Budburst Wine and Food Festival

Macedon Ranges Budburst food and wine festival Nov 12-13th 2011Winemakers celebrate the early Spring in the Macedon Ranges


Visit the the coolest wine district in the country! Over the weekend more than 30 wineries are offering wine – limited in quantity and exceptionally high in quality.

 

Join the winegrowers of the Macedon Ranges Region at the annual Budburst Wine & Food Festival as the grape begins its journey from budburst to bottle.

The Budburst Festival is a celebration of the wine, food & lifestyle of the Macedon Ranges and the emerging buds signal the beginning of the new grape growing season and the arrival of spring.

Wineries across the region, mostly small and all family operated, will open their cellar doors or cluster together to offer wine tastings of spectacular ‘limited edition’ cool climate wines. Celebrate spring at the source - join the winegrowers of the Macedon Ranges Region at the annual Budburst Wine & Food Festival

This event is an opportunity to talk to the people who grow the grapes and make the wine.

Our cellar doors, some rarely open, are a mix of old world and rustic charm offering amazing views, heritage buildings, magnificent gardens, sheltered courtyards and more. Discover the diversity of limited edition wines and artisan produce in the Macedon Ranges Region.

Wine, food and music are natural partners, so expect the best at Budburst. Food is available at most locations – pizzas, oysters, tasting platters, gourmet fare and desserts with a focus on regional produce and our famous regional foodies.

Come to Budburst at the Old Bank in Lancefield and taste our Bordeaux style Cabernet Sauvignon and Birthday Villa Gewurztraminer 2010 - Kyneton Show White Wine Trophy winner.  Our boutique vineyard is in Malmsbury, established in 1968 with views of the historic Malmsbury Viaduct. Winemaker is Greg Dedman.30 cellar doors celebrate with wine, music and food. On the 12-13th of November 2011 enjoy food, wine and music as the winemakers celebrate the beginning of spring.

Visit www.budburst.com to plan your weekend of cellar doors and winemaker dinners. Purchase your tasting glass for $15 from participating wineries during November 12 -13. Taste the wines and share the passion of our winemakers and restaurateurs when you take the road less travelled during the Budburst Festival.

Discover the diversity of limited edition wines and artisan produce in the Macedon Ranges during the Budburst Weekend. Maps and extra information on cellar doors and winemaker dinners can also be found. Hanging Rock winery - located 3 km. from the internationally known Hanging Rock tourist landmark and only one hour from Melbourne, on the slopes of a small mountain known as the 'Jim Jim'.

The Macedon Ranges is a uniquely cool climate area that produces some fine wines that in most cases can only be purchased from the cellar door.

This weekend provides an excellent opportunity to discover a new favourite wine approximately an hour from Melbourne.

Date: 12th-13th November 2011
Details: Macedon Ranges Wine Region Kyneton Area 3444

10 am to 5 pm daily, $15 inc’s tasting glass

Phone: +61 0354255492


This video represents the new look and feel for    Macedon Ranges Wines – Limited Edition:

 

Rowanston on the Track

Rowanston on the Track Winery is located on the northern foothills of the Macedon Ranges on the Burke and Wills track between Lancefield and Heathcote – an easy drive from Melbourne via the Melbourne International Airport.Four outstanding boutique wineries have come together to entice your taste buds over the Budburst weekend. As well as Rowanston’s prize winning Riesling, spicy Shiraz and Sparkling blanc de noir you will be able to taste a wide range of wines including, Chardonnay, Pinot, Sauvignon blanc, Viognier, Gewurztramminer and Shiraz.

At Rowanston on the track there are three acres of large trees and garden which make for a perfect setting for sipping wine and enjoying the welcoming friendly atmosphere of a day in the country. We even have shelter in farm shedding if the weather requires it. A wholesome lunch (including home made cakes) created from mostly on-farm and local produce will be available all day.

Visit the Macedon Ranges and Rowanston on the Track for the Budburst Wine and Food Festival to experience new vintages, special events, great food, music and great company in the coolest wine district in the country.

Rowanston on the Track Winery is located on the northern foothills of the Macedon Ranges on the Burke and Wills track between Lancefield and Heathcote – an easy drive from Melbourne via the Melbourne International Airport.

