Joe Valero Makes Some of Sydney’s Best Tacos. Now He’s Leading the Lottie Kitchen
Words by Grace Mackenzie · Updated on 27 Jun 2025 · Published on 26 Jun 2025
Holiday vibes don’t immediately spring to mind when you think of Redfern, but that changed when Lottie landed on The Eve’s rooftop. Liquid & Larder – Alfie’s , Bistecca , The Gidley , The Rover , Bar Julius – opened the slick space in January, and it has just welcomed Joe Valero as head chef.
You’ll know Valero as the one-man-show running Llankelly Place’s cosy Tacos Tacos Tacos , where it was all about … tacos. Very good ones, at that. Before that he was at Nikkei in Surry Hills and Alcalde , the restaurant at number 12 on Latin America’s 50 Best Restaurants List.
“Definitely a bit of a learning curve at the beginning,” Valero tells Broadsheet. “Especially coming from the single-chef, doing things on my own – just one person doing absolutely everything was something that I always had the curiosity and interest [to do] – to now having a really strong team around me. But honestly that was, like, all of my dreams come true.”
First order of business: a complete overhaul of the opening menu, because there’s potential to showcase more of the flavours and craft of Mexican cuisine. “The [Lottie] brief was Mexican food that is done outside of Mexico, and I think that’s such a good approach, because that’s the way I see food over here in Australia. There’s so many good restaurants: in London you have Kol , you have Cosme in New York. Even this place in Bangkok. These are all, to me as a chef, really successful at expanding what Mexican cuisine is right now. And that’s what I want to do at Lottie.
“Mexico has such a strong backbone of traditions in cooking, traditions in the way they approach food and family … I’m just embracing all of the ingredients and all the techniques and all the multiculturalism we have over here, too. I’m not strictly like, ‘Oh this dish doesn’t [traditionally] have this’, or ‘This is not the way my mum prepared this’, or ‘This is the way that I would do it in Mexico’.”
If you know Valero’s Tacos menu, you’ll spot riffs. The ocean trout tostada has a base of fermented habanero and mandarin salsa, ramped up further with a house-made Mexican furikake. Then there’s the play on his al pastor – done here with surprisingly meaty slow-roasted celeriac. There’s a creamy salsa of confit garlic and jalapeno, Valero’s take on the avocado salsas traditionally seen on Mexican taco stands, that’s “fucking delicious”.
A kangaroo tail sope uses fermented potatoes for a base with a mochi-like chew, with our emblematic animal slow-cooked with Mexican chillies. Local line-caught fish is served cured with lime, and you’ll find carne apache, where Riverine sirloin tartare arrives with taro chips and Valero’s nutty salsa macha.
“I was a bit intimidated, almost, about the change of pace and just how stunning the venue is. I went there for the first time and it was such a lovely day – it’s this really open space, the roof of a hotel, just sun-drenched. Lots of plants around.”
With all that and more, Valero’s approach is set to re-energise Lottie.
Joe Valero joins Redfern’s Lottie as head chef. His full menu is available now.
About the author
Grace MacKenzie is Broadsheet Sydney’s food and drink editor.
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