Celebrate the Local Seasons

Why Choose Seasonal Produce?

"I’m surrounded by world class product around Lake House and the Daylesford area. You can reconnect with the seasons by looking at the A frames outside the farms you pass. Quinces in autumn, Chestnuts in winter, Broad beans in spring, Berries in summer and much more."
(Alla Wolf-Tasker, The Lakehouse)

In almost every circumstance, if it’s Victorian fresh produce, it’s in season right now.

Seasonal produce suits the way we eat.
Seasonal produce makes sense in so many ways. The dishes we cook at certain times of the year are based on seasonal produce. A winter braise served with carrots makes perfect sense as this is the time of year when Victorian carrots are at their very best. A summer berry pudding on Christmas Day made from berries grown in the Dandenong or Otway Ranges served with cream from Gippsland makes a stunning dessert.

Seasonal produce tastes better.
Seasonal produce has not been forced to bear fruit or produce leaves or flowers by the use of hothouses or other means of making plants produce food. Seasonal produce tastes the way it should, is riper and more full-flavoured.

Seasonal produce makes economic and environmental sense.
Produce comes into season around Victoria at roughly the same time, with regional variations. This means there is a glut on the market and the price plummets. Consider the difference in the price of a hothouse tomato from elsewhere in Australia in June from a tomato from the Goulburn Valley in summer and autumn. (Compare the taste as well!) Seasonal Victorian produce is cheaper, helping mums and dads save pennies and food service business owners with food costs. Victorian produce also makes better environmental sense. Consider the difference between cherries in spring that have only travelled an hour from the Yarra Valley or Mornington Peninsula, versus cherries in winter flown here from the Northern Hemisphere by a fuel-guzzling aeroplane.