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Meet the female changemakers transforming The Tweed’s culinary scene

Image: Hannah Puechmarin

The women of The Tweed are growing more than just food. On Bundjalung Country in the Northern Rivers of NSW, they are reshaping the region’s culinary culture, placing community at the heart of everything they do.
the magical vistas of Wollumbin
Marvel at the magical vistas of Wollumbin. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)

Across the lands of NSW’s Tweed region, food feels less like an industry and more like a conversation – between growers and chefs, producers and neighbours. Here, sustainability is practised rather than preached, community is central and women are increasingly setting the pace, weaving connection into their daily work in unmistakably delicious ways.

Christine Manfield and Amy Colli, Savour The Tweed

chef and author Christine Manfield
Christine Manfield connects with Indigenous peoples through food. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)

It’s into this verdant Northern Rivers landscape that acclaimed chef and author Christine Manfield settled several years ago. Beyond the relaxed beach life and rich soils, she found a food community whose values aligned with her own. Manfield has long championed Indigenous knowledge and collaboration, and here she found a place where engagement with First Nations people was strong – opening up new ways of connecting and reconciling through food.

“Australians need to be proud of our incredible Indigenous history, and food is a great way of encouraging and expressing reconciliation. It’s a gentle way of bringing people into the story without being afraid," she says.

local food ambassador Amy Colli, Savour The Tweed
Amy Colli co-curates the Savour The Tweed festival. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)

Bringing people to a shared table is what the annual Savour The Tweed food festival is all about. Launched in 2024 and running 22–26 October in 2026, it showcases the region’s farmers, chefs, distillers and brewers while honouring First Nations cultural heritage. As one of its co-curators alongside local food ambassador Amy Colli, Manfield has become a champion of the region’s food culture.

“We have a really flourishing food tribe here in The Tweed and it’s growing every month."

Mindy Woods, Champions of Change

As Colli points out, women are leading the charge, none more visibly than chef and educator Mindy Woods, a Bundjalung woman from Byron Bay dedicated to raising the profile of Indigenous food culture, the oldest in the world, both here and internationally.

“It’s a food story that’s largely untold. We have more than 6500 ingredients unique to this beautiful land, yet there’s an absolute scarcity of them in our grocery stores and home pantries. It’s a shame, and we’re all missing out," says Woods.

Winning the Champions of Change Award at the prestigious World’s 50 Best Restaurants event in June 2025 has given her voice greater global reach, as native ingredients are gradually popping up in the local food and drink scene.

Chanel Melani and Sally Carter, Birds of Isle

co-founders of Birds of Isle, Chanel Melani and Sally Carter
Chanel Melani and Sally Carter, co-founders of Birds of Isle. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)

Nowhere is Woods’ advocacy more clearly realised than at Birds of Isle in Murwillumbah. When Chanel Melani and Sally Carter founded one of Australia’s first female-led rum distilleries, they wanted to create a spirit that truly reflected the Northern Rivers. Native ingredients were essential, but only with proper cultural understanding.

Before developing their signature Bunya Nut Rum, they engaged Woods as a cultural advisor. She guided them through the significance of bunya, showing how every part of the giant Jurassic-era pinecone can be valued – not just the nut, but the usually discarded shell which releases remarkable aromas when gently smoked in paperbark. This respectful approach now defines their work. Even their labels are made from sugarcane waste pulp, a further expression of valuing resources.

Bron Harrison, Natural Wine Shop & Bar

the Natural Wine Shop & Bar owner, Bron Harrison
Bron Harrison at the Natural Wine Shop & Bar. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)

Keeping things natural continues at Burringbar’s Natural Wine Shop & Bar, tucked away in a small rural village along the Northern Rivers Rail Trail. The shop – and recently added wine bar – champions low-intervention and organic wines from small-batch makers: raw, vibrant, unfiltered, often hand-picked, foot-stamped and basket-pressed.

When the laundromat behind the shop became available, owner Bron Harrison seized the chance to expand. With a love of recycling and an eye for style, she converted the space into a charming, speakeasy-style bar pouring drinks until late.

“It was a lot of fun to put together. Everything you see is second-hand," says Harrison.

the Natural Wine Shop & Bar
Pull up a stool at the Natural Wine Shop & Bar. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)

By day the venue morphs into Pour Good coffee bar, run by a husband-and-wife team who draw in locals and cyclists with aromatic, ethically sourced brews, pastries and snacks.

