Top 10 ways to enjoy wine in Australia

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Australian wine is coming of age with wines increasingly reflective of their source and raw materials. The resulting sophistication of wine style, texture and flavour has meant that Australian wines are more relevant to the food we eat than ever before.

Wine bars and restaurants are popping up across the county at a dizzying pace with wine lists that advertise a deeply authentic and uniquely Australian approach.

 

Here, you’ll find the top 10 ways to soak up our truly covetable Aussie wine culture – part of our 100 Incredible Experiences (right here in your backyard) special issue.

 

Words: Chris Morrison is a career sommelier and ‘wine guy’, Chris was named the Sydney Morning Herald Good Food Guide Sommelier of the Year in 2006 and went on to work as group head sommelier for Guillaume Brahimi at Guillaume at Bennelong in 2013. He is now wine director for The Keystone Group, working across its 25 venues.

1. Back with a bang – Australian Chardonnay

The grape that was the Australian wine industry’s business card for more than 30 years, chardonnay is the best example of the changes sweeping through Australian wine.

 

A victim of industrialised winemaking and public listings in the ’80s and ’90s, chardonnay was squeezed into millions of bottles, loaded with excessive oak and pumped up with alcohol.

 

With wine ‘growing’ more prevalent and wines now being made in vineyards not wineries, chardonnay is finally realising its full potential with wines that run from light, fresh and clean to rich, layered and complex.

 

Hot tip… When buying a bottle, remember the best regions for chardonnay are Margaret River, Tasmania and Tumbarumba.

2. A vintage town – Tanunda, SA

Tanunda is the hub of the Barossa Valley, one of Australia’s best-known and oldest wine regions.

 

Churches may form its historical roots thanks to the Lutheran settlers who founded the township over 160 years ago, but wine is Tanunda’s true religion.

 

With some of the oldest shiraz and grenache vines in the world and the sounds of vintage season echoing down the main road, Tanunda is the quintessential Australian wine town.

 

Hot tip… The pool table in the Tanunda Hotel breaks to the left.

3. Splendid drops – Great Southern Region, WA

While the tyranny of distance prevents many from making the trip, perhaps no other wine region in Australia rewards you as highly for making the effort.

 

Sitting in the very south-west corner of Australia, the great southern region is Raw, pristine and breathtakingly beautiful, and the vineyards benefit from a wide variety of soil and climate, creating wines that can tackle well-known subjects like shiraz, pinot noir, and riesling with a unique perspective.

 

Hot tip… Visit in June and take part in the Truffle Kerfuffle, a week-long celebration of the world-famous Manjimup truffles.

4. Enjoy a Tasmanian sparkling – Jansz, Pipers River

The powerhouse regions of the Barossa Valley, Margaret River and the Yarra Valley cast a long shadow across the Australian wine landscape, yet Tasmania and blue ribbon grape growing regions, such as Pipers River are now sharing the spotlight.

 

So many sparkling wine producers go wrong by trying to emulate Champagne.

 

At Jansz, they strive to articulate the uniqueness of their patch of dirt in northern Tasmania through wines that reflect the long, cool vintages of its southern position.

 

They are delicate in structure, concentrated in flavour and unmistakably Australian.

 

Hot tip… Jansz is the only winery in Tasmania that specialises in sparkling wine and their cellar door is well worth a visit.

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5. Divine dining – Margaret River, WA

No other wine region manages to combine the best of Australia as authentically as Margaret River.

 

With many vineyards within sight of beaches that dot the coastline, Margaret River has also cultivated an approach to the ‘wine experience’ that has resulted in the finest collection of winery restaurants found anywhere in the country.

 

On the subject of wine, Margaret River is pound-for-pound the best wine region in Australia with a string of outstanding vintages resulting in world-class quality.

 

The ocean adds something special; its proximity to the vineyards gives the region its temperate climate, leading to wines with a texture and flavour that sits beautifully between the richness of South Australia and the restraint and elegance of Victoria and Tasmania.

 

Hot tip… Tie your visit in with the Margaret River Gourmet Escape held each November.

