Le Foote isn’t just a French bistro, it’s the kind of place that understands its role in the grand, timeworn ritual of eating well. It sits in Sydney’s Rocks, a neighborhood where the past still lingers, stitched into the cobblestones and the salt air drifting in from the harbor. An ode to the French bistro and wine bar, it’s a place of quiet corners and sunlit courtyards, where time slows and a good meal unfolds the way it should- gradually, with purpose, and always with wine.
The menu is built on the canon; escargot dripping in garlic butter, plateau de fruits de mer, grilled rock lobster, steak frites and French onion soup with that bronzed, blistered cap of cheese. Chunks of baguette, smeared thick with funky, salty butter. A salade Lyonnaise that respects the ratio of egg to lardon. And, naturally, martinis- sharp, cold, correct or the kind of Burgundy that makes you sit back in your chair and think about staying a little longer.
Drop in for an afternoon martini with friends, take your time over a long, slow meal in the courtyard, or grab a barstool for steak frites and a glass of something deep and brooding. Come pre-theatre, or post a gallery opening at the MCA, or simply because Tuesday deserves better.
A great bistro isn’t just a restaurant. It’s a rhythm. A ritual. A reason to sit a little longer, talk a little louder, and let the night unfold. At Le Foote, we’re here for it.