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Michelle Kuramochi and Rachael Sanderson, Raven Place

Michelle Kuramochi of Raven Place
Rachael Sanderson of Raven Place. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)

Community spirit runs deep at Raven Place, a rural haven in Clothiers Creek where Japanese street food meets organic farming and a lot of heart. Opened in 2023, it’s the dream-turned-reality of Michelle Kuramochi who’s teamed up with farmer Rachael Sanderson, who runs the completely chemical-free property. Around a third of the land is being regenerated to remove weeds and restore native species, producing edible mushrooms as a happy by-product.

a Japanese street food and coffee food truck at Raven Place
Japanese street food meets organic farming. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)

Everything in the onsite van is made from scratch. Drawing on years living in Japan and tips from her mother-in-law, Kuramochi pickles vegetables, mixes sauces for gyozas and wontons, and flavours coffee with fresh turmeric. Most ingredients come straight from the farm: pasture-raised chicken eggs, tiny cucamelons and basil for pesto. Some produce goes to restaurants and medicinal herbs become tinctures for a local herbalist.

food and drinks at Raven Place
Delightful eats at Raven Place. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)

Knowledge is shared, too. Sanderson works with schools to build food-forests and teach kids about food security. Volunteers help weekly and join planting days.

“We’re really trying to bring that idea of community and all working together for a cause," says Sanderson.

The farm also grows food specifically for people in need, donating crops like snow peas, strawberries, potatoes and rocket to the community centre, with workshops planned to help people grow food at home.

Michele Stephens and Amy Brown, Farm & Co

Michele Stephens at Farm & Co, Cudgen
Michele Stephens gets amongst the blooms at Farm & Co. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)

Michele Stephens’ passion is growing soil. She and her family have been at Farm & Co at Cudgen for 23 years, starting out as conventional sweet potato farmers. But as a former paediatric nurse, with a growing family and after a major health scare for her husband, she began rethinking everything she knew about food. What we eat, she realised, shapes our health.

“We need to look at our farming systems because no matter what you put into your mouth, it comes from a farm."

Hank the pig at Farm & Co, Cudgen
Hank the pig enjoys a good old pat. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)

Today she farms in small lots, rotating crops to encourage biodiversity and feeding soil with green manure.

“That’s our fertilisation program. We don’t add anything extra, except perhaps from our pigs or chickens."

Alongside avocados, macadamias and sunflowers, the farm grows around 60 to 70 varieties of vegetables and herbs. Much of it makes its way to the small farm store and cafe out the front, a showcase of whatever’s at its peak. There’s a restaurant too, a collaboration of local hospitality talent with wholesome dining front and centre.

former sous chef at Rick Shores, Amy Brown of Farm & Co.
Amy Brown, also of Farm & Co. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)

Amy Brown, former sous chef at Rick Shores, leads the front of house and kitchen, where the team turns organic produce grown metres away into sophisticated yet totally accessible dishes. Menus change with the farm’s rhythms and feature other nearby ethical and sustainable producers, as well as minimal-intervention wines.

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More innovative women of The Tweed

The momentum keeps building. Feted cheesemonger Kat Harvey brings artisanal cheeses (and killer toasties) to Murwillumbah. While sister-duo Nikky and Danni Wilson elevate neighbourhood dining at Bistro Livi around the corner.

Rachel Duffy brightens Cabarita Beach with delicious eats at No 35 Kitchen and Bar, and Hannah Bamford from Apex Dining at Tweed Regional Gallery champions female chefs.

Rounding out the wave are Yen Trinh, who imbues Pipit with sustainable storytelling and thoughtful design, and Morgan Snow, the creative director and sommelier shaping the award-winning seafood experience at FINS. As Harvey explains with a grin, “In The Tweed, it’s more than just food. It comes with a whole lot of love."

