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The Alliance Hotel

Classic Aussie pub, bar and bistro.

Matt Shea

The Alliance in Spring Hill has been given a new lease on life by one of Brisbane’s best bar groups.
1 / 8The Alliance in Spring Hill has been given a new lease on life by one of Brisbane’s best bar groups.Markus Ravik
Kangaroo tartare with an onion and bean puree on toasted brioche.
2 / 8Kangaroo tartare with an onion and bean puree on toasted brioche.Markus Ravik
The Alliance Hotel after its recent relaunch in Spring Hill.
3 / 8The Alliance Hotel after its recent relaunch in Spring Hill.Markus Ravik
Duck ragu pappardelle.
4 / 8Duck ragu pappardelle.Markus Ravik
What differentiates truly great bars from the rest is the bartender.
5 / 8What differentiates truly great bars from the rest is the bartender.Getty Images
The Alliance’s bistro has been renamed The Whisky Warren and serves a menu of Australian game dishes.
6 / 8The Alliance’s bistro has been renamed The Whisky Warren and serves a menu of Australian game dishes.Markus Ravik
Wild venison tenderloin with a parsnip puree and cucumber salad.
7 / 8Wild venison tenderloin with a parsnip puree and cucumber salad.Markus Ravik
Downstairs, in the wine cellar, a private dining room accommodates up to 14 guests.
8 / 8Downstairs, in the wine cellar, a private dining room accommodates up to 14 guests.Markus Ravik

The Alliance Hotel

Australian$$

The changes at the relaunched Alliance might initially feel subtle, but then co-owner Peter Hollands says there was a lot of low-hanging fruit at this iconic 1864-built pub. In the beautiful old front bar, the bar top and beer lines were replaced, the walls covered in Australiana – think old Foster’s, Fourex and Four’n Twenty pie posters – and the windows thrown open to better catch the sun as it tracks across the old Spring Hill workers’ cottages to the north-west, filling the venue with a lovely afternoon light.

On tap there are 10 beers that split the difference between big box drops such XXXX Gold, Toohey’s New and Guinness, and a rotating selection of craft brews. Out back, the old bistro has also been reinvented as The Whisky Warren. It serves a menu of Australian game that changes depending on what he can get his hands on. You might order dishes such as kangaroo tartare served with onion and bean purée on toasted brioche; butterflied harissa-marinated whole quail with cauliflower purée, sautéed kale and crisp enoki; or a slow cooked rabbit stew with mushroom, potato and tomato.

The rest of the venue has a series of private dining rooms and function spaces. Upstairs, there’s the light-filled Leichhardt Room with capacity for 160 guests. Downstairs, beneath the public bar, there’s the Actress and the Bishop Bar, with capacity for 45 people; and the 60-person Mirror Room. There’s also a 14-seat private dining room in the venue’s wine cellar.

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Matt SheaMatt Shea is Food and Culture Editor at Brisbane Times. He is a former editor and editor-at-large at Broadsheet Brisbane, and has written for Escape, Qantas Magazine, the Guardian, Jetstar Magazine and SilverKris, among many others.

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