• Josh Niland’s added meat to the menu at Petermen, his North Sydney dining room. Head in soon to try the ocean king’s take on a surf’n’turf, with a Berkshire pork chop.

Otto’s new Pasta Club gets you your choice of two pastas, a glass of wine and a dessert (like the summery lemonmisu) for $50. Available from Wednesday to Sunday, until September 30.

Huge Moves is back for the year, taking over two levels of the Ace Hotel on Saturday October 19. Book your tickets, stat.

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Coya in North Sydney, helmed by chef Ashraf Saleh, welcomes a fresh mezze menu to its offering. Dishes of house-made pickles and za’atar-topped labneh join eggplant fateh, golden whitebait fritters and chermoula chicken. Hot tip: if you order every dish from the snacky new menu, and head in with three friends, it’ll come to $50 a head (and be a very nice way to dine).

• To celebrate two years in Sydney, Baker Bleu is dishing out lemon-curd-stuffed brioche buns – on the house. Head in on Tuesday September 24 to nab yours, available with every purchase.

• Today is National Tradies Day, and there are barbeques all over Sydney firing up to raise money for TIACS, a mental health service for “tradies, truckies, farmers and blue-collar workers”. Head to one of 12 pubs, like the Ashfield Hotel or Marrickville Tavern, today before 6pm to nab a snag and support the cause.

• The Inner West Ale Trail is getting bigger, with 18 independent breweries – across six suburbs – now part of it. There are a bunch of offers, like two-for-one brews at Future, Kicks or Mixtape, available too.

• Bird in Hand’s bottled a limited edition cab sav to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the Sydney Swans. There are 150 cases available, each with six bottles commemorating milestones from the club’s history.

House of Martinis: Barangaroo House is devoted to the classic cocktail all September long. There are old-school and out-there pours happening across all three levels (House Bar, Rekodo and Smoke). There are $10 minis, after-work Martini luges, tableside numbers and roving Martini carts.

What we covered this week

Lune Rosebery (nearly) has an opening date, and Kate Reid’s excited about the fit-out. So, what’s it going to look like?

• Eight to try: Sydney-made mooncakes, from traditional Cantonese and lava duck-yolk numbers to delicate snow-skin varieties and a matcha-spiked chocolate serve.

• First look: the slick, futuristic Kariton Sorbetes trips west, opening its second NSW spot in the Eastern Creek Quarter.

The future of five Sydney pubs is at risk – including the home of Ricos Tacos. “I just try and stay out of it, cook and do my job,” Ricos founder Toby Wilson tells Broadsheet.

• Nine thoughts we had at Yum Cha Project, the CBD diner trying to rethink yum cha.

You might’ve missed

• First look: Teddy, the Ezra boys’ new project, takes over the old Raja space in Potts Point. It’s pumping out retro plates and disco tunes with a brief that prioritises value over haute cuisine aesthetics.

• First look: AP Supply is the only place to buy the bakery’s plump pistachio cream puffs. The weekend-only joint is also takeaway only, and it’s all in a bid to tackle queues and do “the baker’s duty”.

• Coffee by day, boiler room by night: FBR is a 15-seat space with specialty pours and secret sets.