The family-run boutique vineyard produces Shiraz, Riesling, Merlot, Sparkling Shiraz and sparkling white, Blanc de Noir. Special feature of this vineyard include original stone fences, fantastic views of the McCarg Ranges including park-like old gardens. Explorers Burke and Wills travelled past the property en-route to Swan Hill on the first leg of their ill-fated journey in August 1861.

 

Kyneton Ridge Estate

Kyneton Ridge Estate is one of the premier winery destinations for Budburst, offering wine tastings, light café meals or full Sunday lunches.Kyneton Ridge Estate is one of the premier winery destinations for Budburst, offering wine tastings, light café meals or full Sunday lunches. Delight your ears with mellow chilled live jazz music on Sunday.

They will be serving food all Budburst weekend.  The majority of ingredients have been sourced locally, supporting local farmers and businesses. Enjoy a two course meal or pop past at any time over the weekend for a casual meal or snack.

Join chief winemaker John Boucher, for complimentary wine tastings featuring our best ever Shiraz,which has scooped several awards in 2011, plus new releases of our award winning pinot noir and sparkling releases. Kyneton Ridge is open all Budburst weekend so come past for a wine or some coffee and bask in the sun as you enjoy the panoramic views from our deck. Grab a light snack or book in for lunch. Kyneton Ridge Estate is an all weather venue, with air conditioning on hot days, and crackling log fires for when the chill sets in.

Your hosts John and Pauline look forward to welcoming you at the cellar door. For enquiries or to book your table call 03 5422 7377.

 

Passing Clouds Winery

Join Passing Clouds as they celebrate their first official Budburst Weekend as part of the Macedon Ranges Wine Region Wine & Food Festival. And, on Saturday November 12, from 5pm to 6:30pm enjoy a deliciously decadent evening  of fine Passing Clouds wines paired perfectly with regional and European cheeses at the intimate Gourmet Larder Café.
Cheese & Wine tasting:
Sparkling Chardonnay 2008 with Fromager D’Affinois (French double cream brie)
Macedon Chardonnay 2009 with Holy Goat La Luna (Local goats cheese from Sutton Grange)
Pinot Noir 2008 with Delice de Bourgone (French triple cream brie)
Graemes Blend 2008 with Jensen Red (washed rind from Victoria)
The Angel 2008 with Petit Basque (semi-hard sheeps milk cheese)


We are located in beautiful Musk at 30 Roddas Lane, which is five minutes drive out of Daylesford, on the Daylesford-Trentham Road.Passing Clouds Wines Available: 2008 Macedon Ranges Chardonnay, 2008 Sparkling Chardonnay, 2006 Reserve Shiraz, 2010 Bendigo Shiraz, 2008 Graeme’s Blend Shiraz Cabernet, 2009 Macedon Ranges Pinot Noir, 2006 Reserve Pinot Noir and 2008 The Angel Cabernet Sauvignon.
Food: Regional Platters

Passing Clouds Winery is located in beautiful Musk at 30 Roddas Lane, which is five minutes drive out of Daylesford, on the Daylesford-Trentham Road.

Maldon Folk Festival

Each October however, this usually sleepy township of Maldon comes absolutely alive for its annual Folk Festival. It's where traditional forms of music are celebrated in a full weekend of over 150 concerts and events.

28th Annual Maldon Folk Festival

The 38th annual Maldon Folk Festival will be held in the historic township over the weekend of Friday 28th to Monday 31st October 2011…The Tradition Continues!
Maldon is a charming little town in Central Victoria, famous for its colonial styling and main street shopping area, where each footpath is edged with stone. The stores in Maldon have been lovingly maintained in heritage colours and retain their original, late 1800′s, style. Many of the local homes are the cottage type, with picket fences, honeysuckle crawling over the verandahs, pretty apple trees and an abundance of roses.

Each October however, this usually sleepy township comes absolutely alive for its annual Folk Festival. It’s where traditional forms of music are celebrated in a full weekend of over 150 concerts and events. Cultural groups, like the colourful Morris Men dance in the street, buskers play and it’s not uncommon for a spontaneous sing-a-long or accordion battle to breakout down at the Grand Hotel.

Maldon’s Folk Music Festival incorporates a range of styles. You can expect to hear celtic ballads, gypsy bands, appalachian harmonies, authentic southern blues, honky-tonk cabaret, and modern Australian roots music there. Among the instruments; banjos, fiddles, slide guitars, masterfully played mandolins, harmonicas, slapped double basses and a collection of drums; all of them wonderfully unaided by digital effects.

