Where to eat, stay and play in Kangaroo Valley

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Turning onto the enclaved valley roads of Kangaroo Valley transports you from suburbia to a hidden oasis just outside of Sydney – here’s why it’s the perfect weekend escape for city dwellers.

Discover hills gently rolling between cellar doors, trails that lead to impressive waterfalls, Australia’s largest surviving wooden suspension bridge, and fresh produce at every turn. The only thing missing from a valley visit is the perfect itinerary… until now.

 

Here are the best ways to eat, play and stay in Kangaroo Valley.

Where is it

Kangaroo Valley is nestled between the Southern Highlands and NSW South Coast, about two hours’ drive from both Sydney and Canberra.

Eat

The Friendly Inn

Located smack bang in the middle of the main street, The Friendly Inn is the real deal – a traditional UK style pub. It’s one of the oldest watering holes in the area, providing an indoor/outdoor setting for both locals and those just passing through. The menu consists of nightly blackboard specials and classic pub clinchers. Seafood, steak, schnitzels and burgers are in heavy rotation, alongside more adventurous options like the barramundi, laksa and linguini.

 

The outdoor beer garden provides ample opportunity to soak up views of the famous Kangaroo Valley escarpments. There’s a covered playground area for kids, as well as a pétanque court. Come summer, the venue also plays host to live music and holiday firework displays.

 

If you’d rather BYO back at your own digs, The Friendly bottle shop is open seven days a week.

The Friendly Inn is the real deal – a traditional UK style pub

The General Store/Café 

It wouldn’t be a regional Aussie town without a classic General Store. Kangaroo Valley delivers theirs in bulk, offering both a locally-stocked shop and adjoining café. Two for the price of one.

 

At the café portion of The General, breakfast bounty is beautifully served. The Chef’s Special (named after Head Chef Tony) changes regularly – it could be anything from a fresh cheese, basil and tomato omelette to a lightly spiced congee. The Japanese vegetable pancake is served with rising sun sauce, mayonnaise and seven Lebanese spices, or perhaps a classic Egg and Bacon roll is more to your liking – both are catered to here. Mrs Bread’s pop-up bakery supplying organic sourdough bread to the café. There’s also an adorable honesty system bread shelf out the front. Simply leave your money in the tin and grab your bread to-go.

 

Stock up on locally made produce at The General Store next door, courtesy of Kangaroo Valley Kindred Spirits. There’s garlic dukkha and chilli pesto, pickles and fresh cheese, plus all the grocery staples of a classic small supermarket.

The classic General Store

Jing Jo

For a great eat-in or take-out Thai option you can’t beat Jing Jo Restaurant in the heart of Kangaroo Valley.

 

The restaurant focuses on the freshest local produce to create its Thai dishes. An unexpected brunch offering (Salmon Gravlax, Rice Paper Rolls) surprisingly delivers. However it’s the lunch and dinner sittings that the locals line up for. A favourite is the Nok Tod Kra Tiem – deep fried quail, Jing Jo style.

 

The restaurant is housed in a former gallery, and retains an artistic air by presenting a series of exhibitions throughout the year. Local artists are invited to display their art on the walls, providing a blissful backdrop for a classic Thai meal.

Jing Jo provides a blissful backdrop for a classic Thai meal.

Play

Yarrawa Estate

Tucked between the escarpments of Upper Kangaroo Valley is Yarrawa Estate Vineyard.  The only winery in Kangaroo Valley proper, Yarrawa, or ‘windy place’, is named after a nearby state forest and is perched in a beautiful location on Scotts Road.

 

Owners Mark and Sue Foster will welcome you to the cellar door like old friends. Spend the next few hours making your way through white varietals such as chambourcin, verdelho and Semillon; followed by some robust reds that include a cabernet sauvignon and cabernet merlot, and an elegant rose named Jasmine Grace. Over the years, Mark and Sue’s efforts have been awarded with silver and gold medals in the South Coast Wine Show, as well as a place in acclaimed chef Luke Mangan’s cookbook.

