While Gitan actually means ‘gypsy’ in French this is one restaurant that we can’t imagine will be going anywhere, anytime soon.
While renowned chef Jacques Reymond epitomises authentic French style he is very much a passionate Australian – having lived here for 32 years.
In his latest venture, L’Hotel Gitan, which opened last November, he combines traditional French cuisine with a very laid-back, Australian feel. Many of the dishes are designed for sharing, and the interior – a magnificently renovated pub – is open, casual and communal.
L’Hotel Gitan is the ‘sister’ restaurant to Reymond’s very successful Bistro Gitan, which offers refined French cuisine with strong Spanish and Italian influences.
Situated on either side of Melbourne’s popular Fawkner Park, Reymond says the two restaurants attract mostly the same local clientele however, “with L’Hotel Gitan we wanted to give our regulars the opportunity to come several times a week – not just once every six months.”
The classic-inspired French menu is divided into three sections: petite (small tapas-style dishes), moyen (entrée size share plates), and plat principal (main course dishes, many of which are cooked in front of guests). Charcuterie is sliced to order and there’s also an impressive rotisserie, used to prepare whole chickens, whole suckling pig, suckling lamb and whole racks of pork.
“This relaxed, communal way of enjoying French cuisine is something I have with my family,” says Reymond. “I find it very Australian. It involves sharing, people interacting with each other, feeling happy and relaxed, but still eating very good food.”
In keeping with its honest, inviting menu one of L’Hotel Gitan’s most distinguishing features is its vast, open-plan kitchen.
“We want our customers to feel comfortable as soon as they walk in and to have direct interaction with the chefs who are preparing their meal”, says Reymond. “This was our vision: everything prepared in the open.”
There are three key areas to L’Hotel Gitan’s kitchen: the main kitchen, a prep kitchen in the rear and a pastry section. To keep up with demand there is currently 16 staff in the kitchen and Reymond hopes to soon have a team of 20.
While he is used to being very hands-on Reymond has taken a step back with L’Hotel Gitan. He is closely involved as a consultant but leaves the day-to-day management up to his four children. This family-run atmosphere also adds to its relaxed, welcoming appeal.
“Our food is very accessible. It’s comfort food, but well executed”, says Reymond. “However the produce is also from the same suppliers that I used to use at Jacques Reymond Restaurant. The best of the best,” he adds.
Since opening in November the restaurant has been busy. It produces 50 covers for lunch and 150 for dinner every night. L’Hotel Gitan is certainly on the path to a bright future …and we don’t need the tea leaves or a crystal ball to tell us that.
IN THE KITCHEN
When it came to the kitchen fit-out Reymond installed a custom-built stove and used the sleek aesthetics of the Waldorf Bold range for the open commercial kitchen.
He knew when to stick with a good thing, saying, “I’ve installed Waldorf many times: at my first restaurant in Richmond, at Jacques Reymond Restaurant, at Arintji in Federation Square and even at the two resorts I consult for in Fiji”.
Reymond also invested in deep fryers for the back kitchen, stoves for the preparation kitchen, some Blue Seal S Line combi ovens and a Turbofan oven.
He couldn’t be happier. “I have always been very satisfied with the equipment quality and the after-service I have received,” he says. “Moffat is a great brand.”
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