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    Restaurant in Sydney, Australia

    20 Chapel

    410Pearl Points

    Serious fire cooking, easy to book.

    20 Chapel, Restaurant in Sydney

    About 20 Chapel

    20 Chapel in Marrickville is Sydney's most focused open-fire dining room outside the CBD, built around dry-aged beef and a wood-fired grill by former Rockpool chef Corey Costelloe. Book it for serious meat cookery and an industrial space that earns its atmosphere when full. Easy to book, but weekends fill faster than midweek.

    Is 20 Chapel Worth Booking? Yes — If You Want Serious Fire Cooking in Sydney's Inner West

    The question most people are Googling: is 20 Chapel in Marrickville worth the trip out from the CBD? The answer is yes, with a clear profile in mind. This is the restaurant for the food enthusiast who wants to watch dry-aged beef meet open flame in a space that feels like it was built for exactly that purpose — not a converted pub doing fire cooking as a trend, but a focused venue where the grill is the entire point.

    Chef Corey Costelloe came to 20 Chapel from Rockpool, where he spent years working at the sharper end of Australian steakhouse cooking. That background is visible in the sourcing: the kitchen works with Blackmore Wagyu for its rissoles and dry-ages its beef as a default, not an upgrade. The wood-fired, open-fire grill sits at the centre of the dining room, and the open kitchen means you see the heat and the technique directly. For a guest who cares about how their food is cooked, that transparency matters.

    The room itself earns its own mention. The building carries industrial heritage , exposed materials, scale, weight , but the open grill softens it with warmth. It is a larger space than you might expect for Marrickville, which means the atmosphere on a quiet Tuesday is different from a packed Friday, and that timing decision should factor into your booking. The counter and kitchen-facing seating are worth requesting if you want to watch the fire work.

    Multi-Visit Strategy: What to Prioritise Across Two or Three Visits

    First visit: anchor on the beef. The handkerchief steak , thinly sliced, seared over wood fire , and the Blackmore Wagyu rissoles are the two most distinctive things on the menu. They represent the kitchen's clearest point of view: Australian produce, primal cooking method, enough refinement to justify a proper dining occasion. Pair with something from the local wine list and let the front-of-house guide you through it.

    Second visit: use the beverage list more deliberately. The restaurant carries craft beers and spirits alongside its wine selection, and the staff are reported to know the pairings well. This is a good room to ask questions in. Producers like Coppertree Farm supply the kitchen, and those sourcing decisions extend to what's in the glass, so a more exploratory approach on a second visit rewards the effort.

    Third visit, or for a group: book the room when it's likely to be full. 20 Chapel reads better with energy , the fire, the noise, the theatre of an open kitchen are all more present when the room is working. If you are bringing people who have not been before, a Friday or Saturday evening will make the strongest case for the restaurant.

    For context on where 20 Chapel sits in the broader Sydney fire-cooking conversation, compare it against venues like 6HEAD (which focuses on premium wagyu in a waterfront setting) and AALIA (which takes a different direction entirely with Middle Eastern-influenced modern cooking). 20 Chapel is the more neighbourhood-rooted of these options, which is either a reason to go or a reason to stay in the CBD depending on your evening.

    If fire cooking interests you beyond Sydney, Brae in Birregurra and Attica in Melbourne represent other high-commitment Australian kitchens worth knowing about. For a different city altogether, Bacchus in Brisbane and 2KW Bar & Restaurant in Adelaide each have their own approach to the fine-dining end of the Australian spectrum.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Booking difficulty is rated Easy , you do not need to plan weeks in advance the way you would for a tighter-format venue. That said, weekend evenings fill more reliably, so book at least a week out for Friday or Saturday. Midweek is more flexible. Location: 20 Chapel St, Marrickville NSW 2204 , inner west Sydney, accessible by train to Marrickville station. Not CBD-adjacent, so factor travel into your evening plan. Grill format: Open fire, primarily dry-aged beef. Not the right room if your group skews strongly vegetarian. Drinks: Wine, craft beer, and spirits; staff-guided pairings available. Ambiance: Industrial space with open kitchen; warmer and more theatrical when full.

    For more on eating and drinking in this city, see our full Sydney restaurants guide, our full Sydney bars guide, and our full Sydney hotels guide. If you are planning a broader trip around Australian food, our Sydney wineries guide and experiences guide are worth a look too.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does 20 Chapel handle dietary restrictions?

    The menu is heavily anchored in fire-cooked beef — Blackmore Wagyu rissoles and wood-fired handkerchief steak are the signature draws — so this is not an easy venue for vegetarians or pescatarians. If beef and open-fire cooking are not on the table, Saint Peter (fish-focused) or AALIA (broader produce-driven menu) are better fits. Call ahead if you have specific requirements, as kitchen flexibility on a fire-forward menu can be limited.

