Orita's 2 Japanese Restaurant
Behind this Balnarring Village room stands a chef with more than half a century at the Japanese stove, who moved the operation down from a long-held Toorak address to see out a semi-retirement on the Peninsula. What arrives is described as Japanese cooking rendered as a modern art form: personal recipes, careful plating, and a close pairing of food with wine and setting. Sashimi is the heart of it, a trio assorted plate showcasing the day's fish, sitting alongside Peninsula touches like Coffin Bay oysters served natural and a grass-fed beef tenderloin that leans on quality over flourish. The cooking is precise rather than showy, the work of someone with nothing left to prove, and the small dining room in the village shopping centre is run with a curated, unhurried hospitality. It is a destination table for the Mornington Peninsula's Japanese eating, the kind of place regulars book for an anniversary or a considered lunch after a morning among the wineries. Portions and pace suit lingering, and the wine list is chosen to sit with the food rather than upstage it. For the region, it offers something quietly rare: traditional Japanese technique carried by a single, long career, unhurried and personally signed.