.

Flank steak, eye fillet and bone-in strip loin from O'Connor beef are all cooked for around 10 minutes over the parrilla.

The parrilla is also used to cook vegetables, such as padron peppers, whole onions slow-roasted in their skins, and grilled carrots with thick black bar marks, served with goat's curd and black cabbage cream.

Source: broadsheet.com.au


❊ Address ❊


 ⊜  6 Riverside Quay  Southbank  View Map
 ✆ Telephone: (03) 9088 8600
6 Riverside Quay SouthbankVictoria(03) 9088 8600




❊ Web Links ❊


Asado | Argentinian BBQ - Bar & Grill 

❊ Also See... ❊


Palermo | Argentinian Steakhouse

Pastuso | Peruvian Restaurant


Disclaimer: Check with the venue (web links) before making plans, travelling or buying tickets.

Accessibility: Contact the venue for accessibility information.





Update Page

Asado | Argentinian BBQ - Bar & Grill