No matter how long you've lived in Melbourne, there are always treasures you won't have noticed down a laneway or through an arcade.
, a restaurant specialising in Indonesian Padang cuisine, is one these spots you wish you'd discovered earlier. originates from the Indonesian province of West Sumatra but its deliciousness has taken it across the archipelago and over to Australia.You'll recognise Padang restaurants by the myriad of plates - think beef rendang, chilli eggplant, curried fish, potato patties and sambal - stacked up behind shopfront windows or on tables. Australian regulations won't allow such stacking, so husband and wife owners, Afdal Utama and Tika Kartini, have adapted the visuals by placing curries in bain-marie behind glass.While some dishes, like the and the corn fritters come and go, favourites like the (gulai ayam) and the are always on offer.
Three dishes and rice from the bain-marie menu: lamb brain, silver beet and crispy beef lung. Source: Audrey Bourget
Afdal Utama and Tika Kartini at their restaurant Salero Kito. Source: Audrey Bourget
Offal lovers will be in heaven with beef tendon, lamb brain curry and crispy beef lung. If you're new to offal and keen to try, Utama recommends starting with the crispy beef lung, which is like a salty meat cracker.
"Often it's just the concept [of offal] that scares people, but we make them try and they're like 'oh, it's just a cracker', so people like it and order it".
Another way to ease into offal is with Salero Kito's satay. "In Indonesia, you get different meats and cuts for satay, but here, our ox tongue satay got so popular that it's all we do now," says Utama.
Once you've made your selection, you'll be offered a fiery green sambal. Make sure to say yes. "The green sambal is the most popular back home. Sometimes, people come in just to buy that," says Utama.Most customers make a beeline for the bain-marie section but do check out the a la carte menu.
Three dishes and rice from the bain-marie menu: tendon, spicy eggplant and crispy beef. Source: Audrey Bourget
The oxtail soup (sop buntut) will warm you up on cooler days with its fragrant broth simmered with herbs and spices like star anise and clove. There's also soto padang, a hearty soup with beef broth, fried mashed potatoes, mung bean noodles and dendeng (crispy beef).Ayam pop is another Padang specialty. "It's like our version of the . We boil the chicken first with special spices and we make sure it doesn't break. Then, we deep-fry it for 30 seconds and we serve it with rice, silverbeet curry and chilli," explains Utama.
Soto Padang: Crispy beef, mashed fried potatoes and mung bean noodles in a beef soup. Source: Audrey Bourget
The , Indonesian fried rice, is not specifically from West Sumatra, but at only $11, we understand why it's so popular among customers of whom many are students.
But it's not only students; Salero Kito Padang is full of office workers at lunchtime.
The chicken curry and beef rendang are still favourites, however people are becoming more open to trying different cuts of meat, says Utama. "They see it in other cuisines too. In Vietnamese cuisine, you often have tendon in pho and then you have lamb brain in Lebanese and Iranian cuisine," he says.
Ultimately, Utama says he wants people in Melbourne to enjoy the same dishes he relished in West Sumatra.
Tivoli Arcade 18, 235-251 Bourke St, Melbourne
Monday – Saturday 11:30 am – 8:00 pm
Sunday 11:30 am – 4:30 pm
#FEASTER: THE DIVERSITY OF INDONESIAN FOOD
Sumatran egg curry with green sambal (gulai telur)