Sure Travel Journey Vol 3.4 Spring 2017 | Page 41

• E N R O U T E / / C I T Y G U I D E Clockwise from left: A bird’s eye-view of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. The Rocks market pops up under the bridge every weekend and features a vast array of excellent food stalls. If you can’t get a table at the exclusive Quay restaurant, the view at the Opera Bar will do. Streetfood delight. © PIN / SHUTTERSTOCK OS/ had changed numerous times. While I marvelled at my setting, my gourmand friends (on the other side of the phone screen) piled on questions about the famed snow egg. The answer? It’s an ethereal dessert that vanishes in a few bites. UNDER THE BRIDGE | CULTURE © LAVIZARRA/SHUTTERSTOCK 55-step snow egg. A custard-apple “yolk” is cloaked in a pillow of meringue, which is encrusted in the thinnest biscuit shell, blowtorched to melt over the exterior of the “egg” and finally nestled on a light granita with a guava fool underneath. When I finally land a table, the flavours The Rocks, under the Sydney Harbour Bridge, is a pricey but convenient area for the first-time visitor – it’s minutes from the Opera House and the ferries that dart across to Manly, Darling Harbour and the Taronga Zoo in Mosman (go for the views from the cable car and not the animals in captivity). This is also an ideal point from which to enjoy the bridge known to locals as the “coat hanger”, by picnicking under it on the grass or booking a 3.5-hour adventure climb across the arch. Over weekends, the streets of The Rocks close to traffic and vendors set out stalls laden with beautiful trinkets and freshly made food that reflects the city’s multicultural heritage. Hidden under the shadow of the bridge – if you know where to look – there’s evidence of the Firs t Nations, the coastal Aboriginals known as the Eora people, who MAKE MEMORIES FOR LIFE // 41