NewsBite

Advertisement

This new Mornington Peninsula fine diner is one of Australia’s most ambitious restaurants of the decade

Across 400 hectares, Barragunda Estate rears cattle, grows wheat and transforms its harvest into Middle Eastern-influenced tasting menus. But the real goal is to rejuvenate people.

Emma Breheny
Emma Breheny

Barragunda is a set on 400 hectares that supply lamb, beef, rye wheat and dozens of varieties of vegetables and fruit.
1 / 8Barragunda is a set on 400 hectares that supply lamb, beef, rye wheat and dozens of varieties of vegetables and fruit.Arianna Leggiero
The dining room looks out to native vegetation and the kitchen garden.
2 / 8The dining room looks out to native vegetation and the kitchen garden.Arianna Leggiero
Dishes such as dried tomato with smoked stracciatella (right) are designed around the garden and a large wall of preserves.
3 / 8Dishes such as dried tomato with smoked stracciatella (right) are designed around the garden and a large wall of preserves.Arianna Leggiero
Chef-farmer Simone Watts can’t imagine writing her menus without a kitchen garden now.
4 / 8Chef-farmer Simone Watts can’t imagine writing her menus without a kitchen garden now.Kristoffer Paulsen
Meals kick off with snacks such as baby radish with sabayon and lovage.
5 / 8Meals kick off with snacks such as baby radish with sabayon and lovage.Arianna Leggiero
Barragunda’s dining room is all about earthy tones and natural materials.
6 / 8Barragunda’s dining room is all about earthy tones and natural materials.Arianna Leggiero
Black Angus beef, raised on the estate, paired with with new-season alliums.
7 / 8Black Angus beef, raised on the estate, paired with with new-season alliums.Arianna Leggiero
Young almond and red tropea onion pissaladiere, served in the style of a danish.
8 / 8Young almond and red tropea onion pissaladiere, served in the style of a danish.Arianna Leggiero

Food-to-table director. Head regenerative officer. Producer-in-chief. It’s hard to encapsulate in a single job title what Simone Watts does at Barragunda Estate. She’s modestly settled on “chef and farmer”, but that only hints at what she’s spent nearly five years building on a secluded Cape Schanck property, now home to one of Australia’s most ambitious farm-to-table experiences.

Barragunda’s 400 hectares provide Watts and her team with lamb, olives, nashi pears, rye grain, lemongrass, Angus beef, garlic, honey, grapefruit – the list goes on. When guests arrive, they walk past a wall of brightly coloured preserves: green almonds, baby radishes, slender fennel.

The dining room is all about earthy tones and natural materials.
The dining room is all about earthy tones and natural materials.Arianna Leggiero

The restaurant could be the Mornington Peninsula’s most significant opening of the decade. (Red Hill’s two-hatted Tedesca Osteria, another life-defining farm-to-table project, is the only other that comes close.)

Advertisement

In addition to the fine-dining restaurant opening to the public on February 21, Barragunda is home to a regenerative farm, a collective of growers, an online produce store, a wedding venue, and – its owners hope – a blueprint for the future of regional dining.

Watts (whose resume includes hatted Coda and Greg Malouf’s MoMo) imagined Barragunda would take about six months to launch. But various planning delays gave her and Hayley Morris – whose family owns the property and pubs such as Portsea Hotel – time to think big.

Dishes such as dried tomato with smoked stracciatella (right) are designed around the garden and a large wall of preserves.
Dishes such as dried tomato with smoked stracciatella (right) are designed around the garden and a large wall of preserves.Arianna Leggiero

Watts calls her catalogue of preserves the Barragunda Bible. When it comes to writing menus, she pores over the “Bible” and the latest harvest list from farm hand Karl Breese. Watts, who lives on the estate, also takes morning runs through the orchards and along garden paths to get ideas flowing.

It’s a very different process to how she – and many contemporary chefs – usually come up with dishes.

Advertisement

“You might put an order in for eggplant and your stock-standard eggplant will arrive in a box, whereas we’ve got four or five different varieties growing,” she says.

“It’s so rewarding when you’re finally putting things on the plate, and eight or nine months ago you were deciding that particular species was going to be sown.”

Chef Simone Watts calls the list of preserves “The Barragunda Bible”.
Chef Simone Watts calls the list of preserves “The Barragunda Bible”.Arianna Leggiero

The opening menu includes pissaladiere tart in tiny Danish form, with fermented green almonds subbing in for the traditional olive, and almond cream squiggled on top. Mussels from Flinders supplier Harry’s are served in a spiced white wine reduction, with fried mussels and sunflower miso.