6. City slicker – Fix St James, Sydney

You can’t help but relax when you walk into Stuart Knox’s rather anonymous-looking wine bar and restaurant, Fix St James.

 

One of the city’s first wine bars, ‘Fix’ is renowned for breaking news and showcasing the best of Australia’s up and coming wineries.

 

But it’s more than the medium-sized and pragmatically formatted wine list that helps you find the right wine every time or that new chef Mark Archer has shaped a menu the contents of which drift between sympathy and lustful craving for wine pairings.

 

It’s how this place makes you feel about wine; it encourages you to ask questions and makes you unafraid of the answers.

 

Hot tip… They allow BYO with a small corkage fee, so bring your cellared goodies and take advantage.

7. South Australian treasures – Star of Greece, Victory Hotel, Port Willunga, Sellicks Hill

From its perch overlooking the Gulf of St Vincent, the Star of Greece has been serving the bounty of the southern oceans to hungry travellers for decades.

 

Imagine light, fresh and intensely flavoured offerings with the ocean stretching to the horizon and crisp, white wines idling in an ice bucket within arm’s reach.

 

Post meal, scoot 10 minutes down the road where, overlooking Selkirk Beach, you’ll find the Victory Hotel.

 

If cold beer has a birthright, it’s to be poured on tap at the ‘Vic’, yet owner Doug Govan, who took over the pub in 1989 has curated arguably one of the best wine lists found anywhere in Australia.

 

Hot tip… the victory hotel has Some of the best accommodation in the region.

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8. Fine dining in the Hunter Valley – Muse Kitchen

You know that moment when you take a bite and things go very quiet.

 

No one wants to be the first but everyone wants to say the same thing: “Is it just me or is this amazing?" Troy Rhoades-Brown’s Muse Kitchen is perhaps the perfect wine region restaurant.

 

Part of Keith Tulloch’s deceptively cute winery in the Hunter Valley’s Pokolbin district, Muse is a Euro-centric bistro with Australian sensibilities.

 

Food is classical in its technique, but generous and robust in flavour.

 

Hot tip… If you’re hankering for something more ‘uppity’, try sister establishment Muse Restaurant, located at Hungerford Hill winery about 20 minutes away, also in Pokolbin.

9. Must try: Coonawarra Cabernet with lamb chops – Coonawarra, SA

They say you can watch your dog run away for three days in Coonawarra.

 

It’s flat, really flat, but it is also perfect for producing elegant, savoury and full-flavoured red wines from cabernet sauvignon grapes.

 

There is a distinctive minty, eucalyptus character in these wines that is unique to the region and fits the tender, smoky and slightly gamey flavours of lamb perfectly.

 

Cabernet sauvignon has stern, grippy tannins that melt when it comes into contact with lamb’s supple flavours.

 

Hot tip… Always order your lamb on the bone and your cabernet sauvignon with at least five years’ bottle age.

10. A wine day out – Giant Steps, Healesville, Victoria

One of the great entrepreneurs of Australian wines, Phil Sexton, has created a Disneyland for the mature-aged less than one hour’s drive from Melbourne.

 

With a fully operational winery, brewery, coffee roaster, bakery, cheese store, pizzeria, wine bar, and restaurant you can literally spend an entire day here.

 

Backed by the award-winning wines from Giant Steps and sister wine label Innocent Bystander, this is a place where hours pass like minutes and kids, well, kids can occupy themselves.

 

Hot tip… Ten minutes away is Oakridge Wines and a new restaurant by chef Matt Stone.

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A gourmand’s guide to eating your way around Hamilton Island

(Credit: Nikki To)

From poolside bites and tasting flights to seafood plates and dry-aged steaks, a foodie adventure on Hamilton Island is worth every bite.

Hamilton Island’s sun-lacquered shores have long magnetised travellers craving an escape from reality. But what’s less expected – and more interesting – is just how assuredly this Whitsundays idyll delivers on the culinary front. Dialling up the flavour as much as the barefoot allure, the Hamilton Island food scene offers world-class dining and drinking options, spanning slick fine-dining moments to just-caught seafood served within sight of the sea. Let’s dig in.

