Gindu is short for Gin Down Under and the idea behind the brand was to create a range of gins, all using native botanicals from across Australia, that represent a sense of place.
Read MoreDaylesford Wine Tours offers an impressive range of options, full day and morning tours, which include lunch, and afternoon tours that take in three cellar doors and end with a tasting at one of Daylesford’s distilleries.
Read More‘In Daylesford it made sense to have this multifunctional space that could be many things for many people.’
Read More“We wanted to take the distilling back to the core basics and make products that were made with the same focus as I saw in those distilleries in Scotland.”
Read More“I first started drinking Anushka Chai at Mister, a café in Macedon,” says Zoë. “Then my older daughter started working at a café in Woodend called Fox in the Chamber which we discovered was owned by the same people behind the chai we loved so much. When my daughter told me that the owners were selling the chai business because the café had become so busy, I saw it as a really cool opportunity to own something we’d fallen in love with years before.”
Read MoreThough he and Claire were aware of the region’s reputation for high quality farming, they were blown away by “the number of small artisan producers of every kind from people making tiny amounts of brilliant sparkling wine to livestock farmers raising rare-breed cattle to veggie growers producing the most amazing stuff on just a couple of acres of land”.
Read More“I’ve never been one for formal business plans but I realised my philosophy is to create products with integrity that have a positive impact on as many chai sippers out there as possible. It’s about the chai and never about the buck.”
Read More“Most of what we learned about making wine was self-taught, a mixture of reading, researching and talking to people who we respected and who knew what they were doing,” says Renata. “I’ve recently finished a PhD and Ollie is always willing to jump in and learn on the go, so I guess we’re both just really interested in self-learning.”
Renata and Ollie decided to divide the wine-making between them. He looks after the chardonnay and pinot noir, she the gamay and riesling.
Read More“One of the advantages of being around for 50 years is that you get to know the region really well and the varieties tend to sort themselves out,” he says. “In the early days in Australia every region tried to do everything but now with the kind of gathered knowledge we have, it means that regions like the Macedon Ranges reveal themselves as ideal for particular varieties and become distinctive for those.”
For fans of delicious, beautifully crafted Victorian cool climate wines, Granite Hill’s pioneering hard work deserves heartfelt and grateful thanks.
Read More“Along with how quickly the gin came together, how easy and natural the process was to get the gin we wanted, it seemed fitting that we liked that tonic best. I think when something falls into place like that, it feels like it was meant to be.”
Read More“I want it to be an immersive experience,” he says. “I love the process of winemaking from the vineyard to the bottle and that’s the conversation I want people who come into Boomtown to be a part of.”
Read MoreLearmonth is becoming something of a cider hub, particularly now that a new cidery and brewing education facility has opened in the town.
Read MorePeter and his wife Jill bought the eight-hectare property west of Ballarat that’s now Nintingbool Vineyard in 1982. They built a family home and lived there while Peter pursued his career in the police force. But he was always thinking about farming.
Read MoreIf you’re after a good example of someone being ahead of the curve, Scott Wilson-Browne from Ballarat’s Red Duck Beer is an excellent candidate.
Given the quality and variety of his beer – everything from popular Pale and Amber Ale styles through to more out -there brews like a barrel-aged, French farmhouse-style saison called Walking With My Wild Best Friend – it’s hard to fathom that Scott is basically self-taught.
Read MoreLet’s raise a glass to the power of community. Thanks to Harriet and Henry Churchill of Zig Zag winery, it’s now possible to do that in a delightfully more literal sense than usual. Two years after the English ex-pats arrived in the Macedon Ranges area and became the latest “stewards”, as they describe it, of their beautiful three-hectare vineyard outside Malmsbury, they have just released their second label. Known as Kind Folk, it’s a celebration of the friends and volunteers who have emerged from the local community to help them realise their dream.
Read MoreThe origin story of Daylesford and Hepburn Mineral Springs Co is ripe for a Seachange-style mini- series treatment. It would start with protagonist, Brylie Rankin, needing a break from working in the hospitality industry in Melbourne, moving to Tasmania with her then- husband, only to discover after they arrived that she was pregnant.
Needing to be closer to her family because of the impending kid, they end up in Daylesford and, after the birth, return to working in restaurants. As she is waiting tables, Brylie notices something that plants the seed that will transform her life.
Read MoreIt’s doubtful a dose of the flu would figure in too many business plans, but for Clay Watson, the flu helped launch his business. Bed-ridden in his Daylesford cottage one weekend, Clay was working on the website for a vague idea he’d been playing around with about starting a company specialising in bespoke tours of local wineries. In his delirium, Clay inadvertently published the website. The next day, he started getting enquiries. When his wife Renai asked him what he’d done, Clay replied: “We’ve just started Daylesford Wine Tours, babe – we’d better buy a bus”.
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