The influence of Watts’ mentor, the late Greg Malouf, is peppered throughout. Small merguez sausages made with the estate’s lamb (reared for longer than usual to get more flavour and yield) are paired with ezme, the Turkish salsa featuring diced tomatoes, cucumber and peppers. The sausage is smoked over a large wood-fired hearth that was shipped in from the much-celebrated Adelaide Hills restaurant The Summertown Aristologist.

Advertisement
Mussels a la grecque showcase seafood from nearby Flinders.
Mussels a la grecque showcase seafood from nearby Flinders.Arianna Leggiero

There’s also “an ode” to Malouf in a dessert of citrus-blossom honey, semolina, cardamom, preserved stone fruit and cream.

Morris hopes guests will feel the difference after eating the 10-dish tasting menu ($145), where just-picked, “nutrient-dense” vegetables are the star. A long-time advocate for local food systems that are kinder to the environment, she felt a restaurant was the perfect way to show people what’s possible.

“In an environment where [people] feel relaxed and somewhat connected to nature … they’re much more responsive.”

Barragunda joins a growing number of destination diners worldwide striving to showcase values as much as deliciousness. Three-hatted Brae in Victoria’s Otways, The Agrarian Kitchen in Tasmania, and Le Doyenne in France all farm their own food and, for the most part, only cook what they can grow.

Advertisement
Simone Watts has greenhouses, orchards and a large kitchen garden to work with.
Simone Watts has greenhouses, orchards and a large kitchen garden to work with.Kristoffer Paulsen

Here, the farm supplies the restaurant, but surplus produce is sold online via The Collective. Growers in the collective also help each other with mulching and more, and local businesses use the restaurant’s kitchen when it’s closed to make cheese, pastries and other products.

When Watts looked at other farm-to-table restaurants she admired, she noticed they all had a true sense of place. She wanted diners at Barragunda to look out and see the beds that grew the radishes and other crudites that kick off a meal – or even walk around before lunch.

“You get a real feeling of peace and joy when you come to this property. And I don’t think that’s just about the dining experience … It’s largely about connection to country and place,” she says.

The dining room looks out to native vegetation and the kitchen garden.
The dining room looks out to native vegetation and the kitchen garden.Arianna Leggiero
Advertisement

The 40-seat dining room, with its pitched roof of spotted gum, feels a little like a barn. Terracotta tiles, earthenware plates, and arrangements of grasses and flowers grown on the property give a strong sense of the natural world.

Future plans include farm tours for diners, workshops on native revegetation or cheese-making, and talks and tours for fellow philanthropists interested in food systems. While there’s no accommodation on-site, it has been discussed – and Morris and Watts don’t seem to shy away from a challenge.

Lunch Friday-Monday; dinner Saturday

113 Cape Schanck Road, Cape Schanck, barragunda.com.au

Continue this series

Your March hit list: Hot, new and just-reviewed places to check out this month
Up next
Tucked on a side street in Strathmore, Athos cafe is drawing crowds for its home-grown Greek food.

This humble cafe in the ’burbs is taking Melbourne’s Greek food back to its roots

“Mixed grills, platters – that’s never the way Greeks have eaten.” A couple with 30 years experience are drawing people from all over with their homemade and ultra-fresh approach.

Auterra’s guanciale-draped abalone schnitzel sandwich.

This schnitzel sandwich from a three-hat fine diner’s spin-off wine bar is a winner

In a city of chicken-schnitty sangers, this seafood version takes fish ‘n’ chip shop memories and makes them fancy.

Previous
Chilled tofu with syrup.

Doughnuts, ice-cream and nuggets: How this tiny shop puts a creative spin on tofu

A small-batch tofu maker is pushing perceptions of the vegetarian staple into new territory, using McDonald’s, low-waste cooking and more for inspiration.

See all stories

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

Sign up
Emma BrehenyEmma BrehenyEmma is Good Food’s Melbourne eating out and restaurant editor.

From our partners

Advertisement
Advertisement

Original URL: https://www.theage.com.au/goodfood/melbourne-eating-out/this-new-mornington-peninsula-fine-diner-is-one-of-australia-s-most-ambitious-restaurants-of-the-decade-20250219-p5ldb6.html