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8 Foods You Must Try at Vivid 2026

As Vivid Sydney takes over the city from 22 May to 13 June, the Harbour City’s restaurants and bars will invite both locals and visitors to indulge in bites and beverages that turn dinner into a spectacle that rivals the lights

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Whether you’re drifting along the harbour, weaving through the CBD or settling into a hidden corner for the night, here are eight Vivid 2026 eats that are guaranteed to transform every meal into a front-row seat to the action.

Vivid Dumplings at Lotus Barangaroo

At Lotus Barangaroo, Vivid arrives in full colour. Literally! Here, the stuffed modern-Chinese specialties land like little edible lanterns, their rainbow wrappers catching the light from the harbour. 

Inside, the filling is all finesse. Crab and prawn bring sweetness and snap, bamboo shoot and leek add freshness, while a touch of green celery keeps everything bright rather than heavy. And, much like the lights on the outside, they’re unmissable. 

Dessert – vanilla or chocolate pudding – arrives dressed up with apple, strawberry cream, blueberries and dried citrus, while the diva of the drinks menu is the Electric Blue cocktail, which absolutely refuses to blend into the background. It’s vivid in the most literal sense, but also surprisingly structured. Hoju Soju and Blue Curacao bring lift and citrus heat, lemon sharpens the edges, passionfruit softens the finish. It drinks like summer, trying on winter’s jacket.

Lamington Cake Pops at Four Seasons Hotel Sydney

Just steps away from Circular Quay’s spotlight, the Four Seasons Hotel Sydney delivers a signature Vivid experience with a range of vibrant, sensory-led dining and drinks designed to mirror the light, colour and movement of Sydney’s most iconic festival. These include colourful cocktails, the Beetroot Raviole stuffed with smoked stracciatella and candied pecan pictured above (we’ll get to that in a bit), as well as the return of the much-loved POP! driveway activation  – a glowing pit stop where lamingtons on a stick, donuts, loaded pretzels and thick hot chocolates are handed out to people mid-light walk, mid-conversation, mid-collapse.

The lamington cake pop is the standout  – because frankly if there’s a better way to spend an evening than eating a chocolate sponge coated in coconut while dodging crowds and camera tripods, we want to know.

Alternatively, inside, The Four Seasons, the hotel’s Mode Kitchen, offers a more elevated version of the same festival energy – a place where the tuna crudo is clean and precise, the aforementioned beetroot ravioli adds richness and colour, and a citrus meringue pie finishes things with sharpness and crunch. 

Grain Bar brings the drinks to the Four Seasons Vivid Party. Standout cocktails include Prism Bloom – all bright and floral, Ocean Glow – which leans coastal and saline and Golden Ember – both warm and deep. 

Boro Beetroot with Goat Cheese Tartare and Dill at Palazzo Salato

At Palazzo Salato, Vivid Sydney takes a quieter, more grounded form through its participation in the inaugural Vivid Food Regional Dinner Series. The collaboration brings together Palazzo Salato’s culinary team with Southern Highlands producer and chef Stephen Santucci of Moonacres Kitchen, alongside produce from Moonacres Farm and other regional growers. Focusing on the direct line between farm and table, the kitchen anchors each dish in ingredients sourced, harvested and cooked within the same regional ecosystem.

That philosophy is clearest in the Boro beetroot with goat cheese tartare and dill. The beetroot, grown in the rich red basalt soils of Robertson, arrives with natural depth and sweetness, almost dense with flavour. It is paired with a goat cheese tartare that lifts the dish with acidity and creaminess, while dill cuts through with a clean, herbal brightness that keeps everything in balance. It is simple on paper, but deeply expressive in execution.

The broader menu follows the same logic of restraint and clarity. Ravioli filled with Pine Hill Wiltipoll hogget and Dutch cream potato leans into richness and comfort, while mushrooms from Colo Vale bring earthiness and texture. A pork shoulder braised in milk becomes the centrepiece of the table, soft and yielding, finished with pecorino and egg yolk for depth. Even the accompaniments, from radicchio to apple and greens, feel considered rather than decorative.

Dessert moves slightly further afield with South Pacific cacao, crafted locally into a Modica-style chocolate tart paired with rhubarb. It is bittersweet and precise, a final note that mirrors the menu’s overall tone rather than overshadowing it.

Ice Cream Creme Brulee at Dopa by Devon at Sydney Place

Sydney by name, Sydney by nature! Laidback (yet hungry!) Sydney Place is where Vivid Sydney loosens its shoulders a little – with lantern-lit laneways, open-air cinema screenings, and a cluster of venues that let you drift between snacks, drinks and screens without ever really needing a plan.

Across three weekends, the precinct will transform into a free After Dark Cinema, screening Disney favourites in the laneways at 180 George Street from 6pm to 10pm. The line-up rotates nightly, with films including Finding Nemo, Luca, The Princess Diaries, Frozen and The Little Mermaid playing beneath ambient lighting and rows of beanbags. It is Vivid at its most unguarded – families, couples and passers-by settling in wherever there’s space.

At Dopa by Devon, that same easygoing mood carries through in dessert form – in two creme bruleed ice cream takes. 

