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Thursday, 11 June 2026

Authentic gourmet experiences on the Amalfi Coast


There is increasing demand from travellers for authentic gourmet experiences. 

Casa Angelina on Italy's dramatic Amalfi Coast has launched a collection of activities featuring local Italian traditions. 

Located high above the the ancient fishing village of Praiano, Casa Angelina is a member of The Leading Hotels of the World. 

The exclusive 36-room retreat aims to offer the "pleasures of southern Italy are reimagined through a lens of quiet luxury". It is represented in Australia by the Unique Tourism Collection. https://uniquetourism.com/  

Among the immersive experiences for the 2026 summer season are Ancient Lantern Fishing and Nonna's Secret. 

Lantern Fishing offers guests the a night-time excursion inspired by the traditional lampare fishing technique. Accompanied by a local fisherman, guests catch their own fish. Executive chef Leopoldo Elefante later guides them in preparing their catch using seasonal local ingredients and simple techniques (below). 


In southern Italy, the annual preparation of tomato preserves is a tradition with most families. 

Nonna's Secret invites guests to take part and discover one of Campania's most cherished customs (top image). 

The experience begins with a leisurely walk through Casa Angelina's organic garden alongside chef Elefante, gathering sun-ripened tomatoes and fragrant basil. Back in the kitchen, guests are guided through the traditional preparation of homemade passata - with each guest taking home a jar of hand-crafted tomato preserve. 

Other experiences include lacemaking. basket weaving and painting. 

For more details see www.casangelina.com

Discover a different way to buy your wine

Just about every wine store in the world offers a similar format: a section for chardonnay, another section for shiraz, a different section for imports. 

New Melbourne store Drop Shop, which opens its doors today, is doing things differently. 

Drop Shop is challenging decades of liquor retail convention with a simple idea: most people don’t buy wines by grape variety or region - they buy by occasion and budget.

Founded by Pinot Palooza creator and Wine Victoria chair Dan Sims, drinks retail specialist Courtney Keegan and Common State founder Luke McKinnon, the new concept aims to replace overwhelming choice with a tightly curated range organised into three intuitive categories:

Choose from: 

* Weekday from $15 to $25
* Party from $25 to $40
* Fancy from $40+

“We want to create a new category,” says McKinnon, ex Dan Murphy's and Blackheart and Sparrows. 

"We've gone for an occasion-based liquor format that strips out the clutter and speaks directly to the individual who’s tired of choosing between a warehouse and a wine lecture.

”With this guiding logic, the offer is deliberately simple. Wines are presented in three distinct categories with Victorian and rising producers front and centre."

The same equation applies across wine, beer, RTDs, spirits, as well as non-alcoholic options. 

The 60sqm store is designed by We Are Humble and inspired by Japanese konbini culture. 

Drop Shop is described as a convenience store for drinks that’s designed like Aesop, run like 7-Eleven, and organised to take the guesswork out of buying booze. 

“Most retailers would probably describe themselves as highly curated,” Sims says. "But the average bottle shop stocks more than 1000 wines. At Drop Shop, we literally only have room for 150, so everything has to really earn its spot on the shelf. Think of each category as its own shortlist. The idea isn’t to limit choice - it’s to make choosing easier."

Drop Shop is at 70 Lygon Street (corner of St Phillip Street), Brunswick East, 3057. Opening hours:
Monday to Thursday: 11am-9pm, Friday and Saturday: 11am-10pm, Sunday: 11am-8pm.




Wednesday, 10 June 2026

Qantas and Jetstar confirm flights from new Western Sydney Airport


Qantas and Jetstar will use the new Western Sydney International Airport to link to some of Australia's most popular domestic destinations.

Jetstar will launch the first commercial passenger service when Western Sydney International (Nancy-Bird Walton) Airport (WSI) opens on Sunday, October 25.

The Qantas Group and WSI today announced they had finalised a five-year agreement for domestic passenger flights and freight that will enable both airlines to build their schedule as demand for services grows in Western Sydney.

Jetstar will make history when JQ362 departs at 11am on October 25 to the Gold Coast. The airline will operate up to 14 flights a week between WSI and Melbourne, four weekly flights to the Gold Coast and three weekly flights to Brisbane. All flights will be operated by Airbus A320 aircraft.