 

While Yarrawa is better-known for its wines, the property also enjoys the benefits of highly fertile volcanic and alluvial soils. This makes it the perfect environment for growing other produce, such as citrus, apples, macadamias, pecans, walnuts, Japanese raisins, avocados and vegetables. At the cellar door you’ll find cheese plates with charming additions such as marinated baby figs and estate-grown walnuts to complement your wine tasting.

Yarrawa is the only winery in Kangaroo Valley proper

Take a journey through Kangaroo Valley’s past

Driving along Hampden Bridge might not feel like much, but it’s actually a remarkable lesson in Victorian engineering.

 

It is the largest surviving wooden suspension bridge in the country and was specially designed with gothic Victorian sandstone towers. Visit the medieval castle and take a self-guided tour to learn the history behind the bridge. Once you’re finished, the Pioneer Museum next door showcases the lifestyle of early Australian colonisers by way of houses, tools and other artefacts.

Hampden Bridge is a remarkable lesson in Victorian engineering

Visit Fitzroy Falls

Any landscape photographer worth their salt has heard about Fitzroy Falls. Water plunges over 80 metres to the valley below, splashing in the untouched bushland of Morton National Park.

 

The waterfall is named after Sir Charles Fitzroy, the Governor of NSW who visited here during his tenure in the 1850s. Since then it has served as a lush escarpment between Robertson and Nowra, home to local flora, fauna, wildlife, walks and wild swimming.

 

The East Rim Wildflower Walking track runs 1.25km from the Visitor Centre to Warrawong lookout. In spring, the self-guided stroll is home to diverse florals, native plants and trees. The West Rim walking track (3.5km) is a great introduction to dramatic gorges and waterfalls, pristine eucalypt forests and lush greenery.

 

Visit the Fitzroy Falls Visitor Centre on the way out. Inside you can learn about local history, wildlife and birdwatching, or undertake one of the Aboriginal Cultural Walks on offer.

Water plunges over 80 metres to the valley below

Peruse the Village Green Nursery

This blink-and-you’ll-miss-it nursery can be found lurking behind Kangaroo Valley’s main strip of shops. It’s an independent boutique garden and stocks much by way of edible plants, natives, tube stock, ornamentals and more.

 

Wander aimlessly and admire the dedication that has gone into each section, and make sure you stop to chat to one of the friendly green-thumbed staff to ask a question or two.

Peruse the Village Green Nursery

Take a class at Hampden Deli, Dining and School

Looking to hone your kitchen prowess or expand your weekly culinary repertoire? Slide into Hampden Deli: the cosy deli, café and cooking school that calls Kangaroo Valley home.

 

Before rolling up their sleeves as teachers, owners Nick Gardner and Stevie-Lee Bounader spent years cutting their teeth in fine dining restaurants. Head Chef Nick trained at Nelson Bay’s Zest, before working at some of Sydney’s best restaurants (think Quay and Tetsuya’s).

 

Now the space serves as a spot where you can learn the fundamentals of cooking. From pairing the right produce, to quick and easy preparation techniques and bread making, the rotating roster of cooking classes will keep you motivated in the kitchen.

Take a class at Hampden Deli, Dining and School

Stay

Barranca

It’s hard to sum up the beauty of Barranca in just a few words. This place is deserving of a thesis –one line for every time you utter the word ‘wow’ throughout your stay here.

 

The first ‘wow’ moment will come the minute your car rolls onto the 400-hectare, privately-owned property. A melange of animals will be there greet you: buffalo, donkey, pigs and horses – including the largest horse in Australia, Stormy George.

 

Designed by award-winning Grove Architects in Woollahra, Barranca’s four luxury villas — Ferndale, Willow, Jacaranda and Banksia — face north, capturing breathtaking views while immersed in all-day sunlight.

 

Each private residence comes complete with floor-to-ceiling windows, polished concrete floors and contemporary furnishings. Feel jute rugs underfoot while basking in those magic Kangaroo Valley sunsets, then retreat to the fully-equipped kitchen to put those newly-acquired cooking skills from Hampden Deli, Dining and School to use.