Held over a full four days, a popular way to attend the Folk Festival is to purchase a weekend entry ticket with campsite pass. There’s a massive site, under the tall peak of Maldon’s Mount Tarrengower, where hundreds of families set themselves up in tents and camper vans. The campsite has generator-powered toilet and shower facilities hired in for the event and is close to the main music venues.

The Maldon Folk Festival has long been recognised as the best value family festival aroundIn addition to the campsite stages, there are over 20 different locations throughout Maldon which play host to musical acts. Festival goers get to experience a range of performances from loud, energetic dance acts to the softer more intimate gigs, and also get to see inside Maldon’s historic churches, clubrooms, scout halls and galleries. A free shuttle bus ferries passengers to and from the campsite and all over town, however Maldon is small enough that it’s possible to walk from one venue to another.

Apart from the concerts, some of the other festival attractions include the masterclass workshops, where after watching their favourites perform, the audience can attend special sessions where the musicians teach some of their techniques.

Also, market day; held at the local primary school, with hula hoops competitions, face painting, a reptile handling zoo and didgeridoo performances mixed in among stalls of clothing, cd’s, garden art and more. There are public sing-a-long, songwriting competitions, and bush dances as well.

Affordable, accessible and affectionate, with an abundance of music, dance and theatre

The Maldon Folk Festival has long been recognised as the best value family festival around – with the benefit of over three decades, we have learnt to provide a long weekend of quality entertainment at affordable prices to suit all age groups!

Join us at Maldon to celebrate our 38th Festival and bring your friends and relations! Our unique festival offers a long weekend of entertainment for all and an opportunity to be part of a feast of music, dance, theatre and poetry.

The Maldon Folk Festival has a unique friendly atmosphere that appeals to all ages. There are also opportunities for chalkboard sets, busking and sessions.Maldon has a wealth of historic halls, churches, pubs and cafes – our venues are intimate and relaxed – plus the natural amphitheatre of Mount Tarrangower – home to the legendary Guinness Tent, the Tarrangower Wine Tent and a small village of food stalls, kid’s marquee and our main stage – with bush camping nearby.

Located in a natural setting and a relaxed atmosphere the festival also offers workshops, kid’s stuff, chalkboard and session venues plus an Instrument Makers Exhibition.

The historic township has an ambience dating from the Goldrush with a wood-fired bakery, five-star restaurants and everything between! Good food, local wines, pubs, clubs, antiques, gardens and steam trains.

The Maldon Folk Festival is on October 28th – 31st during 2011 and ticket prices are as follows;

Single day $60.00 (Saturday or Sunday only).
Full weekend $110.00.
Family packages $220.00
(Two adults, two children under 12 years, free).
Bush camping sites $40.00.

Upon a glance at the extensive festival program it is not difficult to see that the Maldon event offers one of the best value for money experiences around, and being there makes you feel as if you’ve been let in on the secret of one of the most well-organised bush parties that there is. Importantly as well, the Maldon Folk Festival is a family friendly event with appeal for people of all ages.

Why? world-class performances
When: October 28th – 31st, 2011
Where: Maldon, Victoria
Cost: $110 four-day ticket, $60 Sat or Sun ticket, $220 family ticket, $40 camp sites.

Written by Melody Clifford and published in Weekend Notes with added material from The Bendigo Advertiser.

La Primavera: A Daylesford Celebration

Lavandula is a farm that grows both Spanish and English lavender whose breathtaking fields are in bloom throughout most of the year.

Daylesford Swiss-Italian Celebrations

The spring festival at Lavandula Swiss Italian Farm near Daylesford honours the Swiss Italian origin of this farm, and celebrates spring in the garden.

You can explore the Swiss Italian theme through a visit to the 1860s farmhouse, enjoy the joyful music of Marcello and Paulina, watch the local mime troupe, enjoy the dancing of Simona Grippi or the Sicilia Bella, listen to the singing of the U3A trio or to to Fay Thomson’s stories, or watch Boyd Thompson’s slides of Ticino.

La Trattoria will have spring foods for lunch from the wood oven and from the kitchen, The Vintage Baker is bringing biscotti, and Lina and Tony Siciliano will showcase their delicious wines, olives and olive oil…

Graeme and Bill will have gorgeous chooks and fresh eggs for sale.