Qantas operations will begin on March 28, 2027, with four flights per week to both Melbourne and Brisbane on a QantasLink Embraer E190.

Qantas will also be one of the first commercial airlines to fly from the airport when its inaugural freighter service takes off from WSI’s 24-hour Cargo Precinct on the evening of Monday, July 27.

All flights will be in addition to current services from Sydney Airport (Kingsford Smith).

“This is a major milestone for Australian aviation and one that has been years in the making," says Qantas Group Chief Executive Officer Vanessa Hudson.

"We’re incredibly proud that Jetstar will be the first Australian airline to begin operations at Western Sydney International Airport and Qantas will follow early next year.

“We’re excited by the potential of Western Sydney International Airport to spur local tourism and make aviation more accessible for millions of people in Western Sydney, who currently have to travel to Kingsford Smith to catch a flight.

“Jetstar has an incredible history of growing new markets and being the first airline to launch will give one of the country’s fastest growing regions better access to low fares to some of our most popular destinations.

“We know there’s growing demand for customers in Western Sydney and we’re proud to be working with Gold Coast Airport and Tourism and Events Queensland to make our services to South-East Queensland a reality."

Party time at Hobart's urban winery



Hobart comes alive during the nights of the Dark Mofo festival.

But what if you are looking for something vinous to do during the day?

If trekking out to one of the vineyard regions is too hard, what about a visit to the Glaetzer-Dixon urban winery and cellar door?

If you'd like a full tasting you can book in here, but this year Nick and Sally Glaetzer will also be hosting a pop-up bar in the winery at 93 Brooker Ave, Hobart, serving up wines by the glass accompanied by live music.

"This is a fun opportunity to come and see a working winery while there’s some interesting fermentation business happening in the cellar," says Nick Glaetzer.

The Glaetzer-Dixon pop-up will be open 3pm-5pm on Friday, June 12, Friday, June 19 and Saturday, June 20.

And If you’re heading to the Winter Feast, Nick will be behind the bar a few nights serving the Uberblanc Riesling by the glass.

Tuesday, 9 June 2026

Don't believe the hype: What you really need to know about wine shows

 

I just read this on Instagram and a connected website. 

The World’s Best Shiraz Costs Just $25

"A $25 McLaren Vale Shiraz has just done what many far pricier bottles dream of. Beresford Estate’s Classic Shiraz 2023 has been named the world’s best Shiraz at the 2026 International Wine Challenge, taking home 97 points, a Gold Medal and four major trophies, including the International Syrah Trophy.

It came out on top against 111 Shiraz entries from around the world, making it a very timely little victory for red wine season."

It beat 111 other shirazes, so that makes it the best in the world? It may be a very good wine but this is a patently absurd statement.

Here is what I wrote about wine shows several years ago. It is more true than ever.

You've probably read a story in your local newspaper about how an Australian cabernet or chardonnay was named “best in the world”. But it isn't.

You've almost certainly walked around your local wine store admiring the little shiny stickers on wine labels and believed that a gold medal indicates a wine won its class in a show. It didn't.

Many Australian wine companies are obsessed with their show results, covering their labels with gold, silver and bronze stickers from a multitude of shows.

But while the industry sees stickers as a major sales tool, the reality is that many consumers do not understand how the Australian show system works - and are easily manipulated.

You'd probably imagine that a wine that won a gold medal was first in its class, like at the Olympics, a silver medallist was second and a bronze medallist third. Wrong, wrong, wrong.

In wine shows any wine gaining a score of 18.5 out of 20 (or 95 out of 100) from the judges gets a gold medal. That could be as many as 20% of all the entries. Any entry scoring between 17 to 18.4 and gets a silver, and so on.

At the 2015 Royal Melbourne Show, to take one random example, 169 gold medals were awarded, 314 silvers and 857 bronzes. Almost half the entries got a medal.

At shows, all the wines are tasted “blind” - without the judges knowing what they are.

The outright winner in any class earns a trophy – which is what you should be looking out for after the judges have finished sipping, swirling, tasting and spitting.

But the problem is that there are still hundreds of trophy winners out there in retail land.

There are over 70 officials wine shows in Australia (some far more important than others), several unofficial regional shows and hundreds overseas.

