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The Auckland iteration of Melbourne's extraordinarily famous restaurant has tapas you won't want to share
MOVIDA
Cuisine: Modern Spanish
Address: 52 Tyler St, Britomart
Phone: (09) 302 9888
Drinks: Fully licensed
Reservations: Accepted
From the menu: Anchovy tapa $8ea; lobster croquetta $8ea; potato bomba $9ea; beef tartare $10ea; oyster mushrooms $28; asparagus salad $18; lamb backstrap $45.
Six months before my first trip to Melbourne, a local sent me clear instructions: “You must go to MoVida and you must try the anchoa tapa. I pop in and eat four of them with a glass of wine whenever I’m near.”
Chefs dream of creating a restaurant so famous that it’s almost impossible to get in, serving dishes so iconic that even the people who can’t get a table still know what they would have ordered if they’d made it inside.
MoVida’s Frank Camorra is a chef for whom that dream has come true, and fortunately for us he’s chosen to bring it to Auckland, pairing his unique (well, it was unique until everyone started imitating it) style of Spanish food to the taonga of New Zealand cuisine: pāua and crayfish, most obviously, but also clams and kingfish and no doubt whatever other seaborne critter is unlucky enough to take the bait.
Chef Frank has teamed up with Savor (Azabu, Amano, and Ostro before they dismantled it and moved in Movida), presumably one of the few local restaurant groups that could plan and execute at the scale required to make this work.
But for now, Frank — easy to spot with his salt and pepper beard — is in town and at the pass, re-wiping a plate when it is not gleaming sufficiently, allowing himself a chuckle when one of the Auckland chefs proudly puts a carefully balanced tapa in front of him and it falls over on its side.
At some stage he’ll return to Australia, which will be the real test, but for now nothing comes out that isn’t perfect and you get the strong impression that everyone around him is learning fast.
Before you get as far as the food you should make time for a drink on the other side of the room, in a bar branded Non Solo Pizza, mystifyingly, where they serve a good range of cocktails in comfy surrounds.
My wife Victoria arrived earlier than me and was having such a good time she almost looked disappointed when I showed up, though her analysis of the chilli margarita — “as close as I’ve ever tasted to your ones” — was clearly designed to make me feel valued.
I drank a blood orange and tequila combo that went down very easily but I was craving a cold dry sherry, available only from the restaurant side of the room, and the best possible wine match for this sort of food.
While Ostro was light and glassy, MoVida is warm and comfortable — with red leather everywhere and a big wooden bar built into the middle of the room. There are a lot of staff and they are all very busy, walking briskly (and in one case jogging) around the large room.
I was spotted early and got the full restaurant critic treatment, but to be fair to them they weren’t obsessed with having their top person hog our table — other waiters came and went and all of them had the knowledge and confidence to answer questions and pick favourites from the menu if required.
We were told that each tapa was only enough for one but this didn’t turn out to be true, and if there was one downer it was that the amount we ate early on rather ruined us for what was to come.
Like, crumbed croquettes filled with leek and lobster — great! But they were the size of chocolate eclairs and we could have done one between two, if not four of us, and been just as happy.
READ: Origine Is The Kind Of Fine French Restaurant We Haven’t Had Before
The sliders were big enough to share too, though I would have had difficulty giving any of mine away.
Restaurants tend to be locked into serving calamari a particular way but here they take squid rings as just a starting point, frying them then chopping them into pieces and stuffing them into a roll with mayonnaise and fragments of pickled jalapeno.
They’re served on ciabatta — with a little more chew than the classic Depot slider, but it works with the squid, which needs a little tooth-work as well.
I created a major diplomatic incident when I tried to share Victoria’s beautiful beef tartare, which really is just a bite or two, with cured egg on top and a horseradish cracker so fiery it sears through the rest of the mouthful.
From the bigger plates, order the aged wagyu, a spectacular piece of performance art where the bright, paper-thin slices of beef around the edge of the dish are folded in front of you to create a sort of edible mandala featuring, in the centre, truffled potato foam and a stirrable soft-poached egg.
Save room for what might be the city’s best lamb dish — juicy medallions of backstrap with Moorish spices rubbed into the surface and tiny slivers of fat crisped up under the grill, served with silky eggplant and salty egg roe.
But hey, don’t miss the oyster mushrooms — with a vinegary tang of oloroso sherry, crunchy potato chips for texture (once again egg yolk is used as a simple, rich dressing here).
And there’s the raw asparagus salad with stracciatella which — okay look, I think to get through this menu you’re going to have to make two reservations: one with a rowdy group of friends, and another with someone you love enough to share your deepest hopes and fears, if not your beef tartare.
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