Victoria’s best pub stays

Words by Richard Cornish
Images Supplied

Once upon a time, a community couldn’t call itself a town unless it had a church, a school and a pub. During the Victorian era, the fashion was to build grand buildings with large dining rooms to feed travellers during the day and evening and then accommodate them in rooms at night. The countryside is dotted with these beautiful old boozers. Some are falling into ruin, some are now private homes while, thankfully, some still offer excellent meals and a comfortable bed for the night. Here are five of Victoria’s best old pubs with great food and good rooms.

The Alexandra Hotel

Victoria Pubs The Alexandra Hotel sits in the heart of the beautiful little town of Alexandra 70km north of Healesville, just west of Lake Eildon. This classic old pub was built in 1903 in the late Victorian style and was given a lot of love and a sympathetic makeover in recent years. For some, it’s the night’s stop after a hard day on the Great Victorian Rail Trail, but for an increasing number of food lovers, the pub’s a destination in itself.

Co-owner and head Chef is Patrick Browning, formerly with the Melbourne Wine Room under Karen Martini. He takes local produce and turns it into satisfying dishes such as house-smoked pumpkin served on his own sourdough with poached eggs, cashews, avocado and dukkah for the weekend brunch menu.

It’s worth staying the night and grabbing a table by the fire, taking a seat in the upholstered carved chairs and getting head down into some Loddon Estate free-range chicken with potato and pancetta terrine or an 800g chargrilled Sabre Pastoral grass-fed ribeye. With a beautiful wine list supporting many local wineries, and superb countryside nearby, it’s worth booking one of the well-appointed ensuite bedrooms with views out over the balcony and the bustling township below for a weekend in the country.

More details here.

Harvest Home Hotel, Avenel

Regional Pubs VictoriaWhen Ned Kelly was a boy he saved the life of another lad from drowning in Hughes Creek on the outskirts of his hometown called Avenel, just north of Seymour. It’s a beautiful historic little town with one of the state’s best butcher shops and a swathe of wineries nearby in Nagambie and Strathbogie Ranges. The train running between Southern Cross and Wodonga pulls in several times a day to the station, a short walk to the 1870 Harvest Home Hotel.

With its broad verandahs, wine cellar and semicircular brass topped bar this old boozer is now a boutique hotel and restaurant. The six rooms upstairs offer charming old-world accommodation with antique chairs and sideboards mixed with state-of-the-art bedding, ensuites, heating and cooling. The dining room captures the height of Victorian pomp with carved balloon-backed chairs, parlour plants, and open fireplaces.

Outside in the large sprawling garden are fun, funky bohemian chic dining spaces and towering trees. Chef Martin Golding makes the most of his kitchen garden in dishes like twice-baked Gruyere souffle with freshly picked garden salad and potato and leek soup. While the eye fillet is as great, it is the mashed potato with two-day reduced jus that makes it the reason to drive up the Hume Hwy. Together with dishes like confit duck and roast chicken with Israeli cous cous, and a focus on regional wines, The Harvest Home Hotel has become a popular destination for couples and friends to come for the weekend.

More information here.

Criterion Hotel, Sale

Victoria PubsThis part of Gippsland, between the 90 Mile Beach, the Macalister and Thomson Rivers and ranges beyond, is becoming very popular with fishers, hunters and bike riders. Art lovers are coming to town for the ever-changing exhibitions at Gippsland Art Gallery. A good hub is the Criterion Hotel on Macalister street, a historic pub making a name for its great grub.

Built-in the 1880s, The Criterion has been given a modern, rustic makeover that blends fencing wire lampshades with faux library wallpaper and clean white lines in the main dining room. The food is a good step up from pub grub steering into gastro-pub turf with starters such as a soft, sweet, sticky, peanuty eggplant bao or a plate of fried tiny baby squid with a good dollop of aioli and fresh sharp chimichurri. Mains might include a 350g free-range Gippsland porterhouse with jus, salad and fries or a fat, juicy chicken schnitzel topped with Napoli sauce and tangy Maffra cheddar.

Upstairs the rooms are spacious, modern, and well appointed, each with its own ensuite. Some look out onto the iron lacework of the balcony and beyond. While the location is in the heart of town it is a good point to kick off to explore this beautiful region.

Find out more here.

The Continental Hotel, Sorrento

Pubs Mornington PeninsulaSince 1875 the limestone tower of the Continental Hotel has stood sentinel over Sorrento’s sand dunes, looking out over the azure blue waters of Port Phillip. Built by 1800s businessman and comic performer George Coppin, the four-story building was hewn from local rock and has been a local institution for locals and visitors for generations.

After a recent multimillion makeover, the Intercontinental Hotel is managing the 108 luxurious rooms while chef Scott Pickett and his team are looking after food and beverage across the different bars, restaurants, and room service. Spend the day at the beach, fishing or exploring Point Nepean then head to the public bar in your board shorts for a beer. Or you could dress up and head upstairs to Audrey.

This is a beautiful upmarket restaurant with velvet banquettes, bespoke hand-woven carpets and exquisite commissioned still-life floral photographs by a Japanese photographer. The room looks out over the palm trees, the Sorrento ferry jetty and across the azure blue waters of Port Phillip. The set menu is seafood focused with little dishes of spanner crab in rich pastry tartlets, a crumpet topped with creamy whipped cod roe, oysters, yellowfin tuna, and local line-caught squid. The brand new rooms offer five-star luxury including top-of-the-range two-level penthouse suites offering a private rooftop terrace, private plunge pool, and separate lounge and dining area.

