NewsBite

Advertisement

Victoria’s best regional restaurants of the year (plus great places to stay and make a weekend of it)

Looking for destination inspiration for your next road trip? The Age Good Food Guide’s Regional Restaurant of the Year finalists make a great starting point.

Emma Breheny
Emma Breheny

A trailblazing chef cooking reimagined Aussie staples at a country bowls club, a beloved winery restaurant looking plusher than ever and an Italian restaurant wedged into a delicatessen: venues outside the capital are offering some of Victoria’s most interesting eating experiences right now.

The finalists for Regional Restaurant of the Year and Flinders + Co. New Regional Restaurant of the Year, awarded by The Age Good Food Guide 2024, reflect the exciting explosion in country dining that’s taken place since the pandemic years. And they provide a list of essential dining hotspots for a summer road trip. An influx of keen young restaurateurs, as well as large hospitality groups with deep pockets, has produced a slew of new venues that push the boundaries of what makes a destination diner.

Tedesca Osteria chef-patron Brigitte Hafner says a kitchen garden has changed her cooking.
Tedesca Osteria chef-patron Brigitte Hafner says a kitchen garden has changed her cooking.Simon Schluter

FLINDERS + CO. NEW REGIONAL RESTAURANT OF THE YEAR FINALISTS

Mortadeli Pasta Bar, Torquay

Advertisement

You’ll be greeted by shelves of hot sauce, quality tinned tomatoes and other gourmet goodies, but you’re at the right place. Flick your eyes to the left and spot the butter-yellow bar and toffee-coloured stools, then clock the handmade pasta in front of every diner, perhaps fat tubes in peppery cheese sauce or long strands curled around garlicky clams. Initially a European deli and sandwich spot, Mortadelihas dropped a restaurant in the middle of it all - and it’s a winner.

Shop 8, 4-6 Gilbert Street, Torquay, mortadeli.com.au

The dining room of Mortadeli Pasta Bar doubles as a deli.
The dining room of Mortadeli Pasta Bar doubles as a deli.Nick Watson

Kin, Wahgunyah

You might think you know All Saints, the winery contained in a castle beside the Murray. But take another trip up the Hume and you’ll find signs of a new era underway: a more handsome cellar door, casual pizzeria and a brighter, more contemporary flagship restaurant called Kin, led by young chef Jack Cassidy. He’s putting Murray region produce on the plate in exciting new ways, and pushing the region’s dining forward with his approach.

Advertisement

205 All Saints Road, Wahgunyah, allsaintswine.com.au

Totti’s Lorne
Could they do it? Would NSW’s pub superpower Merivale pull off a restaurant that Victorians embrace? Totti’s Lorne answered that question with a flamboyant and Summer of Love-tinged “yes” in March, delivering a year-round coastal destination that ignored the off-season and kept pumping out Italian good times - and plate after plate of its famed puffy bread. Victorian seafood and local chef Matt Germanchis are part of its arsenal, but it’s hard to resist the pull of eating crowd-friendly pastas, wood-fired meats and snacky things by the sea.

176 Mountjoy Parade, Lorne, merivale.com/venues/tottis-lorne

Totti’s Lorne channels 60s style through an Italian beachside lens.
Totti’s Lorne channels 60s style through an Italian beachside lens.Ashley Ludkin

REGIONAL RESTAURANT OF THE YEAR FINALISTS

Advertisement

La Cachette, Geelong

In the middle of Geelong, chefs Matt Podbury and Joanna Karlin apply time-honoured French techniques to a fresh menu every three weeks. You might be eating wild venison meatballs with cheesy celeriac on grey days, and salmon with asparagus and mussels come spring. The 18-seater is a tiny but mighty operation: the couple live above the restaurant, Podbury’s parents help with admin and during service, Karlin steps out of the kitchen to assume the role of maitre d’. A true charmer.

Steampacket Place, Geelong, cachette.com.au

Salmon with asparagus and mussels at La Cachette, which writes new menus every three weeks.
Salmon with asparagus and mussels at La Cachette, which writes new menus every three weeks.Supplied

Little Picket, Lorne

Advertisement

Rarely will a gourmet road-tripper set their navigation for a country bowls club. But Jo Barrett’s tenancy at Lorne’s bowlo has made it an essential Great Ocean Road stop - and a hit with locals. Call in for dim sims made with wild game, chicken Kyiv featuring rooster and wedges of fluffy sponge cake, but don’t miss Barrett’s cheffier dishes, perhaps spring greens and spanner crab on tostadas. Vegetables are sourced from a farm in Jan Juc, part of a continuation of her small footprint philosophy applied to the whole operation.

