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Good Food hatGood Food hatGood Food hat18/20Critics' Pick

Brae

Updated ,first published

Jerusalem artichoke, teardrop peas and raspberries.
1 / 9Jerusalem artichoke, teardrop peas and raspberries.Colin Page.
The on-site farm where all of the restaurant’s produce is grown.
2 / 9The on-site farm where all of the restaurant’s produce is grown.Supplied
Beetroot with abalone, pork jowl and smoked eel.
3 / 9Beetroot with abalone, pork jowl and smoked eel.Supplied
One of the plates at Brae.
4 / 9One of the plates at Brae.Supplied
Dessert at Brae.
5 / 9Dessert at Brae.Colin Page
Inside Brae.
6 / 9Inside Brae.Colin Page
Trout nut butter and salmon roe.
7 / 9Trout nut butter and salmon roe.Julian Kingma
Snacks at Brae in Birregurra.
8 / 9Snacks at Brae in Birregurra.David Clemson
The entrance to Brae.
9 / 9The entrance to Brae.Supplied
Good Food hatGood Food hatGood Food hat18/20Critics' Pick

Brae

Contemporary$$$$

A study in sustainability, a love letter to regional luxury.

Local, seasonal: the mission is sacrosanct, and it’s quite literally Brae’s bread and butter. Sourdough comprises two flours – one grown on-site and milled in-house – plus miso made of loaves past. Butter? Snow-white cream from nearby Timboon inoculated with a camembert culture for dazzling tartness.

Guests draw warmth from the fire as owner-chef Dan Hunter charms the property’s harvest into an affecting tasting menu. The 77 components in Brae’s flagship salad are picked just outside the window. Some manifest in tinctures, others are simply cut with caring hands and arranged to exhibit their purity.

Venison is smoked lightly, plated simply and eats tenderly, and a nostalgic riff on sport’s half-time orange makes extraordinary use of sweet pumpkin juice and cacao nibs. The room gathers more local art by the day, the service is as generous as ever. Is this Brae’s most charming season yet?

Good to know: Say yes to everything: a pairing (alcoholic, non-alcoholic, somewhere in between), a mid-meal garden stroll, an extra slice of bread.

Good Food reviews are booked anonymously and paid independently. A restaurant can’t pay for a review or inclusion in the Good Food Guide.

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