 

If long days of exploring have you in need of some R&R, there is a calming in-room menu of services that includes massages and spa treatments. You’ll leave feeling both Zen and thankful someone told you about Barranca.

It’s hard to sum up the beauty of Barranca in just a few words

12 Kangaroo Valley restaurants and cafes every visitor must try

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From cafes with house-fermented kombucha to character-filled pubs with buzzy beer gardens and delis helmed by award-winning chefs, it’s a great time to explore the Kangaroo Valley restaurant and cafe scene.

Kangaroo Valley restaurants and cafes have been drawing road-trippers and city dwellers for decades. This tiny township occupies a prime slice of country NSW real estate, sitting pretty in a wide valley, flanked by lush farmland worn tight and snug like a green velvet cardigan.

One of the best ways to experience the Kangaroo Valley is, of course, on foot, hiking to its many waterfalls and swimming holes dotted around the mountains of the Southern Highlands. But if you’re spending a long weekend capitalising on the valley’s many outdoor adventures, you also need sustenance, right? These are the Kangaroo Valley cafes and restaurants to visit on your travels.

1. Wildes Dining

Best for: Point Green beef flank steak with chimichurri and watercress with corn ribs on the side.

The peppy new tapas menu at Wildes Dining is worth staying in for when you’re booked in at Wildes Hotel. Build your feast at incrementally with a selection of appetisers and side dishes that are great for grazing. The tapas menu is available between 4PM and 8PM every Thursday, Friday and Saturday night.

​The tapas bar menu at this restaurant with rooms provides ample reason to stay and play at the hotel, one of the best places to stay in the Kangaroo Valley. Dishes such as creamy burrata, indulgent cured beef loin and delicious mushroom bruschetta are terrific successes and made to share. Round out your composition of plates with dishes from the a la carte menu such as crumbed pork cutlet with fennel slaw and garlic and parsley butter or the market fish with spinach and Jervis Bay mussel sauce.

Wildes Kangaroo Valley

Enjoy a meal at WIldes boutique. (Image: Grainger Films)

Address: 152 Moss Vale Road, Kangaroo Valley

 

2. Terra & Mare Pizzeria & Italian Bakery

Best for: Terra e Mare Pizza with pork and fennel salami, mozzarella, olives and anchovies. Drool.

We’d heard that Terra & Mare Pizzeria doles out some of the best woodfired pizzas in Kangaroo Valley so we gave it a try. Terra & Mare means ‘land and sea’ so you can expect to get a taste of that bounty at this Kangaroo Valley restaurant that specialises in handmade pasta and sourdough pizza.

Terra & Mare Pizzeria and Italian Bakery

Fill your tummy with delicious woodfired pizza,

If you’re in this neck of the woods, we’d suggest you pop in for some carb-heavy sustenance ahead of your hike the next day. Note: this is not the place to take Nonna (Unless she’s a progressive from Piedmont who gets the joke about The Italian Nightmare). The pizza is slathered in smokey BBQ sauce, ham and pineapple and regardless of what your naysayer mate from Naples says, it’s delish. The lamb neck ragu with rigatoni pasta is also worth shouting about. Give it a twirl.

Address: 162 Moss Vale Road, Kangaroo Valley

3. The Friendly Inn Hotel

Best for: Juicy burgers enjoyed in the beer garden where you’ll find out where ‘The Friendly’ gets its name.

Ask a local where to eat lunch in Kangaroo Valley and they’ll likely say The Friendly Inn. This laidback, heritage-listed pub, dating back to 1897, is one of the region’s oldest. Beyond its menu of crowd-pleasing pub staples (think burgers, steaks, salads and the ubiquitous schnitty) ‘The Friendly’ certainly lives up to its name, welcoming dogs and families with open arms.

The Friendly Inn, Kangaroo Valley

The characterful exterior of The Friendly Inn.

Relax in the pub’s beer garden around a picnic table with a cold schooner or glass of rosé, and watch the kids tear around the playground. There’s even a pétanque court and a roster of live music. As the sun drops, you can go from canoeing the Kangaroo River to cocktails in the beer garden overlooking the region’s soaring escarpments. Sorted.

