Categories
Australian Fast Food

Chargrill Charlie’s – Drummoyne NSW Restaurant Review

Our colleague from India is moving interstate to Victoria, and asked us for a suggestion of the pinnacle of Western cuisine to try in Sydney before he leaves. This was my friend’s suggestion. This review is from a visit to the Drummoyne store, but I assume can be applied broadly to any of the outlets in the chain.

The half chicken & chips ($15.90) was actually quite good. The chicken was very similar in flavour profile to that of a rotisserie chicken from Coles or Woolworths, but much moister and fresher. Charlie’s advertised smoke-free charcoal cooking technique did produce a less burnt product than for example El Jannah, whilst still retaining some charcoal flavour.

The chicken roll with mayo and gravy ($13.90) was very moist and flavourful, with enough tomato and lettuce inside to create a sense of healthiness similar to that of a KFC twister.

Full disclosure, I had this charlie’s chop salad ($7.90) after a day in the fridge. One of the problems I faced ordering at Chargrill Charlie’s was that very few of the online reviews actually mentioned anything about the chicken. Most reviewers raved only about the salad, but again without any direction as to which one to get. This was fine. I think it would’ve been bette rwarm.

I’d never had Chargrill Charlie’s before. It seems like Red Rooster for the Harris Farm crowd. The quality was pretty good, but I don’t know that I’d recommend it to a visiting cardiologist, dignitary, or ex-teen heartthrob Justin Bieber as a representation of peak Australian cuisine.

I’ve also been informed by my friend that her peak recommendations for this place are: “marinated chicken drumstick” and “avocado vinagarette salad”, and that I ordered the wrong thing.

Chargrill Charlie’s Drummoyne
172 Lyons Rd, Drummoyne NSW 2047

Categories
Vietnamese

Viet House Rolls – Westmead NSW Restaurant Review

There are a few places in Westmead to get a banh mi these days, and this recently opened place at the bottom of the UWS building is my least favourite one.

I had the crispy pork roll ($12.50 with a can of drink) on my one and only visit to Viet House Rolls, and it was not worth it. First, credit where credit is due: the bread was nice and crusty on the outside, whilst remaining soft on the inside, allowing me to avoid oral mucosal injury. Outside of this, injurious factors included a truly depressing few strands of carrot, pork crackling that came out of a plastic take-away container (if I wanted this I would’ve gone to the grocery store?), and just like. Normal mayo, without a hint of Vietnameseness.

What added insult to injury is that they won’t sell you this roll without a can of soft drink, making it the most expensive roll in the area, and not even good.

There’s a reason that palliative care, the trauma surgeons, my former consultant, and basically any other banh mi aficionado in and around the Westmead area goes to Thuy Hot Bread across from the train station, an absolute local institution that’s been around since at least when I was primary school.

(Full disclosure, I was once salty that I tried to get banh mi from here with a friend after work, within their posted opening hours online, only to find them closed. I am no longer salty about this, extrapolating what I know about the quality and price from this roll, and considering what we ate instead that night.)

Viet House Rolls
T11/160 Hawkesbury Rd, Westmead NSW 2145

Categories
Dessert Korean

Siroo Rice Cake Cafe – West Ryde NSW Restaurant Review

This songpyeon is a rice cake dessert with variable filling, slightly salty and sweet but not too sweet on the inside. I had never had these before, but they are a candidate to have again in the future.

The green tea and red bean bingsoo (medium – $25) was different to all other bingsoos I’ve had with its dusting of injeolmi. I don’t really know if I’m at a stage where I can differentiate between the nuances of different bingsoos. This post serves only as evidence that I ate it. Adequate sizing for 4 adults post Korean BBQ.

Siroo Rice Cake Cafe
981 Victoria Rd, West Ryde NSW 2114
(02) 9807 8718

Categories
Middle Eastern

Mina Bakery – Westmead NSW Restaurant Review

I had this half meat half cheese pizza ($7) towards the tail end of my overnight on-call shift when I had to sleep at work. Alhamdulillah no one tried to have a stroke in Western Sydney overnight.

Physically it was no better or worse than your average half meat half cheese pizza, but emotionally, eating it on the footpath working back to work ready to do my third of five 12 hour days in a row, it was there for me when the NSW public health system was not.

Mina Bakery Westmead
Shop 6/24 Railway Pde, Westmead NSW 2145
(02) 8872 9712

Categories
Chinese

Xi’an Restaurant (西安风味小吃) – Ashfield NSW Restaurant Review

One of my favourite things about Xi’an restaurants is that they are almost invariably named “Xi’an Restaurant”. We ate here in the first week of having moved house, in a flurry of cheap and cheerful dines out whilst we were still unpacking our kitchen.

The food was generally good. This Chinese pork burger Roujiamo 肉夹馍 ($8) was moist and meaty, flavourful though lacking any visible vegetables or herbs.

The Pan Fried Chives Pancake 韭菜盒子  ($7) is a relative favourite of mine. This example had a good crispiness to the skin, which was kept thin so as to maximise the filling to pastry ratio. A good example in a sea of good examples.

The Rice with Yuxiang Eggplant 鱼香茄子 ($16) was a vegetarian version of the dish, well priced, tasty, and very filling. Something my partner enjoys and I am yet to make an edible version of.

Comments
Though readers will note that only the roujiamou was particularly Xi’an in origin, this restaurant executed good versions of Northern as well as Sichuan cuisine at good prices. I’m sure we will be back for more.

UPDATE 13/03/2026


I went back by myself last night, about half an hour before close, for a bowl of noodles. I kind of rationalised going back without my wife by it being just a quick meal, that was ultimately going to be cheaper than buying groceries and cooking for one. The Biang Biang Noodles 𰻞𰻞面 were $17. The service was fast, and the bowl was gigantic. The sauce or gravy of the noodles was extremely delicious, with lots of umami flavour contributed to by the variety of ingredients including egg, pork (with cubes of both lean and fatty meat), as well as tomato, a natural source of glutamate.

The cubes of potato added a richness and thickness to the soup that would have been difficult to achieve with tomato alone, ensuring that flavours clung to each road strand of noodle. The noodles themselves were a bit more soft and well cooked than I would have expected, however thicker parts of the noodle did retain a signature kind of bounce to them, which was I liked.

It was overall a good bowl of noodles at a reasonable price, that I wouldn’t hesitate to recommend.

Xi’an Restaurant (西安风味小吃)
30 Hercules St, Ashfield NSW 2131
0426 092 275