Eating like a local in Tasmania: Discovering one of Tasmania’s gourmet destinations

cygnet tasmania

Cygnet is a tiny town in Tasmania with a global reputation for its annual folk music festival, which attracts artists and visitors from around the world each January.

But the pretty hamlet of 1000 people in the Huon Valley region is also known to locals as the source of some of the best clean, green produce in Australia.

cygnet tasmania

Cygnet lies just 45 minutes south of Hobart in a region best known for its apple and cherry orchards. Its population includes a large proportion of foodies – one of whom, Matthew Evans, has made a series of television programs called Gourmet Farmer.

Many locals, like Evans, have turned their hands to breeding, growing and cooking their own produce. It’s also popular with media types and artists.

Sleepy during the week, Cygnet comes alive at weekends when visitors descend to enjoy its cafés, art galleries and waterfront walks.

Steve Cumper, chef/patron of popular Cygnet eatery the Red Velvet Lounge, was named Australian country chef of the year a couple of years ago, and like Evans, opted for the country over the city, having previously worked at several high-profile city eateries.

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Cumper has his own small farm outside Cygnet at which he grows a wide range of vegetables and herbs, as well as fattening up cattle. He, like many of the local foodies, was attracted to Cygnet by the wide range of local produce.

Many local farmers sell direct from the farm gate, with apples, cherries and berries all available from roadside stalls during the season.

At the rustic Lotus Eaters Café, just a few doors down from the Red Velvet Lounge, Giselle Benton and Alex Klimenko also use local produce wherever possible, including vegetables, herbs and eggs frobm their own kitchen garden, and highlight ingredients like Tongola Goat Cheese and organic rhubarb.

eat like a local in tasmania

The menu here changes daily but focuses on curries, gourmet pizzas, fresh soups and vegetarian dishes – with everything made from the ground up.

Marcus Boks began his Boks bacon business in Cygnet before moving to Glenorchy, but his premises have been taken over by Graham Victor, who styles himself as a “24-hour emergency butcher”. He’s one of two artisan butchers in town.

 

Other local gourmet food producers include Swiss couple Hans Stutz and Esther Hauesermann’s award-winning Tongola Goat Products, known for their cheeses and curds from their own herd,

and another former Sydneysider in Gillian Ryan, who makes her hand-crafted Cygneture chocolates using Belgian couverture and “fresh fruit, vegetables, herbs, teas, local beers, wines, ports and liqueurs from the Huon”.

tasmania food

Her chocolate selection changes seasonally as she eschews preservatives. Like many local producers, Ryan sells her chocolates not only from her Cygnet shop but at local markets and festivals – and sometimes at the extremely popular fortnightly Cygnet Market (below), held every first and third Sunday throughout the year. Here you can taste everything from fresh mussels to home-made cakes and preserves. Everything from saffron to salmon can be sourced locally.

eat in tasmania
At Nicholl’s Rivulet Organic Farm, just a couple of kilometres out of town, Gerard Crochon sells organic beef from beasts raised in his own paddocks from his farmgate shop on Thursday and Friday afternoons, and all day Saturday – and home-made beef pies at local festivals and markets.

Wine lovers are catered for with Panorama Vineyards, Hartzview and Elsewhere, just outside the town, having cellar doors and Two Bud Spur due to have their weekend cellar door open any day now. Leading Hunter Valley winemaker Jim Chatto and his wife Daisy have big plans for their Isle pinot noir vineyard just out of town.

There are also two cider tasting rooms nearby: Willie Smith’s at Ranelagh and Pagan Cider just outside town.

Cygnet also has three pubs (one currently closed after a fire) and two other good cafés, the School House and Devour (terrific for burgers), along with a bakery, Double Delight, a gourmet greengrocer, Cygnet Gourmet Larder, where the provenance of all the fruit and vegetables is signalled, and a weekend pizza outlet. It’s the perfect day trip from Hobart.

 

Article written by Winsor Dobbin from www.gourmetontheroad.blogspot.com. Winsor Dobbin is a journalist and blogger who has lived in cities as diverse as London, Paris, Johannesburg and Sydney. He writes about his greatest passions; food, wine and travel for leading magazines and newspapers in Australia and around the globe. You can also follow him on Facebook and Twitter.