Gold Plated: Culinary Masters 2025
Robb Report Australia & New Zealand crowns a new Culinary Master in Brisbane—and finds a city in gastronomic ascendancy.
On a golden evening in Brisbane, the air hummed with both anticipation and the scent of burnt butter. Inside the softly lit dining room of Restaurant Dan Arnold, guests gathered for Robb Report Australia & New Zealand’s Culinary Masters 2025, a celebration of craft, connection and the kind of detail-obsessed artistry that turns dinner into theatre. Among the invitees were leading figures from Australia’s business, property and art worlds: including Catherine Malouf, the face of Brisbane hospitality; renowned artist Michael Zavros; and Simon O’Brien, senior partner at LGT Crestone Wealth Management.

They came not just to dine, but to witness the ascendance of Australia’s most talked-about chef, Dan Arnold, who was crowned this year’s Culinary Master. Past recipients include icons Matt Moran, Neil Perry and Josh Niland, but this night carried its own quiet charge. Arnold, whose namesake eatery sits on an unassuming corner in Fortitude Valley, has spent the past seven years refining a singular take on modern Australian fine dining: disciplined, deliberate and unapologetically local.
“For me, cuisine is about clarity,” Arnold said, as his team plated Fraser Isle spanner crab with citrus beurre blanc and pickled radish, a dish that captured the chef’s obsession with restraint and balance. “I want every element to have purpose,” he added. “Precise in execution, but open enough to surprise.”

The six-course menu, paired with rare vintages from some of Australia’s most celebrated vineyards, was an ode to meticulous technique. Coral trout was cured in finger lime and glossed with lemon myrtle oil; duck breast roasted and brushed with macadamia miso; Wagyu short rib slow-cooked for 48 hours and paired with smoked eggplant and a hint of native pepper. Dessert was both nostalgic and subtly performative; a honeycomb parfait layered with wattleseed and a pour of warm chocolate ganache.
As Robb Report’s editor-in-chief and publisher Horacio Silva commented:
“Culinary Masters isn’t about celebrity; it’s about mastery. That intersection where craftsmanship meets emotion. Dan captures that perfectly. His food doesn’t shout, it resonates.”

Arnold’s sense of place is deeply rooted in Brisbane’s rhythm: subtropical, open, and still writing its culinary story—a tale that is no longer dominated by the Sydney–Melbourne narrative or chained by national borders. “I’ve tried to position us between the rigour of French gastronomy and the immediacy of Queensland produce,” he says. “It’s about giving Brisbane diners an experience that can sit comfortably on the international stage while still feeling unmistakably local.”
By the end of the night, one truth lingered like the taste of the last truffle shaving: Brisbane had arrived, and it did so not with fanfare, but with finesse.
Culinary Masters returns in 2026 as part of Robb Report ANZ’s 10-year anniversary celebrations. Register early here to be among the first to receive priority access, and exclusive updates for what promises to be our most ambitious Culinary Masters yet.
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