Bigger companies can afford to enter their wines into myriad different shows (it is an expensive and time-consuming business), making themselves almost certain, by the law of averages, to earn some bling to enliven their labels. 

Others prefer to let their wines stand on their own merits.

You need to look very carefully at those label stickers to determine whether a wine won a bronze medal at Pine Gap Show, some tasting in Moldova, or a trophy at one of the major shows like Sydney or Melbourne. 

I receive regular press releases saying: "Our shiraz is the best in Australia after winning the trophy at the [Insert Any Name You Like Here] Wine Show."

Or, if the show is in London, New York or Ljubljana and has an international field: "Our shiraz is the best in the world."

It's all nonsense. 

Winning a trophy at a wine show does not make your wine the best in Australia, or the world. It makes it the favourite of the small group of judges who sipped it at that show. Usually at room temperature, and almost certainly without food.

Most wines, as you know, are enjoyed with food. And the whites and sparkling wines are almost always drunk chilled by consumers.

The reality is that a wine can win a trophy one week, and get a score of 14/20 the next. 

Different judges; different scores. But no one ever sends out a press release saying: "Our wine wasn't even good enough to win a bronze."

The wine show system in Australia is extremely good, particularly at the regional level, for winemakers to benchmark their wines against others from the same area. And for keen consumers to get to know some new producers who shine against their peers.

If more than a couple of panels (different judges; different shows) award trophies or gold medals to a particular wine then there is a pretty strong basis for assuming that it is a wine of excellent quality that appeals to winemakers, sommeliers and, sometimes, wine writers with educated palates.

If the judges of one show share similar palate opinions to you; excellent news all round. But they may not.

And remember that gold medal does not mean that a wine was the best in a show. It merely means it was in the top bracket.

And also bear in mind that many, many wineries, particularly those in the upper echelons, do not enter their wines into shows. At all.

Penfolds would be on a hiding to nothing entering its benchmark Grange red in shows, only to see a barrage of “better than Grange” press releases from rivals should it fail to win.

Other wineries, particularly small ones, find entering shows is just too expensive. They prefer to persuade wine lovers to try their wines and make up their own minds.

The fact is that a lot of very good people with excellent palates give up a lot of their time to judge at shows "and help improve the breed". 

I'm in awe of the number of wines they can taste each day.

Stickers help sell wines. And that's the bottom line. But look closely and that gold-coloured sticker on your bottle may just say "Good with fish". Buyer beware.

Bronte gets a new dining experience


Restaurateur Alex Cameron is helping transform Sydney beach suburb Bronte into a new gourmet hotspot. 

Fishnets, the second Bronte venue from Cameron’s Overwhelming Hospitality group, opens this week, building on the success of European-inspired Table Manners. 

“Fishnets is grounded in Japanese technique, but designed to be shared and enjoyed in a relaxed neighbourhood setting,” Cameron says. 

“It sits between the precision of fine dining Japanese restaurants and the ease of a local haunt. 

"I’m proud to be bringing another venue to Bronte and the surrounding area, and to show a different side of what we can do. There’s a growing community of venues here, and we’re hoping people start to see Bronte as a destination for dining.”

The menu is craftedby former Sokyo omakase chef Sanghyeop Kim in collaboration with group executive chef Luke Churchill, and centres on "a refined but approachable take on Japanese dining" with a strong sushi offering. 

Think a seasonal sashimi platter dressed four ways; a nigiri selection; and larger plates like Murray cod with turnip and roast chicken dashi, and a 500g tuna katsu with cabbage and Japanese demi-glace, or maybe pippies with yuzu kosho beurre blanc. 


“At Fishnets, we’re taking the precision of omakase and translating it into something more relaxed and shareable," says chef Kim. 

"It’s still about quality and technique, but in a way that feels approachable. I’m particularly excited for people to try our nigiri menu; this is where top-tier produce really comes to the forefront. 

"It’s about the balance of the rice, the temperature, and the quality of the fish. It looks simple, but it relies on precision.”

The drinks program at Fishnets has been designed to complement the menu’s precision and approachability, with a strong Japanese influence throughout. 

Fishnets will be open for dinner Wednesday to Sunday, with lunch over the weekend. Bookings are available via fish-nets.com.au.