Take a look here.

Bunyip Hotel, Cavendish

Bunjip HotelOut west of the Grampians/Garwiwerd, where the river red gums grow old and gnarled is a little pub by the banks of the Wannon River on the corner of the Henty Highway. This is The Bunyip, a community-owned hotel built in the 1840s and remodelled in the 1930s.

This is sheep grazing country where the locals wear big hats, drive big utes, and have big appetites. Chef James ‘Jimmy’ Campbell knows this as he is a local, there is even a Campbells Road off the highway, and his serves are big.

He cut his teeth at Movida in the early days and ended up running their Sydney restaurant. He’s back home cooking up mutton, duck, and free-range chook using the skill and technique he learned over the years. A classic is the sticky, chewy Koroit French fries topped with a free-range egg and dusted with paprika. Move to hogget skewers with whipped cod roe or house-made black pudding with green tomato pickle. Charcuterie is tops, the shanks, schnitty, steak, and pork are some of the best cooking in the state.

The rooms out the back have been renovated and are comfortable, clean, modern, and very reasonable at $120 a night. The only drawback is the shared bathroom. On warm nights sit out under the stars with a bottle of local wine, such as a Crawford River Riesling, and watch the free light show under the Milky Way. The Bunyip is one of the last great old pubs in the nation and the value is exceptional.

Details here.

We wish to acknowledge the traditional owners of this land and to pay our respects to their Elders, past and present.

Making street food magic at The Laneway in Healesville

Words by Tehya Nicholas 
Images Supplied

Heather Alcock, who served homemade pies, cakes, salads and more in her bustling cafe in Healesville for twelve years has now turned her attention to something a little spicier.

Down the leafy stretch of the Maroondah Highway, when the straw-yellow fields fade into tree-lined suburbia, Alcock’s Mocha & Lime cafe stood as a faithful outpost to locals and travellers alike. She had nailed the formula of a great neighbourhood cafe: leafy location, lack of pretension, good coffee and seasonal, fresh brunches.

When Mocha & Lime was forced to close in June this year due to structural problems inside the building, a collective outcry went up from neighbourhood coffee lovers. Alcock, ever enterprising, found a new spot just up the road: an exposed-brick warehouse space with ample natural light, outdoor seating and an idyllic, sprawling garden, owned and co-occupied by her friends at Alchemy Distillery. She told us recently, “We just hit them up for this space. They’ve been asking me for ages [to do something], but I didn’t want to take on too many projects… But now, we thought we’d better jump on it.”

What’s new at this new venue surreptitiously titled The Laneway? Well, practically everything. Alcock has seized the location shift as an opportunity for a complete culinary and aesthetic redo. Where Mocha & Lime championed downtempo cafe classics in the kitchen, The Laneway slips into something a little spicier. Alcock and her team are careful to avoid strict labels early in the game, but gave us murmurs of “Mexican street food” and “South American inspired bites”. When the kitchen receives its final pieces of polished cookware and last lick of paint in the coming weeks, hungry customers can order salsa-laden nacho plates, cheesy quesadillas, and tostadas of every variety.  Alcock has been sure to uphold her passion for serving locally grown and prepared produce.

“We’ve brought in Yarra Valley Smokery pork and chicken so we will use this across a few dishes,” she explains. “Plus, we have vegan tostadas with chipotle beans.” Seems she hasn’t forgotten the plant lovers.

Among the light, bright meals, their speciality coffee is an aficionado’s delight, served with all the milky suspects you’d expect at an inner city cafe. Local beers, an array of alcoholic Mexican imports, cocktail classics, and gin and vodka-tasting paddles from neighbours Alchemy Distillery flow across the day if that’s your kind of thing.

Softly opening the third week of July for light bites and drinks, your first chance to drop by for a taste of the South American-inspired turn from Alcock is soon upon you. It may be unusual for a community favourite to curveball into a new culinary domain, but their loyal band of customers and budding newcomers are here for the swing.


THE DETAILS

WHAT: The Laneway
WHERE: 242 Maroondah Hwy, Healesville
WHEN: Open Monday, Thursday, Sunday 8am-5pm, Friday and Saturday 8am-8pm, Closed Tuesday and Wednesday
MORE INFO: The Laneway

We wish to acknowledge the Wurundjeri people as traditional owners of this land and to pay our respects to their Elders, past and present.

A taste of Mexico in Woodend

Woodend has expanded its culinary repertoire with the opening of a Mexican restaurant and bar – and just in time for the winter.

Las Margaritas is the newest addition to the town’s food scene, boasting everything from nachos and tacos through to cocktails and tequila.

Situated on Woodend’s main drag, Las Margaritas opened at the beginning of June and is one of the only haunts in the Macedon ranges offering visitors and locals a genuine taste of South America.

And the best part, the menu is chock-a-block with options for the vegans, vegetarians and even the gluten-free folk out there.

“We are a casual and fun place that brings a bit of the city to the country,” owner operator Seema Been says. “We pride ourselves on our cocktails and meals, chimichangas and tacos.”

Having been in the hospo industry for 15 years, Seema has worked in a number of Melbourne businesses spanning from pubs to Latin restaurants and Spanish tapas eateries.

She says she bought the business during lockdown without even seeing it.

“I’ve been coming to the Macedon Ranges for years and had a soft spot for Woodend so when an opportunity arose, we grabbed it,” she says.