Friendly Inn beer garden, Kangaroo Valley

Enjoy the sunshine while enjoying some tasty food.

Address: 159 Moss Vale Rd, Kangaroo Valley

4. Yarrawa Estate

Best for: A glass of Chambourcin and a cheese platter.

This Kangaroo Valley winery is not strictly in the village of Kangaroo Valley. Nor is it strictly a restaurant or café. But it’s still worth highlighting this boutique, husband-and-wife-run winery. Yarrawa Estate lies just a 14-kilometre drive north-east of Kangaroo Valley. Beyond enjoying the owners’ warm country hospitality, weekend visitors to Yarrawa Estate can sample Mark and Sue’s fruit-forward Verdelho, buttery chardonnay and peppery shiraz.

Yarrawa Estate in Kangaroo Valley

This small family-run vineyard is nestled between the stunning escarpments of Kangaroo Valley.

Enjoy your tutored tastings of award-winning wines from the Kangaroo Valley with a cheese platter, accompanied by some of Sue’s homemade pickles, fruits, nuts and preserves. The vineyard is located between the rugged escarpments of Kangaroo Valley, which is known for its rich volcanic soil and temperate climate.

Address: 43B Scotts Rd, Kangaroo Valley

 

5. Osteria La Vallata

Best for: Brasato di Manzo (beef cheeks) served with whipped mash potatoes and portobello mushrooms.

Golfers have a new reason to work on their handicap with the opening of Osteria La Vallata at Kangaroo Valley Golf & Country Retreat. The Woolshed, under head chef Marco Salvestrin, presents nuanced Italian dishes informed by someone who doesn’t live in the mother country but has his heart in Australia. And the new restaurant has amplified the offerings at the Jack Newtown-designed course, with a menu of greatest hits that also emphasises seasonal ingredients.

The backbone of the menu is pasta and gnocchi under a melody that sings of the Mediterranean. Start with the Greek salad and antipasto misto and follow it with pappardelle all’anatra (duck ragu) and tiramisu. Cena conviviale!

Osteria La Vallata

Tuck into tasty Italian fare at Osteria La Vallata. (Image: Kangaroo Valley Golf & Country Retreat)

Address: 391 Mt Scanzi Road, Kangaroo Valley

 

6. The General Cafe

Best for: The Frankenstein that is known as the ‘Cross-Breed Dog’: half banh mi, half frankfurter. What a beast.

Homemade organic sourdough? Tick. House-fermented small-batch kombucha? Tick. A bounty of fresh, seasonal produce gracing the cafe’s breakfast and lunch menu? Tick. Perch on one of the tables out front and watch the locals parading by, or head to the tranquil, leafy, sun-dappled veranda out the back. The cool folks at The General Cafe can cater to vegetarians and those who are dairy-free and gluten-free. And there’s often new specials to try, such as the Italian-style meatballs on sourdough toast, or the roasted mushrooms with creamy white polenta.

The General Cafe in Kangaroo Valley

Organic sourdough bread made in-house elevates the menu.

Address: 51 Moss Vale Road, Kangaroo Valley

7. Kangaroo Valley Bakehouse

Best for: The signature lamb and mint pies.

The best meat pies in Australia are enjoyed while standing amid a knot of people congregating on a footpath talking about the footie or the weather. And lovers of the iconic meat pie should do just that at this Kangaroo Valley stalwart. Made with love, and flaky pastry, the Kangaroo Valley

Kangaroo Valley bakehouse

Indulge in top-notch pies.

Bakehouse doles out all the classics: steak and mushroom, beef and Guinness, and, of course, the traditional Aussie meat pie as well as a curried veggie number. But there are also sausage rolls, apple pies and old-school milkshakes on offer, and fresh bread and pantry items to stock up on.  Take your sweet time savouring Australia’s national dish while getting tips on the best things to do in the Kangaroo Valley.

Address: 150 Moss Vale Rd, Kangaroo Valley

 

8. Maddison’s in the Valley

Best for: The best chicken schnitzels in Kangaroo Valley: order the Mexican which arrives slathered with salsa, guacamole, sour cream and melted cheese.