    How far ahead should I book 20 Chapel?

    Booking difficulty is rated Easy, so you do not need to plan weeks in advance the way you would for a tighter-format venue like Bennelong or a set-menu-only spot. A few days to a week out should be sufficient for most nights, though weekend prime time may tighten. Book online or by phone to confirm — walk-in is likely possible mid-week.

    Can I eat at the bar at 20 Chapel?

    The venue has an open kitchen with a custom fire grill as the centrepiece, and the layout is designed for guests to watch the cooking. Whether bar seating is available for drop-in dining is not confirmed in the venue data, so call ahead if that is specifically what you want rather than assuming it.

    Is 20 Chapel good for solo dining?

    Yes — the open kitchen and fire grill centrepiece give solo diners something to engage with, and the booking difficulty is Easy enough that a solo reservation should not be a problem. If counter or bar seating exists (the open kitchen format suggests it might), solo is a strong fit. For a comparable solo experience with a tighter format, Rockpool Bar & Grill offers a counter option, but 20 Chapel's relaxed Marrickville setting is less formal.

    What should a first-timer know about 20 Chapel?

    Lead with the beef: the Blackmore Wagyu rissoles and the handkerchief steak are the two dishes that define what this kitchen does. Chef Corey Costelloe came from Rockpool Bar & Grill, so the fire-cooking approach here is technically grounded, not a gimmick. The venue is in Marrickville's inner west — not CBD-adjacent — so factor in the trip. Booking is Easy-rated, so no need to stress the reservation, but do anchor your visit around the wood-fired grill dishes rather than grazing across the menu.

    Location

    20 Chapel St, Marrickville NSW 2204, Australia

    Sydney, Australia

    Compare 20 Chapel

    20 Chapel in Context: Awards and Value
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    20 Chapel20 Chapel, located in the heart of Marrickville, Sydney, is another new entry of the list and a culinary haven where the primal allure of open flames meets refined Australian dining. Conceived by acclaimed chef Corey Costelloe, formerly of Rockpool Bar & Grill, this establishment pays homage to his expertise in flame-centric cooking. Here, the art of cooking over fire is not just a method but a philosophy, delivering dishes that are both robust and nuanced. The menu at 20 Chapel is a testament to Australia’s rich produce and diverse flavours. Signature dishes include the Blackmore Wagyu rissoles, a nostalgic nod to Aussie classics and the handkerchief steak, a thinly sliced cut seared to perfection over the wood-fired grill. Each plate is a harmonious blend of tradition and innovation, showcasing ingredients like Coppertree Farm’s crème fraîche and house-made caramelised chilli. The chefs’ commitment to quality is evident in their meticulous preparation and presentation. The interior design mirrors the restaurant’s culinary ethos. With a custom-made open fire grill as the centrepiece, the space exudes a warm, earthy elegance. The open kitchen allows guests to witness the theatricality of fire-based cooking firsthand, enhancing the dining experience. The ambiance is further enriched by the building’s industrial charm, blending heritage with contemporary design. Complementing the food is an extensive beverage list featuring a curated selection of local and international wines, as well as craft beers and spirits. The knowledgeable staff are adept at guiding diners through pairings that enhance the flavours of each dish. Age Method: Australia Beef Type: Mainly dry aged Grill Type: Open fire grill
    RockpoolWorld's 50 Best
    Saint PeterWorld's 50 Best
    BENTLEY Restaurant & Bar
    Bennelong
    AALIA

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Also Consider

    20 Chapel sits in a different bracket from Rockpool and Bennelong, which operate at the formal, higher-spend end of Sydney dining. If your priority is occasion dining with full-service polish and a premium price point, those rooms deliver more of that register. 20 Chapel is the better call when you want the same quality of sourcing and cooking — dry-aged beef, open fire, serious technique — in a room that does not ask you to dress up or spend at that level. It is also easier to book than either of those venues on short notice.

    Saint Peter and BENTLEY Restaurant & Bar are the stronger comparisons for the food-focused diner who wants depth without formality. Saint Peter is the better choice if seafood is your priority — it is arguably the most precise single-ingredient kitchen in Sydney and draws a devoted following for that reason. BENTLEY is the better room if you want wine-led dining with a modern Australian menu. 20 Chapel beats both on the specific proposition of fire cooking and dry-aged beef: if that is what you are after, neither Saint Peter nor BENTLEY is a real substitute.

    AALIA is the outlier comparison — a different cuisine direction entirely, but useful for readers deciding between Sydney's more interesting mid-to-upper restaurant options. AALIA is the stronger pick for a group that wants something more globally influenced and CBD-convenient. 20 Chapel wins on ingredient focus and the theatre of open-fire cooking. The decision mostly comes down to what you want to eat and how far you are willing to travel from the city centre.

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