“Once we got the keys, we had our work cut out to open asap.”

The menu is indeed worth writing home about. Start your experience with a mouthwatering aperitivo – some corn on the cob with tajin, burnt butter and chipotle mayo, or potachos topped with melted cheese, salsa, guacamole and sour cream.

Or maybe savour your own tostada, double decker tacos, fried tortillas or tacos – dubbed as God’s gift to the world.

The selection doesn’t stop there. The menu also boasts signature paella, enchiladas, burritos, quesadillas, fajitas and salads – all perfectly accompanied with your favourite beverage and ready to turn your chilly winter’s eve into a helluva warm one.

“It’s not a job, it’s a passion for food and drinks,” Seema says. “Especially in the current environment; to shop for ingredients and present a menu that appeals to the taste buds and pockets.

“The journey has just begun for Las Margaritas with plenty more to come with the change of season.”


THE DETAILS:

WHAT: Las Margaritas
WHERE: 81 High St, Woodend
FIND OUT MORE: facebook.com/Lasmargaritaswoodend

We wish to acknowledge the Dja Dja Wurrung people as traditional owners of this land and to pay our respects to their Elders, past and present.

This ski season’s best places to eat & drink

Words by Richard Cornish
Images Supplied

It’s Snowtime, and Richard Cornish explores this season’s places to eat and drink.

A tongue of cold air pushing up from Antarctica cloaked the nation’s south with freezing weather and one of the most generous seasonal foundations of snow we have seen in decades. The return to the slopes after a few winters locked down sees a handful of new places to eat and drink along with the thankful return of some old favourites.

KasaBar

Eating Out Falls CreekIf you’re heading to Falls Creek, consider then consider KasaBar. This is a little taste of the Japanese snow fields in the resort’s Village Bowl in Falls Creek. KasaBar has the look and feel of Japanese snow resort izakaya with walls papered in family-friendly manga and Japanese hip hop pumping from the Sonos. Order an ice-cold Sapporo fresh from the keg or try a local beer from Bright Brewery, Bridge Road Brewers or its hot or cold sake to wash down the hot, crunchy karage. Other hot Japanese treats include fries with Japanese spice togarashi or a nourishing bowl of thick, delicious ramen with pork belly, vegetables, and nori. Step outside, and it’s a short hop Eagle Chair, and soon you’re at the summit. Details here.

Harry Burns

Mt Buller Eating OutUp at Mt Buller, the Asian theme continues off Bourke Street with Harry Burns, a snug, warm dining room with padded banquettes, cowhide, and wooden antlers on the walls. The bar is lined with cool granite, and here you can order the house special: a punchy lemon cheesecake cocktail. The pan Asian menu lists delicious little fish dishes such as soft prawn rolls and Thai-style kingfish sashimi at night. Look out for spicy, grilled snapper fillet, classic poached Hainanese chicken with rice, and spicy ginger and spring onion sauce. Come for the big breakfast after a morning on the slopes or a hot roast pork roll or Vietnamese salad for lunch. Also, there is sister restaurant Bob Sugar at Falls Creek.

More here.

The Villager

Mt Buller RestaurantAlso in Buller is The Villager. This beautifully blonde,  rustic dining room, next to the Kooroora Hotel, has a brand new menu focusing on the French roots of co-owner Romaric Senelas. It focuses on crowd-pleasing French comfort food, perfect for cold climate dining. Start with French onion soup with a rich Gruyere crust, duck rillettes with suitable accoutrements, snails slathered in herb and garlic butter or a pork and pistachio terrine. For mains think cassoulet, steak frites, duck confit and coq au fin. The wine list has a compact collection of value local wines by the glass complemented with a larger extent of fine Australian and French bottles.

Find out more here.

Abom

Mt Buller RestaurantsA new menu at Buller stalwart Abom reflects the skills and passion of Executive Chef Ross O’Meara. The former SBS Gourmet Farmer and avid fan of wild game serves venison ragu casarecce pasta and forest fungus gnocchi in the dining room at the mountain icon. Downstairs is the speak-easy feel Moosehead Whiskey & Blues Bar downstairs for fireside late-night drinks and seriously good Melbourne musos.

Find out more here.

 

Also, check out these venues in Falls Creek.

Astra

Falls Creeks AccommodationThis little resort within a resort offers accommodation, day spa, and great modern Australian produce-driven food in this beautiful wood-line lodge-like dining room.

Take a look here.

Summit Ridge

Eating out Falls CreekThis popular lodge with a stone fireplace featured in the restaurant dining room. The menu offers bistro classics like beef tartare and ricotta gnocchi.

Learn more here.

Milch

Falls Creek CafeCasual café, bar, restaurant on Schuss St looking out onto the Australian Alps. Come for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

Check it out here.

 

 

 

Then over in Buller, you have these options.

Black Cockatoo

Eating out Falls CreekModern, chic, architect design room with a Josper grill at the heart of the kitchen. Modern menu starring steak, wallaby, miso kingfish. Also, try the casual diner Bird Cage next door.

More here.

Kaptan’s Restaurant

Mt Buller RestaurantsCarved wooden German-style chairs and schnitzel on the menu are a nod to the founder’s, Hans Grimus, Tyrolean background. It is a popular and well-known venue and famous for its Salzburger Nockerl – a massive choc chip hazelnut souffle with hot chocolate sauce.

Get the details here.

