Hills District Independent August 2020 #62 August 2020 | Page 11

LOCAL LIFE Tutti Fruitti, you beauty! Resolute owners, Cynthia Demmock and John Groat have commenced rebuilding iconic Bilpin cafe, Tutti Fruitti. Photo: Kathryn Johnston. by Greg Martin Now, first off it is my absolute pleasure to pass on the good oil that partners, Cynthia Demmock and John Groat are hopeful of reopening Bilpin’s Tutti Fruitti cafe “late September or early in October” The iconic business was totally destroyed on 21 December when a wing of the giant Gosper’s Mountain bushfire swept across the property. Also reduced to rubble was the beautiful home of Cynthia’s daughter, Megan Kezik, and her husband, Chris and three young children. And heart-wrenchingly lost were the magnificent gardens surrounding the cafe and the Kezik’s home Could you please bear with me as I reminisce? I am unashamedly a fan of the Marx Brothers and my favourite of their madcap movies was A Day at the Races. There was a scene in it when Chico, an ice-cream vendor at the racetrack, was shouting in his mock Italian accent, “Get yer Tutsi-Frutsi ice-cream” which attracted mug punting sucker, Groucho, to whom he sold “Itsa sure thing” (dud) tips. Down the years I never gave a thought to whatever was “Tutsi-Frutsi” as the name never crossed my path until about 15 years ago when I was driving up to Bilpin. And there on the left-hand side of Bells Line of Road was a cafe called Tutti Fruitti. I pulled over, bought a superb meat pie and coffee and asked the delightful lady serving me – it was Cynthia – about the name and she was delighted to give me the oil. Seems Tutti frutti (Italian for “all fruits”) is a colourful confectionery containing various chopped and usually candied fruits, and in Western countries outside of Italy, in the form of ice cream. “I first heard it in Little Richard’s song, Tutti Frutti, and thought it was a catchy name and, as our initial plans were to sell fruits such as apples, figs, persimmons and feijoas, we opted for that,” Cynthia explained. As you are all aware, the fruit stall morphed into a wonderful café, which since 2004 became a “must stop” venue for locals and travellers along Bells Line of Road. Heartbroken at the loss of Tutti Fruitti, Cynthia and John were initially reluctant to re-establish the business, but time worked its magic along with the prompting of a host of customers, who to the couple, had become “family”. So, the partners decided to bite the bullet and rebuild, aided in part by a $50,000 grant to small businesses which resolved to re-establish after the horrific bushfires of last summer decimated their properties. The task was daunting, but Cynthia and John rolled up their sleeves and got to work. First, they cleared the property of the debris and then purchased a demountable which will be the servery. They also bought two large shipping containers, one of which houses a stateof-the-art kitchen and the other will be used for refrigeration and storage. “We will also resurrect the surrounding gardens and lawns – of course it will take time for it to grow to what we used to have here but it will still be a pleasant place for customers to relax and enjoy that Tutti Fruitti experience,” Cynthia said. Whop bop be-luma b-lop bam bom! Decimated in the summer’s bushfires were the cafe’s magnificent gardens which, over time, will be re-established to their former glory by Cynthia and John. THE HILLS INDEPENDENT www.hdinews.com.au ISSUE 62 // AUGUST 2020 11