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Snug cafe opens in Coorparoo

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In a former Coorparoo trophy shop, it’s set to serve egg drop brioches, omurice with prawns, and eggplant rice, with a small-producer wine list (and shop) to come.

Matt Shea

Brisbane’s restaurateurs have for years lamented this city’s relative lack of smaller tenancies.

It can be a drag on a healthy hospitality scene: smaller venues equal smaller overheads and provide an opportunity, say, for a pair of young chefs with limited backing to throw an idea at the wall and see if it sticks.

Leaham Claydon and Jianne Jeoung outside Snug in Coorparoo.
Leaham Claydon and Jianne Jeoung outside Snug in Coorparoo.Tammy Law

Snug, thankfully, is exactly that.

Leaham Claydon and Jianne Jeoung used to be on the frontlines of Jonathan Barthelmess’s Yoko and Greca restaurants – neighbouring riverside spots that, every lunch and dinner of the year, flex their way through hundreds of diners (Jeoung left Greca in 2021 to cook at Otto, Clarence and then Niky; Claydon finished up as head chef at Yoko on Valentine’s Day). In short, they’re a pair of young guns who would be welcomed into just about any kitchen in the city.

Snug opened last week, serving St Ali coffee and a selection of pastries baked by the Gold Coast’s Brasserie Bread. But a food licence is expected any day, and Claydon and Jeoung will begin serving dishes such as a scrambled egg drop brioche with mozzarella, omurice with prawns and a lemon mentsuyu sauce, and Korean-style creamed corn with artichokes and provolone. There will also be house-baked soft pretzels and salt butter rolls.

The concept was inspired by an early 2023 trip to Korea, during which Claydon and Jeoung realised they wanted to open their own venue.

Snug is serving St Ali coffee and pastries from the Gold Coast’s Brasserie Bread until the upcoming launch of its first food menu.
Snug is serving St Ali coffee and pastries from the Gold Coast’s Brasserie Bread until the upcoming launch of its first food menu.Tammy Law

“Beforehand, we thought, ‘We should do something eventually,’” Jeoung says. “But that trip, we thought, ‘For sure, we have to find [our own venue].’”

“Locals there support small businesses. It’s pretty full-on but they make enough money. They do what they want to do and they’re very unique. Our whole experience there was, ‘We’re going to do it. We’re going to do something for ourselves.’”

Snug occupies a fetching green tenancy just off Chatsworth Road in Coorparoo. A straightforward fit-out – mostly handled by Claydon and Jeoung themselves – is dominated by a spacious dining counter built out of red-stained Tasmanian blackbutt that runs the length of the venue. Benches line the walls, the prime spot at the bifold windows that look out upon the surrounding houses and apartment blocks.

There’s also smart hand-fired tableware produced in Daejeon by Jeoung’s family.

A liquor licence will follow the food. Expect a rotating list of small-producer wines (along with a small wine shop in a downstairs basement space) alongside an evening menu that will include Appellation oysters, raw fish with shiitake mushrooms and wild sesame, pressed bulgogi served with banchan (Korean-style vegetable sides), and eggplant rice finished with spring onion and a spicy soy.

Snug will eventually open late, serving wine and a short menu of Korean-inspired plates.
Snug will eventually open late, serving wine and a short menu of Korean-inspired plates.Tammy Law

But even in its abridged form, Snug has already been a hit, with Coorparoo and Camp Hill locals descending on the venue during its first weekend.

“It was 280 people on Friday and then just kicked on from there,” Claydon says.

“People are particularly excited for the wine bar,” Jeoung adds. “They’d come past when we were getting ready and ask what we were up to, and then say, ‘Great, I need somewhere local where I can just walk home.’”

Open Mon-Tue 6am-3pm, Thu-Fri 6am-3pm, Sat-Sun 7am-3pm.

321 Chatsworth Road, Coorparoo.

instragram/snug.bne

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Matt SheaMatt Shea is Food and Culture Editor at Brisbane Times. He is a former editor and editor-at-large at Broadsheet Brisbane, and has written for Escape, Qantas Magazine, the Guardian, Jetstar Magazine and SilverKris, among many others.

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