The Midnight Rum Brulee is the more indulgent on offer – with nama cheese ice cream that brings a creamy, slightly savoury base, folded with rum raisin and Biscoff crumble, then finished with a bruleed top that cracks cleanly under a spoon. 

The Emerald Matcha Brulee moves in a different direction. Salted matcha ice cream, jujube shortcake and cacao nib crumble create a more restrained profile, all bitterness and lift, anchored by that same caramelised sugar shell.

Together, they fit neatly into the rhythm of Sydney Place during Vivid: something sweet between a film, a drink and the next wandering step down the laneway.

Nutella Crepes at Four Frogs Creperie

At Circular Quay, where Vivid Sydney’s light trail meets the harbour breeze, a delicious collaboration between Four Frogs Creperie and Nutella is leaning all the way into simple pleasures done properly. For the festival, the French creperie is teaming up with the famed Italian hazelnut spread to create a limited-edition takeaway stand in the heart of harbour. 

This is Vivid food stripped back to its most comforting form. A freshly made crepe, folded warm and generously filled with lashings of the beloved sweet spread, to deliver a hand-held moment designed for wandering rather than sitting. It’s soft, slightly crisp at the edges, and best eaten mid-walk as the harbour lights flicker in your peripheral vision.

Alongside it, a hot chocolate version leans even more into winter indulgence – thick, rich, and unmistakably Nutella-led, made for cold evenings when you’re drifting between installations and don’t quite want the night to end.

The pricing keeps it intentionally accessible too: $11 for the crepe with Nutella and $5.50 for the hot chocolate.

A Dessert Journey at Level 30 at W Sydney


On Level 30 of W Sydney, the view over Darling Harbour does most of the talking. But Singaporean pastry chef Janice Wong is a welcome interruption to the conversation through her 2am:dessertbar concept.

Known for pushing desserts into the space between food and art, Janice has built a reputation for design-led creations that treat sugar, chocolate and savoury elements as tools for structure, texture and visual storytelling rather than simple sweetness.

Bringing 2am:dessertbar to Sydney for Vivid Sydney, Wong marks her first dedicated pastry venture in Australia, extending the Singapore-born concept that has become known for immersive, gallery-like dessert experiences. Her work sits firmly at the intersection of pastry, design and performance, shaped by a philosophy that finds beauty in “perfection in imperfection”.

For two nights only on May 29 and 30, Level 30 becomes home to two distinct expressions of her practice. The first, Bioluminescent Dreams, transforms the space into a glow-lit dessert installation where illuminated creations and bold flavour pairings unfold against the city skyline. The second, Dessert Journey at Level 30, takes a more intimate approach.

Here, guests are seated for a three-course dessert tasting menu paired with mini cocktails, each course designed to move between contrast, texture and form. Rather than traditional progression, the menu is built around interplay – savoury notes meeting sweetness, crisp textures against soft finishes, and visual presentation treated with the same weight as flavour.

With only 10 seats available per sitting, the experience is deliberately restrained. It is part fine dining, part installation, part dessert studio in motion, where the boundary between kitchen and artwork is intentionally blurred.

Squish Cheeseburger at Bistro George at Jacksons on George


Not everything during Vivid Sydney needs to be conceptual.

At Bistro George, the Squish Cheeseburger is exactly what it sounds like and exactly what you want. Smashed beef, melted cheese, soft bun, eaten fast, usually between plans. It’s messy in the right way. Salty, hot, immediate. 

Around it, the snacks menu keeps things firmly in indulgent territory. Chicken nuggets arrive with caviar and hot sauce, vongole frites come with Champagne, sticky date pudding is served with butterscotch sauce and koji ice cream, and everything is built for grazing rather than sitting still for too long.

Upstairs at Jacksons on George, DJs, live music and the return of the spice bag keep the energy moving well into the night. Crispy chicken, chilli chips and Guinness in hand, the building becomes a three-level relay of Vivid fuel.

Anything on the menu at A “Floral Dreamscape” at Market City

Finally, Market City’s “Floral Dreamscape” is proof that where you eat is just as important as what.

The beautiful dining installation turns the 1909 Dining Precinct into a soft, glowing landscape of projections and light. It’s immersive, but relaxed. More wandering than waiting.

Here, the best strategy is no strategy at all. Move between stalls. Follow scent, sound, colour. Dumplings into skewers into noodles into something sweet you didn’t plan on eating but absolutely should.

The surrounding precinct adds momentum. Paddy’s Haymarket brings neon face painting, scavenger hunts and playful chaos, while Hay St Market stretches the offering across hawker-style kitchens and late-night trading.

It’s Vivid without the queueing, the shoulder-to-shoulder squeeze, or the sense that you need to “do it properly”. Just food, light and movement, in whatever order you like.

Marie-Antoinette Issa: Marie-Antoinette Issa is the Beauty & Lifestyle Editor for The Carousel, Women Love Tech and Women Love Travel. She has worked across news and women's lifestyle magazines and websites including Cosmopolitan, Cleo, Madison, Concrete Playground, The Urban List and Daily Mail, I Quit Sugar and Huffington Post.
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