Catseye Pool Club

Catseye Pool Club
Catseye Pool Club offers stunning beach views. (Image: Kara Rosenlund)

Framing the electric blues of Catseye Beach from The Sundays hotel, Catseye Pool Club is Hamilton Island’s latest culinary prodigy. Shown to our table, we thread through rattan chairs, Zellige tiles and tumbling greenery that opens up to Coral Sea shimmer.

The poolside restaurant is the brainchild of Sydney-based chef duo Josh and Julie Niland, who have brought their relaxed yet elevated dining ethos north. The menu – designed to bring people together – is made for sharing, each hero ingredient orbited by a palette of sides to mix, match and layer as you please.

My thyme cocktail – woody with scotch, lifted by lime leaf – pairs perfectly with the charcoal grilled prawns entree, which is served with tumeric and lemongrass marinade, macadamia satay sauce and a thai-leaning sour green mango salad. Each forkful lands differently, but all are a delight. Then comes the coral trout. True to Josh Niland’s ‘scale-to-tail’ philosophy, the fish is presented whole in a theatrical crescent, a tiny fork stuck into its cheek in a nod to Niland’s declared prize cut. Ribbons of zucchini resembling gauzy curtains bring brightness and snap, while kasundi lends depth and warmth. It’s tongue-tantalising, special occasion dining with humanity.

Sails Restaurant

Sails Restaurant hamilton island
Settle into casual poolside dining. (Credit: Nikki To)

A more casual poolside dining scene awaits at nearby Sails Restaurant, where Eastern Mediterranean flavours are dished up with an island twist. Chermoula chicken skewers and barramundi souvlaki lie on the more filling side of the menu, while the sumac squid and stone-bread flatbread with za’atar – arriving alongside pomegranate molasses, beetroot hummus and crushed macadamias – are perfect light bites after a dip in the pool. And don’t miss the garlic lemon scallops.

The setting is equally part of the draw. Sunlight floods the high-ceilinged dining room, while outdoor tables look out across the glittering expanse of Catseye Beach. Holidaymakers in oversized sunglasses sip spritzes beneath umbrellas, the gentle clink of plates mixing with splashes from the adjacent pool. It’s the kind of place you’ll want to linger long after lunch.

Bommie

cuttlefish dish at Bommie restaurant Hamilton Island Yacht Club
Head to the Hamilton Island Yacht Club for a taste of Bommie. (Credit: Nikki To)

Tucked into a sleek curved wing of the Hamilton Island Yacht Club, Bommie delivers experiential fine dining with a sense of occasion. Led by award-winning Executive Chef Ryan Locke, the seasonal menu champions local and native Australian ingredients whipped up into a modern display of creative precision.

Inside the dim-lit dining room, guests can choose between the Tasting Menu or Chef’s Signature Degustation. Sourdough with pine oil sets the tone for the six-course tasting menu, beautifully presented in a bed of pine needles alongside smoked paperbark butter. I love how the squid ink choux pastry is served with flavour-popping native finger lime, which our waiter encourages us to eat caviar-style. Standout moments continue with the wattle-seed-crusted venison elevated by red fruit and pickled beetroot swirls; the meat is perfectly pink in the middle and an homage to the island’s history as a deer farm.

Pebble Beach

qualia Resort Pebble Beach
qualia Resort guests can dine at Pebble Beach. (Credit: Lean Timms)

Exclusive to qualia Resort guests for lunch and dinner, Pebble Beach is Hamilton Island’s most serene expression of seasonal island dining. Ocean-facing chairs dot a timber deck that spills straight onto the resort’s private beach, while crystalline turquoise waters stretch to meet distant islands – a scene far prettier than any postcard could capture.

The recently refreshed menu doubles down on seasonality and bright, layered flavours. While the more substantial T-bone steak with hazelnut honey carrots tempts, we go lighter: Coffin Bay oysters with Champagne foam and keffir lime dust kick us off splendidly, followed by Byron Bay burrata served with balsamic and caramelised figs. The fennel and orange salad topped with succulent grilled chicken is utterly delectable, but it’s the zingy, oh-so-fresh soft shell fish tacos that I can’t stop thinking about. It all goes down a treat with a glass of delicate Charles Heidsieck Brut Reserve Champagne.