The Whitt

The Whitt Mt BullerCasual, old-school dining room for the Victorian Ski Club, open to the public via bookings for lunch or dinner. Soup and Gruyere toastie for lunch. Gnocchi for dinner with affordable wines on the compact list.

Learn more here.

 

Then if you’re heading to Hotham, give these venues a whirl.

Miss Mary’s

Mt Hotham BarIn the heart of Hotham, with a great view across the alps, this is a haven of relative quiet, offering Asian classics, all paired up beautifully with amazing cocktails. Lunch through to dinner.

Take a look around here.

Joyce Brock Off Hut

Joyce Brock Off HutThis isolated cabin, built-in 1949 by the Australian Women’s Ski Club, is only accessible by ski or snowboard. Here you’ll find an extended deck housing a BBQ smoker so expect slow-cooked lamb in ciabatta, bbq chicken wings and baked potatoes. Worth the effort.

Find out more here.

Alphuette Wine Bar & Restaurant

Restaurants Dinner PlainAt nearby Dinner Plain, you will find the best wine list on the mountain and great easy eats like cheese croquettes, slow-cooked shoulder of lamb, pizza and the dessert classic of sticky date pudding.

Check it out here.

We wish to acknowledge the traditional owners of this land and to pay our respects to their Elders, past and present.

It’s a warm welcome back to the Woodside Beach Hotel

Words by Richard Cornish
Images Supplied

While country pubs are closing at a rate of knots, there is one old boozer on the South Gippsland Highway that is set for a re-birth.

The Woodside Beach Hotel between Sale and Yarram had been closed since 2016 when a group of Gippsland locals got together to form a syndicate to buy the pub last year. The group included fishermen, farmers and even a former AFL player. Soon the 1849 pub will reopen its doors.

The team have given the old girl some much-needed TLC. Gone are the old dunnies and replaced with more amendable modern amenities. The terracotta tiles have been lifted and replaced with a light, bright and rather rural-looking corrugated iron look roof. Inside and out the old pub has been given a lighter more family-friendly feel.

Woodside is a farming region that backs onto Ninety Mile Beach. It’s a grazing area producing some of the state’s best lamb and beef. Nearby is the commercial fishery of Corner Inlet where fresh whiting and flathead are caught. “All this is something we’re making the most of. Local and seasonal produce,” says syndicate ‘chairman’ Clint Hillas. He adds, “Technically, I’m not a Gippsland man, but I married a local woman so that gets me across the line,” he says with a laugh.

A sample menu reads like a who’s who of Gippsland producers with names like Maffra Cheese and Shaw’s Butchery leading the edibles and Lightfoot& Sons, Tom’s Cap Winery and Grand Ridge Brewery representing Gippsland wineries and brewers. The dishes are simple but good. Great steak, parma, fish and chips, ploughman’s platter. Nothing fancy, just simple grub done well.

The Woodside Beach Hotel is slated for re-opening in August with a 70-seat dining room, public bar and cosy lounge with wood fire and Chesterfield couches called the Cognac Room. There are two beer gardens and soon three luxury accommodation pods will be open for booking.

“This is about local people helping locals,” says Clint. “But everyone is welcome.”


THE DETAILS

WHAT: Woodside Beach Hotel
WHERE: 62 High St, Woodside
WHEN: Opening August
MORE INFO: Woodside Beach Hotel

We wish to acknowledge the Gunaikurnai people as traditional owners of this land and to pay our respects to their Elders, past and present.

Ballarat welcomes new pop-up restaurant, Peasant

Words by Richard Cornish
Images Supplied

Suppose you like the big flavours of traditional European dishes. In that case, you will be booking into Peasant, a new pop-up restaurant based in Ballarat’s historic Bank of New South Wales.

Peasant is part of the new wave of ‘small footprint’ restaurants that move into an existing site, give it a breath of fresh air, but don’t drop half a million on a big refit. Business partners are chef Doug Kerr, and maitre’d Dan Tesoriero. They perfected their modern style of old fayre at all-day diner Billy Boy Blue in Rathdowne Street, Carlton North.

Now they are offering a more refined five-course dinner service in what was the Lydiard Street Wine Bar. The dark wood panelling and cut glass chandeliers remain giving the room a slight nod towards ironic iconoclastic whilst updating the décor with dark wood tables pre-set with good cutlery and fine Plumm stemware.

Book ahead because bookings for the week close on Sunday evening prior to Friday service. Choose between the vegetarian menu or the menu with meat and fish. The menu changes weekly. Both five-course menus are priced at an excellent value $110.

“We want to prepare for as many meals as we serve only,” says Doug. He trained in the Michelin restaurants in Britain and has the skill as a chef to look at boxes of seasonal produce and write a five-course menu. “But this is a lean operation, and there is no space for wastage.”

Take a seat and look out over the historic frontage of the old mining exchange. Order a drink and start with perhaps a cheesy, rich, decadent version of Welsh rarebit made with Wensleydale custard. Following could be a creamy cod brandade with dill and lemon served in a crunchy lettuce leaf. Next might be a golden, rich, and sticky pigs trotter stuffed with chicken and black pudding served with tiny sweet broad beans. Lamb shoulder next, plated in a very modern pulled, packed, fried cylinder with a swede gratin with potatoes dressed with goat’s cheese. Finish with Bavarian curd dumpling with preserved summer plums.