It’s hard to miss Maddison’s in the Valley as you drive through the dinky little village of Kangaroo Valley. The Kangaroo Valley cafe is housed in a heritage bank building and features a striped awning and outside tables filled with diners enjoying breakfast, brunch and lunch. Join the locals checking the chalkboard for daily specials (and the words of wisdom) or study the regular menu for classic cafe fare. Maddison’s in the Valley is a simple, no-frills kind of cafe in Kangaroo Valley, as some of the best regional eateries are, and it serves a very satisfying bacon and egg roll for the weary traveller.

Maddison's In The Valley Kangaroo Valley

The charming exterior of Maddison’s In The Valley.

Address: 158 Moss Vale Road, Moss Vale.

9. Cambewarra Lookout Cafe

Best for: Hefty burgers accompanied by a choice of local beers.

The Lookout Cafe on the peak of Cambewarra Mountain is a great place to perch. The venue, which has been operating as a cafe since 1909, offers panoramic views over the Shoalhaven. The terrace, which is open to the vast skies, is one of the best vantage points to look out over Kangaroo Valley. Here’s the scoop: there’s a gelato cart and picnics on the grounds are also possible. Travelling with your dog? That’s a complimentary puppycino right there. Plug the Lookout Cafe into the GPS. It’s one of the best venues with a view in Kangaroo Valley. Check the cafe’s Facebook page for The Lookout at Dusk events with live music.

cambewarra lookout cafe

A drink with a view at Cambewarra Lookout Cafe. (Image: Cambewarra lookout cafe)

 

Address: 182 Cambewarra Lookout Rd, Beaumont.

10. Kangaroo Valley Coffee Co.

Best for: Beetroot lattes if you want to be bougie

What many road-trippers are surprised to learn is that Kangaroo Valley is a village as well as a valley. And you will find many of the residents of this sleepy, charming riverside town queuing for their morning brew at the Kangaroo Valley Coffee Co. after their morning walks. Coffee has played such a role in community and culture in Australia and this has filtered down into the regions where there’d be a bit of a brew-ha-ha if the java was not up to scratch. You will find the Kangaroo Valley Coffee Co. in the back of a lovely little cottage that houses The Hive KV, another hub of the community. Take a moment to sit and breathe here where coffee is more than a drink; it’s a moment. There are blankets and a fire pit to keep you warm in winter.

Kangaroo Valley Coffee Co

Kickstart your day with a delicious brew.

Address: 170 Moss Vale Road, Kangaroo Valley

11. Sweet As Kangaroo Valley

Best for: Lollies, chocolate and gelato

Time will stand still when you watch your children eyeing off all the homemade candies, sweets, gelato and fudge on offer at Sweet As Kangaroo Valley, as they are made to taste exactly as they did when you were a kid. What was once Homelea Cottage is known as Sweet As Kangaroo Valley. The family-run institution aims to support as many artisans as it can such as Woodstock Chocolate Co. hand-made in nearby Milton, as well as The Pines Gelato, churned in the paddocks of Kiama. Sweet tooths will be satisfied when they add scoops of liquorice allsorts, Fluffy Crunch fairy floss, and Lovers Lane Rocky Road to the mix.

Sweet As Kangaroo Valley

Indulge in some sweet treats.

Address: 149b Moss Vale Road, Kangaroo Valley

 

12. Hampden Deli, Dining & School

Best for: The tasty tarts and cakes intricately decorated with edible flowers are hard to pass up.

Hampden Deli is the brainchild of fine-dining powerhouse couple Nick Gardner and Stevie-Lee Bounader. Here, you’ll be able sample local produce in the form of tasty sweet treats and delicious sangas. Not only that, but you’ll often have the chance to learn about the food you’re eating, too. The Deli regularly runs classes on foodie topics like wine pairing, and how to brew the perfect cuppa joe.

Hampdon deli

The baked goods at Hampden deli are impossible to pass up (Image:

Address: 4/160 Moss Vale Rd Kangaroo Valley

Want to know more about where to stay and play in Kangaroo Valley? check out our guide to Kangaroo Valley here.