Search Results for directories - Narrowed by: Rigby, Myffy, editor. SirsiDynix Enterprise https://wait.sdp.sirsidynix.net.au/client/en_US/WAILRC/WAILRC/qu$003ddirectories$0026qf$003dAUTHOR$002509Author$002509Rigby$00252C$002bMyffy$00252C$002beditor.$002509Rigby$00252C$002bMyffy$00252C$002beditor.$0026ps$003d300?dt=list 2024-05-10T01:08:35Z Good food guide 2020 / edited by Myffy Rigby. ent://SD_ILS/0/SD_ILS:291855 2024-05-10T01:08:35Z 2024-05-10T01:08:35Z by&#160;Rigby, Myffy, editor.<br/>Call Number&#160;647.9594 GOO<br/>Publication Date&#160;2019<br/>Summary&#160;The most prestigious food guide in Australia, now brought to you by Simon &amp; Schuster Australia. The 2020 edition of this acclaimed national guide - the home of the hats - reviews 500 restaurants around Australia and awards the best eateries from Darwin to Hobart, Melbourne to Perth, and Sydney to Brisbane. The Age Good Food Guide was launched in 1979 and The Sydney Morning Herald Good Food Guide followed five years later. With the addition of The Brisbane Times, The Canberra Times and WA Today, the Good Food Guide is Australia's most trusted restaurant guide, compiled and edited by respected, independent critics. Reviewers arrive unannounced, pay for their own meals and are stringent judges, looking at service, ambiance, the X factor and, of course, the food. Hats are awarded to the best of the best. To achieve a hat is a pinnacle of a chef's career and a restaurant's history, and the term `hatted' has become part of the Australian lexicon.<br/>Format:&#160;Books<br/> Good food guide 2019 / edited by Myffy Rigby. ent://SD_ILS/0/SD_ILS:288158 2024-05-10T01:08:35Z 2024-05-10T01:08:35Z by&#160;Rigby, Myffy, editor.<br/>Call Number&#160;647.9594 GOO<br/>Publication Date&#160;2018<br/>Summary&#160;Launching nationally on 16 October, the 2019 edition of this acclaimed, highly trusted national guide - the home of the hats - will review 500 restaurants around Australia and award the best eateries from Darwin to Hobart, Melbourne to Perth, and Sydney to Brisbane. The Age Good Food Guide was launched in 1979 and The Sydney Morning Herald Good Food Guide followed five years later. With the addition of The Brisbane Times, The Canberra Times and WA Today, the Good Food Guide is Australia's most trusted restaurant guide, compiled and edited by respected, independent critics. Reviewers arrive unannounced, pay for their own meals and are stringent judges, looking at service, ambiance, the X factor and, of course, the food. Hats are awarded to the best of the best. To achieve a hat is a pinnacle of a chef's career and a restaurant's history, and the term 'hatted' has become part of the Australian lexicon.<br/>Format:&#160;Books<br/> Good food guide 2018 : national edition / edited by Myffy Rigby &amp; Roslyn Grundy. ent://SD_ILS/0/SD_ILS:287424 2024-05-10T01:08:35Z 2024-05-10T01:08:35Z by&#160;Rigby, Myffy, editor.<br/>Call Number&#160;ARC 647.9594 GOO<br/>Publication Date&#160;2017<br/>Summary&#160;In a historic development, the Good Food Guide will become a national edition for the first time. The 2018 edition reviews 500 restaurants around Australia and awards hats to the best places from Darwin to Hobart, Melbourne to Perth, and Sydney to Brisbane. The move builds on a proud 38-year tradition. The Age Good Food Guide was launched in 1979 and The Sydney Morning Herald Good Food Guide followed five years later. The Brisbane Times Good Food Guide was added in 2012. Collectively, they have become Australia's most trusted restaurant guides, compiled by respected critics and edited by Myffy Rigby and Roslyn Grundy. Our defining strength, and the reason people trust the Good Food Guide, is the independence of our critics, says co-editor Myffy Rigby. Our reviewers arrive unannounced and pay for their own meals. We're stringent when it comes to judging. That means we look at service, ambience, X factor, and most importantly, food to award those all-important hats. Hats are awarded to the best of the best. To achieve a hat is a pinnacle of a chef's career and a restaurant's history, and the term hatted has become part of the Australian lexicon.<br/>Format:&#160;Books<br/>