Feted cheesemonger Kat Harvey
Feted cheesemonger Kat Harvey. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)
Kat Harvey's artisanal cheeses
And her artisanal cheeses. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)
Nikky and Danni Wilson at Bistro Livi
Nikky and Danni Wilson at Bistro Livi. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)
Rachel Duffy at No 35 Kitchen and Bar
Rachel Duffy commanding the bar at No 35 Kitchen and Bar. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)
Cabarita Beach on the Tweed Coast
Cabarita Beach epitomises The Tweed’s coastal appeal. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)
breakfast at The Tweed
Farm & Co's local dishes burst with flavour. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)
scenic views at Apex Dining
Enjoy views for days at Apex Dining. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)
Birds of Isle Bunya Nut Rum
Birds of Isle Bunya Nut Rum respects local ingredients – and tastes amazing. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)

 

A traveller’s checklist

Getting there

the Maggies Beach on the NSW Tweed Coast
Picture-perfect Maggies Beach. (Image: Hannah Puechmarin)

At the tip of NSW, The Tweed region is a short detour off the Pacific Motorway between Byron Bay and the Queensland border. It’s just minutes from the Gold Coast Airport in Coolangatta, with domestic and international connections.

Eating there

  • Raven Place in Clothiers Creek is a roadside food van and outdoor cafe selling Japanese street food, farm-fresh eggs from happy chickens, and fermented and organic goodies directly from the sustainable farm behind. It serves excellent coffee, too.
  • Expect breakfasts with a twist, plus modern Australian lunches leaning on Asian flavours and featuring local suppliers, at Apex Dining. The food at this sophisticated gallery cafe is curated as carefully as the surrounding exhibitions, with killer hinterland views on the side.
  • Spend a day with the whole family at Farm & Co in Cudgen. Take a farm tour, gather macadamias, pick sunflowers or settle in for an indulgent breakfast or long lunch at the open-air restaurant, showcasing delicious meals with the freshest of produce.
  • At the Natural Wine Shop & bar, pick up a bottle of minimal-intervention wine or settle into the newly opened wine bar out back over snacks. Look for the secret champagne button: press it and bubbles will appear while patrons cheer.
  • While tiny in size, Kat Harvey Cheese packs a big punch, with a tantalising selection of more than 50 fine artisanal cheeses from Australia and around the world. Feisty cheddars, zesty gruyères or buttery Époisses among others. You can book cheese tastings, too.
  • In the arty surrounds of the M-Arts Precinct, Bistro Livi brings relaxed but refined dining to a neighbourhood hangout, putting the best of the region’s land and sea prettily on a plate. Great food without pretension.
  • Using local sugar cane, native ingredients and smoke to enhance flavours, Murwillumbah’s Birds of Isle is redefining rum with Aussie flavours. Visit Birds of Isle to order and follow on social media for pop-up tastings and events.

Staying there

Halcyon House, a haven of coastal sophistication at low-key Cabarita Beach, offers five-star accommodation in delightfully colourful bespoke rooms, hatted fine dining at Paper Daisy and a luxury spa to top things off.

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Christine Aldred
Christine Aldred is a travel writer and avid wanderer. She loves delving under the surface of places she visits to uncover their histories, tales and culinary highlights, and sharing the finds. She’s somewhat obsessive about taking photos, is a chronic over-packer and spends way too much time online.
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This stretch of Sydney beaches topped the annual Best Australian Beaches list

    Carla Grossetti Carla Grossetti
    Bate Bay’s sweep of beaches has been crowned Australia’s best for 2026, placing Sutherland Shire in the spotlight as a top coastal destination just south of Sydney’s CBD.

    The beaches fringing Bate Bay – Cronulla, North Cronulla, Wanda, Elouera and Greenhills – have topped Tourism Australia’s 2026 list of best Australian beaches (as curated by Beach Ambassador Brad Farmer). For locals, it’s less revelation, more recognition.

    The mood shifts from the moment you step off the T4 train service from Central to Cronulla and catch a glimpse of the ocean. At dawn, the Esplanade is already buzzing with regulars, and by mid-morning, parents have staked out a toasty spot on Cronulla Beach where excited toddlers clamber over rocks, and the Jellybean swim squad at Oak Park have donned their bright pink caps while singing Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin’.

    By the afternoon, towels are being collected from across the sand as visitors wander back to Cronulla in loose formation.

    North Cronulla beach
    Dive into the world’s best beaches.

    That’s the thing about Bate Bay beaches. This isn’t a story about a single beach. This long, uninterrupted sweep of sand and sea, where you can walk for kilometres without breaking stride, is not just enjoyed over summer; it’s a year-round destination. Here, Cronulla’s buzz gives way to Wanda’s wild edges, before stretching out to the quieter reaches of Greenhills.

