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Good Food hatGood Food hat17/20Critics' Pick

Barragunda Dining

Updated ,first published

Barragunda’s dining room.
1 / 9Barragunda’s dining room.Arianna Leggiero
Eggplant danish.
2 / 9Eggplant danish.Wayne Taylor
Dried tomato with smoked stracciatella.
3 / 9Dried tomato with smoked stracciatella.Arianna Leggiero
Appletini made with apples from the estate.
4 / 9Appletini made with apples from the estate.Wayne Taylor
Baby radish with sabayon and lovage.
5 / 9Baby radish with sabayon and lovage.Arianna Leggiero
Mussels a la grecque.
6 / 9Mussels a la grecque.Arianna Leggiero
Views of the native vegetation and the kitchen garden.
7 / 9Views of the native vegetation and the kitchen garden.Arianna Leggiero
Black Angus with new-season alliums.
8 / 9Black Angus with new-season alliums.Arianna Leggiero
The lush vegetable garden.
9 / 9The lush vegetable garden.Kristoffer Paulsen
Good Food hatGood Food hat17/20Critics' Pick

Barragunda Dining

Contemporary$$

A gorgeous farm-side restaurant celebrating landscape and light.

Located on 405 hectares, Barragunda spans restaurant, regenerative farm and native bushland. Chef Simone Watts transforms the farm’s produce into gorgeous dishes on a bargain of a five-course tasting menu. Baby vegetables come with decadent sabayon made from leek tops.

A fantastically lacquered savoury Danish may cradle Jerusalem artichoke and onion or smoked eggplant with black garlic. Animals, too, are raised here: hogget, which is smoked for kofta, and black Angus, used for steaks, osso buco and more. The orchard dictates dessert: perhaps a stonefruit and semolina confection in summer, or mandarin with orange blossom and carrot for winter.

Several estate-grown apple varieties power an unforgettable Appletini, and staff are happy to chat about wines from small Australian producers and European cult labels as you bask in the room that overlooks a market garden.

Good to know: The restaurant operates on a profit-for-purpose model, supporting projects linked to food, farming and climate.

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