If it is any gauge of the expectation building around Peasant’s opening, word on the street is that top local chefs have booked to be the first served by Dan and Doug in their hearty Ballarat pop-up.


THE DETAILS

WHAT: Peasant
WHERE: 15 Lydiard St Nth, Ballarat
WHEN: Open Now
FIND OUT MORE: Peasant

We wish to acknowledge the Wadawurrung people as traditional owners of this land and to pay our respects to their Elders, past and present.

Wayward Winery to open doors in the Pyrenees

Images Supplied

A sprawling new vineyard and accompanying restaurant, function space, accommodation and cellar door is set to open up its doors over the coming months along the gateway of the Pyrenees Wine Region.

The project of Ballarat wonderpreneur Teddy Powlett, Wayward is situated just 20 minutes down the road from the city in the quaint township of Waubra.

‘It’s the first winery as you hit the gorgeous Pyrenees Wine Region,’ Teddy says, ‘and we are close to opening the restaurant for weekenders and functions with plans for accommodation and a cellar door later this year.’

With the Pyrenees renowned for its exceptional cool-climate wines, and Teddy known for his curation of refined dining experiences in the region (he is partially responsible for the likes of Ballarat’s Ragazzone, Moon and Mountain and Renard Social Club), lovers of fine vino can only imagine what is to be expected when this boutique space beckons them in.

According to Teddy, working in such a creative industry is what keeps him going back for more.

I love the people I work with and the creativities elements of the industry. It’s been a tough few years but the resilience shown by our staff has been amazing.


THE DETAILS

WHAT: Wayward Winery
WHERE: Waubra, Pyrenees Shire
WHEN: 2022
FIND OUT MORE: Wayward Winery

We wish to acknowledge the Dja Dja Wurrung people as traditional owners of this land and to pay our respects to their Elders, past and present.

Lead architect of MONA opens cellar door and sculpture park in the Macedon Ranges

Words by Amanda Kennedy

Mount Monument Winery in Romsey proves true the old adage good things come to those who wait. First acquired by Nonda Katsalidis in 2005, the multi-stage project has been ageing, almost like a fine wine. If the name rings a bell, it’s because Nonda is one half of Fender Katsalidis, the highly-awarded architectural practice responsible for Hobart’s MONA, the Eureka Tower at Southbank and many more structures around Australia and internationally.

Over the years, the 45ha property has been planted with 1500 olives trees and the area under vine increased by almost half.
‘I think what we’ve been building over the last few years has been really more about water management and trying to increase the bird life to the area by taking the animals of the property and just letting areas self-seed.’ explains Jane Collins, Katsalidis’ partner. ‘We’ve just enjoyed seeing it regenerate, like turning the dam that existed with the previous farming approach into more of a wetlands. That was our starting point.’

A relatively high altitude of 630m makes it possibly the coolest climate in Australia in which to grow grapes and produce wine. Thankfully, winemaker Ben Ranken is no stranger to producing wine in such a cool climate. His own vineyard, Wilimee Wines, is located less than half an hour away.

‘We’re pretty excited about having Ben Ranken wine-making for us, he is a very intelligent, careful, great communicator. It’s been lovely having him involved,’ says Jane. As winner of the 2021 Young Gun of Wine Vigneron amongst his accolades, wine might just run in Ben’s veins. His ancestor, George Ranken, planted some of the first vines in Australia in 1841 in Bathurst, NSW. While the finishing touches are still being made to the whole project, Ben was able to press the first grapes in the winery in March this year.

The winery forms the lower half of a two-storey building which nestles into the hillside. The 60-plus seat restaurant is located upstairs overlooking the vines and east towards the township of Romsey. A cosy cellar door will face onto sculpture-filled grounds, accessible via a vine-covered pergola. The buildings have included water tanks and composting worm farms as part of their design and are built using fire-resistant materials, essential in such a high-risk fire zone. Short term future plans also include several small eco-lodges to provide the full Macedon Ranges accommodation experience complete with stunning sunsets and crisp mornings.

While the winery might be named for the nearby volcanic rock formation, Brock’s Monument, it may soon be eclipsed by the outstanding architecture and sculptures which seem destined to become a drawcard themselves. Jane  explains, ‘It was very organic; it’s not like we had a business plan or anything. It’s more of a passion project than anything … and then Nonda just invited a few friends who were sculptors and artists.’

The playful structures invite the observer to look at the environment in new ways – whether it’s Tom Borgas’ Active Form (2019) all hard angles and striking in its Yves Klein electric blue or The Birth Of Zarathustra by Richard Stringer (1991) which will keep an eye on diners with its prominent restaurant position.

They’re all so different, but I think thematically there is something that is very much about a sense of place or how fragile the environment is. There’s something that really connects all of the artists in terms of their connection to conservation. So even though it looks like a random collection in a paddock, when you actually read about the works, there’s something that really ties them all together.

Get inspired with the swoon-worthy Instagram gallery and keep an eye out for opening dates, slated for this Queen’s Birthday long-weekend (11-13 June 2022).


THE DETAILS

WHAT: Mount Monument Winery
WHERE: 1399 Romsey Rd, Romsey
WHEN: Opening Queen’s Birthday long-weekend (11-13 June 2022)
MORE INFO: Mount Monument

We wish to acknowledge the Wurundjeri people as traditional owners of this land and to pay our respects to their Elders, past and present.