Beach Club Restaurant

Beach Club Restaurant hamilton island
Book in advance for Beach Club Restaurant. (Credit: Nikki To)

A lunch or dinner table at Beach Club Restaurant is best booked in advance – and it’s easy to see why. Looking out over the hotel’s palm-fringed infinity pool, the restaurant spotlights elegant contemporary Australian cuisine with a stellar (also Aussie-leaning) wine list to match.

I am completely enamoured by the grilled Queensland prawns, which are brought to life with a smoked compound, local fried curry leaves and lime. Digging into the butter-soft lamb rump served atop pea ragout and parsley Paris mash feels like a warm, nostalgic hug. And dessert – vanilla bean ice cream drizzled with hot salted honey and apple gel – ends the night on a high note.

Expect warm and discreet service; our waiter Marco tells us that the tiny decorative starfish on our table are there to help the staff remember whether we prefer sparkling or still water, so they don’t need to bother us by asking multiple times.

Talk & Taste with Courtenay Morgan-Fletcher

hamilton island Talk & Taste with Courtenay Morgan-Fletcher
Join this immersive wine experience. (Credit Eleanor Edström)

There’s more to Hamilton Island’s foodie scene than restaurant reservations alone. For wine-curious travellers seeking something a little more immersive, Beach Club has recently introduced Talk & Taste – a tutored tasting hosted by Bommie Assistant Manager and wine enthusiast Courtenay Morgan-Fletcher. Held twice weekly for a maximum of eight guests, the experience explores Australian wine culture through four thoughtfully selected drops paired with native-inspired bites.

We opt for the white wine and seafood option. Alongside pours from Eden Valley and Launceston, a nibbling platter arrives featuring sashimi, salmon roe, Mooloolaba prawn ceviche and palate-cleansing ginger. The seafood is pristine and pared back, allowing the wines to take centre stage.

The real highlight, however, is discovering just how nuanced winemaking can be. Courtenay speaks of viticulture as both art and science: harvest grapes a week too late and ripeness tips into ruin; plant the same varietal on different elevations and the sun, slope and water flow will shape entirely different expressions. Pinot noir, she explains, with its delicate skin and high water content, yields lighter fruit-forward wines, while thicker-skinned shiraz delivers depth and structure. I leave feeling fascinated and inspired by Courtenay’s evident passion.

coca chu

table spread at CocaChu
Get a taste of Southeast Asian flavours. (Credit: Nikki To)

Sweet and hot. Sour and salty. Dining at ever-popular coca chu is a sensation-swirling experience that’s not to be missed if you’re a sucker for punchy Southeast Asian flavours. Located at the Main Pool end of Catseye Beach, this lively hangout is all swaying lanterns, driftwood, high beamed ceilings and giant open windows that let in the balmy ocean breeze.

Drawing from hawker traditions, the grilled betel leaf is a neat, vibrant mouthful of chilli fried cashews and spiced beef. The tofu surprises – soft beneath a tumble of dill, mint and coriander, and glossed in moreish peanut sauce. The massaman curry is pure comfort: creamy, fragrant, fall-apart meat. It’s generous and expressive cooking that I, for one, cannot get enough of.

Marina Cafe

hamilton island MArina Cafe
Take in harbour views and comfort food.

Sometimes, all you crave on holidays is a bacon and egg roll done properly and a creamy fruit smoothie. Boasting harbour views, an easygoing atmosphere and clean modern interiors, Marina Cafe is a popular local haunt for a reason. The casual menu lures families and couples alike with its all-day brekky, seasonal salads and sandwiches – from a roasted pumpkin bowl to prosciutto and rocket on herby focaccia.

The acai bowl, topped with toasted nuts and berries, is a refreshing start to my day. Whether you sit in or takeaway, it’s a good-vibes-guaranteed place to refuel before or after your Whitsundays adventures.

Discover your foodie getaway now at hamiltonisland.com.au.