Gary Thomas, Spade to Blade, will demonstrate sausage-making. Help him make fresh and cured varieties… and hear the story of luganighe. Jill Taylor will demonstrate basket weaving, using Lavandula’s basket willows and lavender. Maldon Petanque will stage a tournament, but you must register by 10am if you want to field a team – or join one!

Lavandula Swiss Italian Farm. Lavandula is a taste of Europe in the centre of Victoria.Under colourful fluttering flags from Biasca, you will enjoy la primavera festa by simply lolling on the grass, watching the farm animals and the little chicks on the lake, or walking in a beautiful garden taking time to notice the fresh growth of spring or to hear the small birds bustling through the nesting season.

Bring a rug, relax and breathe in the indescribable freshness of spring country air.

This year’s La Primavera will be held 10.30am-5pm Sunday 30 October 2011 (that’ll give you plenty of time to get ready for the Festa’s evening lantern parade & fireworks).

Entry $5 adults, $2 school-age children. Relax in the country, find tranquillity, breathe fresh air, listen to birdsong and be refreshed. Ninety minutes from Melbourne, and just north of Daylesford in central Victoria, Lavandula has space and beautiful vistas.

At its heart is the golden stone rustica, a cluster of farm buildings constructed by Italians from southern Switzerland who came to look for gold and stayed to farm. The farmhouse is open for viewing each afternoon and gives an immediate sense of Italian rural life in 1860s Victoria.

Twenty years ago Carol White restored the buildings creating a European garden and productive farming lifestyle. Around its golden stone farm buildings, Lavandula grows lavender, olives and grape.

10 minutes north from Daylesford. Relax and hear the quiet. Enjoy the space. Find a secret place. Walk in a garden that is beautiful and productive. Play petanque. Discover regional Italian architecture in the 1860s farmhouse. Meet farm animals.

La Trattoria licensed daytime cafe serves teas and lunches from the Mediterranean cuisine. Eat in the warm snug cafe, in the sunny stone loggia, or al fresco in the ash grove.

Lavandula is beautiful to visit in all seasons. Right now in spring…

Green grass and sunshine, tulips and irises, fruit trees in blossom. Nesting birds are singing among the pink flowers on the quince thickets, and frogs are calling from the bubbly creek. There’s a spring menu at La Trattoria. In the Barn you’ll find our shop has homewares and potions good for body and soul.

Melways Ref:           X909 C8
RACV VicRoads:       59 C6
Touring map:           www.visitvictoria.com

Address:  350 Hepburn-Newstead Road, Shepherds Flat 3461
Email: mail@lavandula.com.au
Tel: 03 5476 4393

The Weekender’s Guide to Daylesford

Combining Respite and Pleasure during a Weekend in Daylesford is Easy.

We’ve picked out a few of our favourites things to fill two days in spa country.

By Caroline Clements, 3rd June 2011, from http://www.broadsheet.com.au

Daylesford snow cover from Wombat Hill in 2007As the urban sprawl spreads further north, the distance between the city and your weekend destination seems less and less of an obstacle. Daylesford is only 90 minutes away and if you skip around the herds departing the city on Friday night, you’ll be in spa country by dinnertime.

It seems like a wave of city folk have crept further from the Melbourne to find sweet country respite more permanently and, as such, regional Victoria is becoming a more accessible place to stop into, even if only for a night or two. Small business is fast becoming the new retirement and Daylesford, blessed with its countless local producers and small businesses, is one of many pockets of the state that is feeling the influx.

It’s pretty easy to fill your days at this popular weekend spot, but we’ve chosen a few things that will undoubtedly make your two days out of town a treat.

Mineral Spas at Daylesford
For over 150 years the regional Victorian landscape has been luring visitors to its natural mineral springs (there are over 70 of them). Perhaps you’ve filled up a water bottle with murky ‘mineral water’ to take home with you. Drinking this water is said to be beneficial, but simply bathing in it is quite blissful. Hepburn Bath House is definitely one of the key spots. This spa and wellness retreat is set in a small, picturesque valley and offers a host of stunning experiences and facilities, including warm relaxation pools, massage chairs submerged in bubbling water, waterfall showers and a range of treatments. You’ll leave feeling like your floating.