Dining up the Garden Path: Regional Restaurants growing their own produce

Words: Richard Cornish
Images: Supplied

The ideal of a chef picking the fruit and vegetables from the garden for the kitchen is mostly a fiction. Only a small number of restaurants worldwide have the luxury of space and labour to set up and set out a dedicated space of earth to grow produce for the kitchen. Those restaurants that do are some of the world’s best such as the 30ha farm and restaurant Blue Hill at Stone Barns, New York State; Simon Rogan’s 4ha farm at L’Enclume in the UK’s Lakes District. In Victoria we punch above our weight with a small coterie of high level chefs who have targeted locations with fertile earth in which to grow much of what they use in the kitchen on a daily basis.

Montalto

julie bennett matt wilkinson kitchen garden montaltoIt is a misty morning in Red Hill South. The ground is wet with dew, and the leaves on the vines have turned yellow to gold, falling to the ground. “I love the change of seasons,” says Executive Chef Matt Wilkinson. “It has been a mild autumn, so we’re still picking beans.” He and his team at the Mornington Peninsula winery restaurant are part of many regional restaurants that are tilling the soil to grow a lot of what they need in the kitchen. “For us, the number one thing is the connectivity the chefs get with the earth,” says Matt. “There are generations of chef who have grown up without a sense of seasonality. Produce is at its best and most flavoursome when grown and ripened at the right time of year. Many chefs have no idea when a pumpkin is in season.” Matt works closely with head gardener Julie Bennett to make sure they are growing the right varieties of potato, Jerusalem artichoke, and greens to serve the different food outlets on the property.” One of the proudest things that we share is having a mix of salad greens, around 10 or 11, freshly picked that day, on the plate every day,” says Matt. “With a little salt, lemon, and extra virgin olive oil, it is a dish in itself.” There is a goal at Montalto for zero food waste. Julie will use a WhatsApp chat group to report back what will be ripe in the kitchen garden or the market garden across the creek with its greenhouses. The chefs work on their menu and place a picking order. If there is an excess, chefs will preserve vegetables for later use. One of Montalto’s signature dishes is a straightforward plate of vegetable crudites, perhaps some fine chicory leaves and radishes. This is served with a warm anchoiade paste, a nod to the traditional Italian bagna calda.

We never print on the menu what we are serving on any one day,” adds Matt. “As soon as you define what will be served, you’re committed to it. Instead, we let the garden tell us what we should serve every day.

Montalto, 33 Red Hill Shoreham Road, Red Hill South.
montalto.com.au

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Tedesca Osteria

Brigitte Hafner farm to plate dining restaurant victoriaOn the crest near Red Hill, a short drive from Montalto, is a historic weatherboard house surrounded by rows of vegetable gardens and fruit trees. This is Tedesca Osteria, recently awarded the best restaurant in Australia by Gourmet Traveller and the brainchild of Brigitte Hafner and business partner Jamie Broadway. An architect-led revival of the building gives it a solid old European feel, the wood fire, and oven dominate the wall at one end of the light-filled dining room. “We’re just putting our summer rows to bed for the winter,” says Brigitte. “we farm using biodynamic techniques and have sown a green manure crop. Our winter beds across the way will feed the kitchen over winter and spring. Brigitte’s background is German, but she trained under Guy Grossi in Melbourne and Stefano de Pieri in Mildura. The menu is about a little bit of seafood, a little bit of meat, some pasta and glorious seasonal fruit and veg.” Brigitte and her garden team plant in long narrow strips and will sow heirloom seeds specific to the Mornington Peninsula in staggered plantings. This allows a gradual and continuous harvest throughout the season. “In summer, we plant a lot of vegetables that enjoy direct heat from the woodfire, so we plant a lot of peppers,” says Brigitte. “We also grow plants that ferment well, and we are working with Sharon Flynn from The Fermentary on pickling mustard leaves,” says Brigitte. “There is something very elemental, very basic, very human about connecting with the earth. The produce we grow here is exceptional. It is picked in the garden in the morning, and a very short time later, it is on the plate. The flavour is exceptional. This is the unfair advantage any chef with a kitchen garden has over other chefs. It comes down to quality that freshness gives.”

Tedesca Osteria, 1175 Mornington-Flinders Road, Red Hill.
Tedescaosteria.com.au  

Brae

Dan Hunter Braue kitchen garden restaurant victoria Dan Hunter stands in the grounds of Brae at Birregurra, 90 minutes west of Melbourne. It’s an old farm that now supplies much of the produce in the multicourse degustation meal and bread, beer, and whisky.

“This is a working farm. We have 10 acres under grain, a grove of 120 olive trees, and 80 citrus trees, both exotic and native,” he says. Dan founded the kitchen garden at the Royal Mail Hotel (see below) and made a name for himself when he arrived from Spain after cooking with Andoni Aduriz at renowned restaurant Mugaritz in San Sebastian. Mugaritz is famed for its extensive plantings of herbs and leafy greens. The farm at Brae is 23 acres in total and supplies 90% of the kitchen’s vegetables. He buys high-quality onions and carrots, for example, for stock. “Yes, it is a source of inspiration, and it inspires the menu, and yes, it is an excellent way to get the chefs close to the source, but you can’t diminish the science, experience, and skill contained in our head gardener Nina Breidahl,” says Dan. “It is so important to get the soil, watering, infrastructure, and systems in place,” he says.

If we were a market garden, we would be supporting a small town with the hundreds of kilos of food we grow and harvest each week

Dan looks out over the near 1km of beds. “I love this transition season. Autumn was mild so we still have tomatoes and eggplants,” he says. “Now I am looking forward to the winter veg. The brassicas, the bitter leaves.”

