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

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.
Harvest Home Hotel, Avenel

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.
Criterion Hotel, Sale

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.
The Continental Hotel, Sorrento

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.
Bunyip Hotel, Cavendish

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.
We wish to acknowledge the traditional owners of this land and to pay our respects to their Elders, past and present.
If 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
Up 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
Also 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.
A 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
This 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.
This popular lodge with a stone fireplace featured in the restaurant dining room. The menu offers bistro classics like beef tartare and ricotta gnocchi.
Casual café, bar, restaurant on Schuss St looking out onto the Australian Alps. Come for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
Modern, 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
Carved 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.
Casual, 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.
In 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.
This 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.
At 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.
It 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
On the crest near
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.
The rock face of Mount Sturgeon looms over ordered rows of fruit and vegetables at the Royal Mail Hotel’s