Anthony Albanese names favourite restaurant Corinthian Rotisserie in ... trends now Anthony Albanese might be the most powerful person in the country, but he still dines at the same Sydney restaurant he's been going to for two decades. Mr Albanese told Triple M radio that the Corinthian Rotisserie is 'the best Greek in Marrickville' and the lamb cooked by Marie Giannakelos is 'to die for'. The food at the restaurant owned by Frank Giannakelos, 80, and his wife Marie, 70, is so good the menu hasn't changed since it opened four decades ago. For 43 years, six days a week, lunch and dinner, dine in or takeaway, the Corinthian has specialised in slow cooked lamb, souvlaki and moussaka. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese (left) is pictured with George Giannakelos in the Corinthian Rotisserie restaurant in Marrickville in Sydney's inner west For 43 years, six days a week, lunch and dinner, dine in or takeaway, the Corinthian (dining room pictured) has specialised in slow cooked lamb, souvlaki and moussaka Frank and Marie still work in the kitchen alongside their son Chris, 46, while another son George, 49, works in the dining room. 'We've been here 43 years and Anthony Albanese has been coming for 20 years and his office is across the road,' Chris Giannakelos told Daily Mail Australia. 'He's like a regular customer, a normal person.' 'Now that he's Prime Minister, we still treat him as a normal person. He's doesn't want any special (treatment). Nothing. He sits at whatever table is available.' Mr Giannakelos said Mr Albanese is a popular figure around his Sydney inner west constituency of Marrickville. 'People love him around the area. He walks around, people greet him, he doesn't get any backlash or anything,' he said. Anthony Albanese said the Corinthian Rotisserie (pictured) is 'the best Greek in Marrickville' Mr Albanese said the Corinthian Rotisserie is 'to die for' (buffet pictured) That sense of normality also extends to the restaurant, where the Prime Minister just walks into the restaurant like anyone else with no pre-planned arrival. 'No one bothers him when he comes into the restaurant,' Mr Giannakelos said. He said they have also had other famous people dine at the Corinthian but doesn't want to name names as, unlike Mr Albanese, they haven't spoken publicly about going there. With its new found fame due to the Prime Minister mentioning it, the restaurant may find itself even busier than normal. But with both parents and their sons still working there, the Corinthian still remains family affair. 'Me and George are going good, we're happy as it is,' Mr Giannakelos said. 'Our parents want to keep working, they love it.' Frank Giannakelos (pictured) is 80, but still works in the restaurant he started 43 years ago Though most online reviews of the Corinthian are extremely positive, some have complained that 'locals' and 'Greeks' get special treatment. 'If you're Greek, you get better service than if your're not,' one person on review site Zomato said. Another on TripAdvisor said: 'Waited forever to be served and then for our main course food to arrive.' A third praised the 'salads, calamari and Greek beer' but said the 'meat dishes were overcooked and greasy'. All rights reserved for this news site (dailymail) and under his responsibility