Brae, 4285 Cape Otway Rd, Birregurra.
braerestaurant.com

Wickens at Royal Mail Hotel

Wickens Royal Mail Hotel Robin kitchen garden dunkeld victoriaThe rock face of Mount Sturgeon looms over ordered rows of fruit and vegetables at the Royal Mail Hotel’s Dunkeld gardens three hours west of Melbourne. A high brush fence protects the plants from the westerlies and the town’s kangaroos. There is almost a hectare of gardens and two paddocks where 70% of the kitchen’s fruit and veg come from. It is an organic system of gardening and cooking where the ducks do the snail patrol, and all the waste from the kitchen gets composted to make new soil. Even the fish carcasses are fermented to make a liquid tea. The plants are as diverse as juniper to make gin, wasabi for a bit of Japanese heat and bananas grown in the greenhouse.

The garden really directs what we do in the kitchen,

says Executive chef Robin Wickens. “At present we are heading into pea and broad bean seasons. We have been raising veg for over 12 years now so there is a good knowledge about what will be ready when,” he says. There are three full-time kitchen gardeners with other grounds staff commandeered at peak times. Robin and his team head into the gardens every morning with their pick list and harvest what they need for the evening service. They have input on what is planted in the garden and work with the garden team to have a range of varieties to spread the harvest across the season. “We are working on the asparagus now to ensure we have enough for spring,” says Robin. “This means having 450 plants of different varieties.” Robin says the garden looks after itself financially, and the menu is supplemented with snails grown in the gardens for escargot and locally shot venison. Beef cattle are raised on the farm associated with the hotel. A mobile abattoir, Provenir, visits the farm throughout the year to ensure a steady supply of Angus beef, wagyu, and lamb from the rare English meat breed Hampshire. “There is always a story to tell, and guests are invited to come on a kitchen garden tour,” adds Robin.

Royal Mail Hotel, 98 Parker Street, Dunkeld
royalmail.com.au

Other great restaurants with kitchen gardens

O.My

In Melbourne’s outer sprawl of Beaconsfield is this oasis of great food and wine from the Bertoncello brothers cooking with produce supplied from their nearby farm.

70 Princes Hwy, Beaconsfield.
omyrestaurant.com.au

Du Fermier

In Trentham, Annie Smithers prepares a set menu lunch from vegetables she grows nearby on her farm Babbington Park.

42 High Street, Trentham.
anniesmithers.com.au

Sault

The team at Sault near Daylesford has been expanding their kitchen garden over the years, basing their seasonal menu on what is growing in the garden.

2349 Ballan-Daylesford Rd, Sailors Falls.
sault.com.au

Lake House

Alla Wolf Tasker and her team have always championed local produce and, since the development of their nearby Dairy Flat Farm has been able to grow a large portion of their own produce.

King Street, Daylesford.
lakehouse.com.au

 

We wish to acknowledge the traditional owners of this land and to pay our respects to their Elders, past and present.

The staffing crisis facing our hospitality industry

Words: Della Vreeland
Images: Supplied

‘We’re at a bit of a loss at the moment.’ Daniel Greenwood says as he contemplates how his business is expected to move forward in the wake of the COVID pandemic. The hospitality industry seems to be facing a crisis of sorts, with cafes and restaurants the country-over desperately seeking chefs, wait staff and front-of-house workers – to no avail.

The head chef at Hurstbridge’s Restaurant St. Lawrence, Daniel says his already small team of three is on the hunt for another two staff members in order to optimise its service. And with his wife Emily (the restaurant’s pastry chef) currently expecting their first child, the hunt for some newbies is all the more pressing.

“We haven’t needed staff up until this point. Only now that my wife’s pregnant, we have a limited amount of time left and so we’ve been trying to find somebody to work for us,’ Daniel says. ‘It seems like post-COVID, it’s trickier than what it would’ve been otherwise.’

Daniel and Emily opened up the 25-seater Restaurant St. Lawrence in August 2019, only six months before COVID well and truly infiltrated Australia’s shores. Throughout the pandemic, they were able to make-do, showcasing their culinary finesse on the plate with a stunning rotating seasonal menu, takeaway offerings and an accompanying bakeshop. Both Daniel and Emily previously worked at the hatted restaurant Levantine Hill (as Sous Chef and Pastry Chef respectively) before deciding to make the move to Hurstbridge to start up a venture of their own.

‘We’ve both been in the industry a long time and have seen in the past that when businesses and restaurants are looking for staff, it’s relatively easy to find people who are keen and eager to work – even sometimes to do trials and internships or anything. Now it’s really the polar opposite. There’s nobody around at all.

‘It’s not ideal and I want to say there’s a lack of skilled workers more than anything else. It’s not that there’s nobody out there, there’s just nobody with relative industry experience, and nobody who wants to work in the industry.’

A decrease in skilled migration

According to the Restaurant and Catering Industry Association (RC&A) of Australia, the closure of international borders over the past two years meant that Australia missed out on an entire wave of skilled migrants.

‘These workers were critical to Australia’s hospitality sector and we’re hoping that now things are re-opening we can at least try to make up for lost-ground,’ says RC&A CEO Wes Lambert.

‘(Further), the ways that visas are processed in this country to bring in skilled workers from overseas is extremely slow, convoluted and expensive. People want to come to Australia to work and our venues want to bring in the very best. We just don’t think that’s happening right now.