35 Mountjoy Parade, Lorne, littlepicket.com.au

Dim sims at Little Picket might be filled with wallaby.
Dim sims at Little Picket might be filled with wallaby.Eddie Jim

Chauncy, Heathcote

A well-travelled couple with exceptional hospitality pedigree, Tess Murray and Louis Naepels knew they wanted to open a country restaurant just like those dotted around France, Spain and Italy. Lucky for Heathcote, they followed through, creating a stunningly simple offer where crisp linen and fresh flowers meet highly seasonal prix-fixe menus. A flourishing kitchen garden and strong relationships with central Victorian producers reinforce why destination dining is such a thrill.

Advertisement

178 High Street, Heathcote, chauncy.com.au

Chauncy embraces the old world charm of its surveyors’ cottage setting.
Chauncy embraces the old world charm of its surveyors’ cottage setting.Simon Schluter

Lake House, Daylesford

It’s been a beacon of farm-to-table dining for nearly 40 years, pulling generations of diners and forging a path for dozens of aspiring young restaurateurs. But Lake House never stands still. It added the 15-hectare Dairy Flat farm and accommodation just before the pandemic, gave its cottage-chic dining room a subtle facelift this year, and the cooking feels more contemporary and relevant than ever in this more eco-conscious dining era.

4 King Street, Daylesford, lakehouse.com.au

Advertisement

Tedesca Osteria, Red Hill

Chef-patron Brigitte Hafner (ex Gertrude Street Enoteca) describes her style at Tedesca as “live cooking”. A hearth powers her five-course menus, scorching O’Connor steak until beautifully crusted and lightly grilling prawns for the opening spread of mezze. The menu might change three times in a weekend, with Hafner and her team pulling most of the vegetables from a 500-square-metre biodynamic kitchen garden, a project that was pursued during the pandemic. Lunch is luxuriously paced - why would you want to rush?

1175 Mornington-Flinders Road, Red Hill, tedesca.com.au

Tedesca Osteria’s hearth is the restaurant’s focal point.
Tedesca Osteria’s hearth is the restaurant’s focal point.Simon Schluter

WHERE TO STAY

Advertisement

GREAT OCEAN ROAD

Sunnymead

A 1980s motel in Aireys Inlet has gone from tired to terrifically retro under new owners, who have added a spa and restaurant, as well as a daffodil colour scheme and mod furnishings that play up the building’s history.sunnymeadhotel.com.au

Sunnymead has embraced its motel past with a retro-fabulous makeover.
Sunnymead has embraced its motel past with a retro-fabulous makeover.Supplied

HEATHCOTE

Advertisement

Wilka Eco Escape

You’ll need to post all your photos of lunch at Chauncy before or after you check-in to this off-grid cabin on a hillside of a private farm. What it lacks in mod-cons, it makes up for with views, stillness and a hot-tub. wilka.com.au

RUTHERGLEN

Jones Winery Tiny House

When in wine country, why not sleep where the magic’s made? A tiny house on Jones’ property is surrounded by vines and gum trees, with a deck to make the most of the peace. A loft holds a queen size bed, while downstairs is a full kitchen, although the winery restaurant isn’t far away. joneswinery.com.au

Advertisement
Inside one of the guesthouses at Tedesca.
Inside one of the guesthouses at Tedesca.Supplied

MORNINGTON PENINSULA

Graceburn Tedesca

Like everything Team Tedesca touches, the two guesthouses beside the restaurant are an impeccable balance of luxury and personality, with carefully selected objects, artworks and flowers making you feel like you’ve stepped into the owners’ world. One sleeps six adults, the other two. tedesca.com.au/osteria-tedesca

The winners of The Age Good Food Guide 2024 Awards will be announced on October 30, presented by Vittoria Coffee and Oceania Cruises. The Age Good Food Guide will be on sale from October 31.

Advertisement

Restaurant reviews, news and the hottest openings served to your inbox.

Sign up
Emma BrehenyEmma BrehenyEmma is Good Food's Melbourne-based reporter and co-editor of The Age Good Food Guide 2024.

From our partners

Advertisement
Advertisement

Original URL: https://www.theage.com.au/goodfood/melbourne-eating-out/eight-essential-victorian-regional-restaurants-and-four-fabulous-places-to-stay-nearby-20231019-p5edia.html