November 23, 2024
Mankoushe has been one of our neighbourhood favourites for well over a decade, and we don't manage to stop in as often as we'd like. All year, every time they pop into my instagram feed, I've been telling myself that we're overdue to stop in for brunch.
The menu is simple and savoury, with most items baked in the wood-fired oven; three days per week there's a lunch plate ($18), there's a small selection of dense sweets at the counter, and custards or rice puddings spiked with fruit in the fridge. Veg*ns are always well cared for, while coeliacs might prefer to avoid the prevalence of flour.
I ordered the zataar bread ($5) toasted and filled with tomato, cucumber, onion, olives and mint ($4). The bread's a little thinner and grainier than it used to be and I like that! I picked out the onion but, in a big step for me, I left the black olives in. They were the right salty seam through the fresh salad and earthy, spiced bread. (Maybe it's time to update our bio.)
Michael can rarely look past a shakshuka ($19) when it's on offer and this was the hearty dish he hoped for: eggs dressed with tomatoes, capsicum, onion, garlic, cumin and paprika with a side of the same wholemeal pita.
We both enjoyed glasses of blood orange juice ($7 each) and Michael added his requisite long black ($4). We keep coming back to Mankoushe because we always leave feeling nourished.
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You can read about one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten of our previous visits to Mankoushe.
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Mankoushe
323 Lygon St, Brunswick East
9078 9223
Accessibility: There is a small step up through a narrow entry. Tables are regular height, chairs have backs, and furniture is medium-spaced across the floor. We ordered at our table and paid at a low counter. We didn't visit the toilets.