‘It would be wrong to say that things were perfect even before the COVID-19 pandemic however, the situation that we find ourselves in now is far, far, worse obviously. Now that borders have reopened we hope to see an influx of people coming back to Australia or even for the first time. We really think that the government needs to take steps to encourage international workers to come to this country to work.’

These thoughts are echoed by owners of Ballarat’s laneway cafe Hydrant Food Hall Elise and Sam Rowe, who have also been struggling with staffing shortages and who have noted the direct correlation between border closures and the staffing crisis.

‘From what we have seen and experienced, the border closures within Australia and internationally, has meant that the travelling employee has been stationary,’ says Elise. ‘Hospitality and tourism is a fabulous industry for people to work as a casual while utilising time off to travel.

‘We have also seen many university courses transition to majority online study, which means the need for students to move to Ballarat has reduced in numbers. Again, hospitality is a suitable industry for students as a casual job to fit around the typical on-site class timetable. These students have not been arriving to town in the same numbers as they used to be. Venues in the Metro region are also feeling the pinch a bit. The larger population will be helpful in terms of the number of people looking for work, but many of the challenges that regional venues are facing are also true for metro too.’

The deeper issue

According to Elise, the industry as a whole has witnessed many experienced and qualified employees leave due to it not being able to provide a secure income yet demanding stringent work conditions – something that the COVID pandemic cast an unsettling spotlight on.

‘These two factors are not overly attractive for many people, and for those who had inklings for a new career restart, they have taken the opportunity to study online over the past couple of years and a new work life.’

A hospitality union Hospo Voices spokesperson said over the pandemic, workers were treated like a ‘shock absorber for changes in the business cycle, suddenly losing their shifts and hours from one day to the next’.

‘We must remember the real reason bosses can’t find workers –  trained, experienced workers have quit the industry in droves – is because they are fed up with wage theft and insecure work. Four out of five workers are casual in this industry – the highest rate of any industry,’ they said.

‘We are seeing some venues offer sign-on bonuses and other inducements, but the danger is workers will find the rug pulled from underneath them when competition for workers starts to ease off.

‘Our key piece of advice for hospo workers right now – use this shortage to demand secure employment.’

But Wes says such claims are not only wrong but entirely unhelpful when trying to revitalise a struggling industry.

‘The unions like to shine a light on example of wage theft, which is fair, but then go way too far in characterising this as an industry-wide problem that will 100% happen to anyone who even dares to take up a job in hospitality,’ he says. ‘We know this problem is decreasing and all workers should be getting their appropriate pay.

 ‘In terms of “insecure work”, you can walk down any street in any town or city in Australia and I guarantee you that nearly every restaurant and café that you see will have a sign in the window advertising full-time or part-time work.

 ‘It seems quite silly to me that the unions are so concerned about “insecure work” and yet demonise the one industry crying out for people to fill part-time and full-time roles.’

Education and reconceptualising hospitality

Elise says that moving forward, it’s crucial to think about the next generation of workers – educating and supporting them with sound advice about the industry and the career opportunities that it can provide.

She says as a community, society and government, it was important to showcase the value in the industry and not to underestimate its economic impact.

‘We also need to be teaching them about work ethic, persistence, responsibility, resilience, loyalty and teamwork,’ she says. ‘Hospitality is an industry of face-to-face, the enjoyment of people, and the stage of giving. We need to ensure that future generations are given these life skills.

‘The demand for quality food and coffee is increasing, and quality friendly service is an important part that comes along with that. It’s a creative industry full of design and colour, a science-based industry, an industry of numbers and formulas, an industry of events, an industry of local suppliers, an industry based on consumer behaviour, an industry that requires effective marketing, and of course an industry of mathematics and sales.’

Wes agrees that government and industry must work together to encourage more Australians to take up hospitality as a career as opposed to a transient, ‘in-between’ job.

‘Part of this comes with better engagement at schools, mentoring from experts and a changing of our culture,’ he says.

Working within their means

Until the situation improves, business owners are needing to work with what they have and make the most of what is indeed a trying situation for all those in the industry.

Even though lockdowns are a thing of the past, Hydrant Food Hall continues to have times where it needs to close up shop due to its staff needing to isolate – something eateries simply cannot afford in the wake of the pandemic.

‘Attempting to lift staff morale and engagement during times of uncertainty has had its challenges,’ Elise says. ‘We have noticed that people’s motivation to focus and actively work has been lower than previous years. There has been an element of long-term fatigue that everyone brings with them.

‘(But) now that the government restrictions have lifted, so too has morale and enjoyment at work. People are beginning to move about again, applications are arriving, and there are smiles. We have definitely had our moments of exhaustion and frustration during these times, but our belief in our business and our product, and genuine enjoyment for the venue, helped us to keep our eye on the future and do everything we can to ensure that the service our customers have grown to know and love, will be the thing to bring them back and so too will the staff and their workplace enjoyment.

‘The challenge now is having staff who can fill the roster to the demand of growing the business.’

For Daniel and Emily, the current challenge means capping their service to 25 so it remains manageable.

‘That’s what it will mean for a lot of other places,’ Daniel says. ‘Work within your means rather than trying to really push and trying to be busier.

‘The irony of it all is we wanted to open our place a bit closer to home and we wanted to cook for ourselves and do things on our own terms and that’s been taken away from us a bit.’