Accommodation
It’s just a short walk back to your private sanctuary if you’re staying across the road at the luxury villas at Hepburn at Hepburn. This is completely extravagant, designed by David Edellman and owned by 8 Hotels, it is certainly a fancy weekend lodgings. But if you’re after something more town-and-country, there are plenty of other, less extravagant options nearby, like a private house up on the hill for two or more, or a cosy bed and breakfast like Lakeleigh. Owner Jean Steiner also owns Peonies & Picnics, a homewares and antiques store in town selling old prints, picnic baskets, crockery and ornamental urns. Sharing a connecting door is Ego’s Culinaria, a small all-day cafe serving sandwiches, salads and baked goods from sausage rolls to lemon meringue pies.

A Perect Drop for Wining and Dining in DaylesfordA Perfect Drop
Just across the road is A Perfect Drop, a stunning wine and food lounge. What looks like a house from the front feels that way on the inside too, and its this comfortable atmosphere that can make lunch (cosied up on a chesterfield) turn into a long afternoon by the fire with a stiff drink. The food is wintery and warm at this time of year, with a seasonal local tasting plate and hearty dishes of rump steak, roast duck, trout from nearby Tuki Trout Farm and locally sourced veggies.

Farmers Arms Hotel
On a wintery night out of town you want to feel as far away from inner city suburbia as possible. The humble Farmers Arms Hotel is a welcome substitute. On any given night the front bar might be full with rowdy locals. Sit up here with a pint of ale before heading out back to the dining room for dinner, though you can also get meals at the bar. The old redbrick building must have been an old RSL or some such and the interior hasn’t changed a great deal, but it’s warm and comfortable. The food is excellent, with sophisticated pub dishes like racks of lamb, pork neck, béarnaise steak and soufflé.

Daytime Cafes – Cliffy’s, Harvest, Chowder House
Other favourite daytime eateries to drop into include Cliffy’s, a cluttered country larder, Harvest cafe, and if you are in Hepburn, check out the Chowder House. This is something straight off a highway in America. Packed full of vinyl-covered chairs around tables, the Chowder House has a diner feel and serves huge bowls of seafood chowder with sweet corn bread on the side. If for no other reason, this place is a great novelty. It’s opposite the Hepburn General Store, which is a cute country milk bar-come-cafe where you can stop in for a loaf of bread or sit down for a sandwich.

Istra Smallgoods
If a picnic sounds more appealing, head to Istra Smallgoods, located in the nearby town of Musk. It is a goldmine. Istra Smallgoods produce a range of cured meat products and supply restaurants and cafes all over Melbourne, but this is the headquarters. Run by a Croatian couple, it also sells large jars of pickles, tinned fish, tubes of liver pate, homemade pasta sauce and an array of Slavic sweets.

Markets
Markets rate highly on a good to-do list for an out-of-towner. Daylesford has this covered. If you’ve got a few hours to kill, venture to The Mill Markets just out of town. This is like the Chapel Street Bazaar, but bigger. In fact, it is Australia’s largest indoor market of antiques and collectables, with over 140 stallholders. Indeed, it’s a trash and treasure market like no other – crammed full with antiques, clothes, furniture, art and books. You’ll find manual meat mincers and plaster sculls next to vintage posters of Raffles Hotel in Singapore in the swing of 1960s British India and roughed African rugs. For an outdoor market selling local wares alongside local grocers selling fruit and veg, eggs and bread, head up to the Daylesford Sunday Market, every Sunday morning. You’ll also pick up locally made soap, woolly knits and cheap bric-a-brac.

Breakfast and Beer DaylesfordCidery/Breakfast & Beer
The Daylesford-Macedon region is also, of course, home to a host of local wineries and breweries. Many of these local producers supply to the restaurants in the area, so it’s not hard to track down a local drop. Daylesford also has a cidery just a couple of kilometres down the road making tradition ‘still’ cider, like they did in England before they had bubbles. But if something effervescent is more appealing, try Breakfast & Beer, a toasty place to relax serving a huge selection of international brews. This cosy two-storey bistro is housed in the oldest freestanding building in town, and despite the name, also serves lunch and dinner with beer at any time of the day.

And when you leave to head back into town, drop by the roadside farmer’s gates. Based on an honesty donation system, local traders sell everything from kangaroo poo to potatoes, apples, honey and eggs. Take something back home with you.

 

 

 

 

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