
Spice Alley, Chippendale, New South Wales © Destination NSW
8 of Sydney's best cheap eats
Sydney has some of the best top-end cuisine in the world, but it also has a food scene with great depth and diversity.
By Paul Chai
You don't have to reserve an expensive fine dining table to enjoy Sydney's buzzing food scene. There's a range of affordable dining, from boutique burgers to Asian restaurants serving simple, honest food with flavours that will linger long after you leave. Here are just a few of Sydney's best cheap eats.
Mamak

Mamak, Sydney, New South Wales © Mamak
Where: Locations in the city centre and Chatswood.
A mamak stall in Malaysia serves local street food: spicy fried noodles, rich curries and roti, a flat bread with rich, thick dipping sauces. You will get the same delights in this award-winning Sydney restaurant of the same name. Try the kari ayam (a rich chicken curry), the sambal sotong (delicate rings of calamari wok-fried with a fresh chilli sauce), or rojak (a Malaysian salad with tofu and vegetables covered in a dark, spicy peanut sauce). Dine in at Mamak where bustling tables are surrounded by lush, red walls, or join the queue for takeaway that snakes along the front of the restaurant most days.
Burger Project

Burger Project, Australia Wide © Burger Project
Where: Locations in the city centre and Bondi Junction.
This is fast food done by celebrity Sydney chef Neil Perry. This is not only the cheapest way to sample Perry's famous food, it is one of the best tasting, best value things you will find between two slices of bread. Burger Project is all about provenance, with ingredients including Cape Grim beef from Tasmania (thought to be among the best grass-fed beef in the world). The venues are light, white and simple, in keeping with the upmarket fast food approach, so your Aussie burger (with beetroot and special sauce) will come on a plastic tray, and your wine in a plastic cup. But this is a world away from the plastic food of many fast food chains.
Spice Alley

Spice Alley, Chippendale, New South Wales © Destination NSW
Unmissable experience
Spice Alley is also home to KOI Dessert Bar where you can have a plated dessert experience or delectable high tea.
Where: Chippendale
Sydney's current suburb of cool, Chippendale, is home to Spice Alley: a collection of four kitchens in a laneway, which have come together to create a hawker street similar to those in Singapore and Malaysia. These stalls are run by some of the best Asian chefs in Sydney. Alex Lee Kitchen offers a slice of Singapore with roti (Indian flatbread) and Singapore's national dish of chicken rice. Old Jim Kee seeks to emulate a kopitiam, a type of coffee shop popular in Singapore and Malaysia, serving curry puffs, fried noodles and sweet coffee. At Bang Luck, things have a Vietnamese accent, and Hong Kong Diner celebrates hot pots and congee.
Smoking Panda
Where: City centre
A little bit LA, a little bit classic pub fare, this quirky spot serves up delicious cocktails alongside fun and affordable bar snacks. Tuck into the Peri Peri chicken burger or Szechuan salt and pepper squid or ask the bar staff what the pizza of the day is.
Dumplings & Beer
Where: Locations in Potts Point, Darlinghurst, Drummoyne and Randwick.
There is an artful simplicity in the naming of this restaurant and it's in the dumplings, too. At Dumplings & Beer you get pan-fried pork and cabbage dumplings, scallops and chives dim sum and the ever-popular xiao long bao (steamed pork dumplings with soup inside). It is all served in a fun and friendly Asian-inspired fit-out with Chinese-language newspapers covering the table tops, zig-zagged patterned stools and street art wall murals.
Belles Hot Chicken

Belles Hot Chicken, Sydney, New South Wales © Lewis McQueen
Where: Locations in the city centre, Barangaroo and the Tramsheds.
Belles is a rock 'n' roll diner with bright signage and loud music, serving up southern-style fried chicken with five different levels of spice. You can choose drumsticks or wings, a side of Carolina slaw, and a range of dipping sauces including Belles blue cheese and peach BBQ sauce. Your order will be served in a red basket lined with chequered paper.
Pastizzi Café
Where: Newtown
A pastizzi is a traditional Maltese pastry filled with simple fillings such as cheese, but at this local favourite, in the cool inner city suburb of Newtown, the diamond-shaped Maltese morsels are given a modern twist. You might get fillings such as beef curry, chilli con carne, or chocolate and ricotta. In Malta these pastries are fast food, and no one lingers long in Pastizzi Café’s cosy, white-tiled shopfront. Just grab a "Maltese pie" and head back out to explore King Street, the bustling main artery of this trendy neighbourhood.
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Rosso Pomodoro
Where: Locations in Balmain and Bondi Junction.
The affluent harbourside suburb of Balmain is home to some of Sydney's best, and cheapest, pizzas, with locals queuing to eat at Rosso Pomodoro. This is authentic Naples-approved pie topped with only the best ingredients, such as prosciutto, shaved parmesan and fresh herbs. Grab a bruschetta all’aglio (garlic bruschetta) to start and give a pizze bianchi (white base) a try, topped with gorgonzola cheese, ham and mushroom. The room is as simply dressed as the pizzas, with colourful chairs and a few paintings decorating the walls.