    But while Bate Bay’s beaches may have taken top honours in the 2026 Best Australian Beaches list, they’re only part of the drawcard. Sutherland Shire stacks up as a full-spectrum coastal escape, where good food, national park adventures and on-the-water experiences sit within easy reach of the shoreline. Whether you’re planning a long weekend or stretching out a stay, here’s how to make the most of Cronulla beyond the sand, sea and surf.

    Beyond the beaches

    Dining

    the dining room at Pippis Cronulla
    Enjoy a sundowner by the sea at Pippis Cronulla.

    The Sutherland Shire dining scene delivers from early morning to late at night with a mix of vibrant cafes, bars and pubs. Start your day at Grind Espresso, where the coffee comes strong and fast. From there, drift towards HAM for pastries, best eaten buttery warm.   

    By midday, locals linger across sun-lit tables. Loaf and Next Door appeal to the surfers who come in for snacks after chasing waves. Blackwood’s Pantry and The Press are also popular for breakfast and lunch, while Pilgrim’s continues to hold a special place in the hearts of vegans.

    Newer arrivals signal where Cronulla is heading: Homer Rogue Taverna is being hailed as one of the best restaurants in Cronulla, with the confidence that comes from understanding what locals want. Ask a local to reveal their favourite restaurant for a special occasion, and it’ll likely be Pino’s Vino e Cucina al Mare, Yalla Sawa or Alphabet Street. Summer Salt, Sealevel, Benny’s, Bobbys and Pippis are a few of the best waterfront restaurants in the Shire.

    Finally, when most places are winding down, Duke’s Providore shifts gears to become Duke’s After Hours – a low-lit romantic spot perfect for a date night. Parc Pavilion, Northies Cronulla and bars The Blind Bear, Las Chicas and Low & Lofty’s are also part of Cronulla’s identity.

    Visit Bundeena

    Bundeena Ferry Wharf
    Catch a ferry to Bundeena.

    A short ferry ride from Cronulla, Bundeena offers a counterpoint to Cronulla’s mighty surf beaches. If Cronulla is the Shire’s social heart, Bundeena – or Bundenesia, as it’s affectionately known – is the place to go to exhale and unwind.

    Hop on the ferry from Cronulla, and within 30 minutes, you’ll be inhaling the eucalyptus-scented air. Check the creative pulse of the local community by timing your visit with the Bundeena Maianbar Art Trail on the first Sunday of every month.

    One of the best things to do in Bundeena is paddle into Cabbage Tree Basin with Bundeena Kayaks. Follow the five-kilometre Jibbon Beach Loop Track that leads past quiet coves to ancient Indigenous rock art, or simply find a stretch of pearl-white sand to relax on.

    Pristine walking trails

    Royal National Park Cape Baily Walking Track
    Cool off with a coastal stroll.

    Beyond the coastline, Sutherland Shire offers myriad ways to shift gears. Royal National Park – the oldest national park in Australia – sits just minutes from the surf. Clifftop walks trace the edge of the continent, the rugged bushland is threaded with creeks and hidden waterfalls, and a network of tracks rewards those willing to go a little further.

    Take the Coast Track, where the land drops cleanly into the ocean over sheer cliffs that have been stacked together like giant Jenga. Or veer inland, where pockets of forest cool the air and filter the light. It’s a reminder of how close nature sits to the bustle of suburbs in the Sutherland Shire.

    Enjoy whale watching

    humpback whale sighting noosa experiences
    Spot whales from May to October. (Credit: The Edit Suite)

    Twist your binoculars until the ocean is in focus, stretched like a creased blue sheet all around.  Come May, the East Coast becomes the humpback highway. Thousands of whales migrate along this stretch of coastline each year, their movements tracked by keen eyes from vantage points like the Cape Solander platform in Kamay Botany Bay National Park, one of the best places for whale watching in Australia. There’s something quietly thrilling about seeing that first telltale spout or the arc of a breaching body against the vastness of the sea. From June to October, whale-watching cruises depart from Cronulla, offering a closer look at the migration.

    Awards come and go. But places like Cronulla endure because they belong as much to the visitors as they do the early-morning swimmers, walkers and surfers.

    Plan your escape at visitsutherlandshire.com.au.