23 July 2024
9 mins Read
Pause a day of weaving your way through cellar doors with a lunch break at one of the many produce-driven and seasonally-inspired Adelaide Hills cafes. Proliferated with gastronomic delights, these casual eateries may be more relaxed than the region’s fine dining restaurants, but they’re certainly equal in flavour and devotion to the craft of eating well. Start your day with a good coffee and breakfast, stop for brunch, lunch or a snack and graze your way through the hills.
As the sun rises over the charming stone cottage that is Fourth Hill Providore, breakfast begins at 7.30am with house-made baked beans, an omelette, or perhaps a toastie filled with pastrami and provolone, by 9am focaccia is being turned out, a potato and confit garlic iteration, then come 11am, lunchtime appetites are well-provided with the likes of linguini with slow-cooked ragu or orecchiette with garlic and chilli.
No matter the hour of the day, the Italian-inspired menu here will convince you to take a seat on a white Adirondack chair on the sun-filtered lawn and tuck in. After all, wine-tasting is best undertaken on a full stomach.
Address: 34 Onkaparinga Valley Road, Verdun
Pretty little cakes arranged in formation tempt even the most casual sweet tooth here. Just try resisting a raspberry, pistachio and rose cream bun or a strawberries and cream lamington. You may as well allow your eyes to grow as big as your stomach and sit down with a Meyer lemon meringue Danish and a good coffee.
All sugary temptation is forgiven in this former church and schoolhouse in Nairne. Take a loaf of fresh sourdough away with you and some provisions of jams and preserves for afternoon tea back at your place.
Address: 54 Old Princes Highway, Nairne
The second cafe from sisters of Mount Barker’s Lady Luck (scroll down for more on that gem), SUSA is a very attractive addition to the casual diner scene. A stop-and-stare view sets the tone here for a minimal interior style that’s as slick as it is inviting. It’s not strictly vegetarian, but there’s a lot here to satisfy plant-preferring eaters, such as a burnt Brussels sprout gnocchi or fried enoki on sourdough with dukkah. Meat-eaters will relish an elevated bacon and eggs with polenta and parsley oil or a Cuban sandwich. With a well-chosen wine list and chilled ambience, Susa Kitchen is a great long luncher.
Address: 1 Aston Parade, Mount Barker
Half-cafe, half-homewares store, FRED is an Adelaide Hills destination for dining with a side of shopping, or the other way round if that’s how you roll.
The stylish eatery serves an early breakfast, all-day brunch and great lunch options that dart from South America to Asia and Italy, such as hot and sour noodle broth, gnocchi, and a Cuban sandwich. It’s all good and can be enjoyed alongside a local wine, beer or cider. Come Friday night to book in for The Chow Chow Session from 5.30pm.
Address: 220 Mount Barker Road, Aldgate Village
Passionate purveyors of organic goods, this market and cafe in Stirling is your one-stop wholesome shop.
Pick up groceries from local growers, as well as pantry staples, snacks and sweets and settle in for a feelgood breakfast of avocado and peas on toast, smoothie or bircher, or order from the all-day lunch menu with the likes of bruschetta, focaccia, soups and salads. If you’re just after something small, nibble on a vegan croissant with your espresso.
Address: 5 Druid Avenue, Stirling
It’s Mexico meets the Mediterranean at this beloved coffee joint, where owners José and Oswaldo Estrella leverage their Mexican roots with their experience working in Italian restaurants. While the go-to dishes have a Central American lean, such as tacos, quesadillas and huevos rancheros, this petite cafe also spins a good burger, sandwich and pastry. Colourful and cool with coffee from Veneziano, this is a Mount Barker must for laidback lunches.
Address: 1/24 Gawler Street, Mount Barker
You don’t often expect to find a patisserie in a pub, but here you will. Tucked into the sleek Stirling Hotel, which is also home to a bistro, wine bar and chic accommodation, this delightful spot is open every day from 7am to service your croissant and coffee needs. Five Senses Coffee makes up the brew, while you can grab-and-go sandwiches, salads and cakes or take a seat to eat. Pick up a bottle of your favourite Adelaide Hills wine at the adjacent cellar while you wait for your coffee.
Address: 52 Mount Barker Road, Stirling
The thirty years of hospitality experience amassed by co-owners Chany Park and Cheryl Wood (the two Cs) has steered this local haunt into a welcoming and laidback eatery with underlying polish. Local produce gets star billing with cheese from Udder Delights and spreads from Beerenberg Farm and you’ll find the menu wanders from Asian-style dishes to Spanish highlights and cafe usuals, each elegantly expressed on the plate. It’s a good vibe Hahndorf haunt, minus the German infusion of its neighbours.
Address: 43B Main Street, Hahndorf
Take note chocolate lovers, this Stirling Cacao is an imperative addition to your Adelaide Hills itinerary. But be warned, self-restraint may not come easily at this artisan chocolatier with packets of truffles, ganache-lacquered treats, bars, blocks and boxes of chocolates lining the shelves.
They’re all to take with you, but while you’re here, sit and sip a coffee accompanied by the most lavish tiramisu you’ve ever seen, house-made gateaux, waffles or just surrender to your cravings and opt for the dessert platter for two. If you’re on the savoury side of the fence, there are toasties, soups and tarts.
Address: Shop 3, 41 Mount Barker Road, Stirling
This all-day cafe and function centre presides over the Adelaide Hills at 710 metres above sea level. From such a vantage point you’re treated to a sweeping lay of the land woven with grape vines and undulating valleys and meadows. Once you’re done absorbing the view, you’ll find the menu to be equally as expansive with everything from pizza to burgers and brisket to schnitzel. It’s also a great spot for an afternoon Aperol spritz.
Address: 266 Mount Lofty Summit Road, Crafers
Sitting pretty in the quaint town of Lobethal, this converted former garage is a light and uplifting space festooned with blooms and good food. Not only will you find a cafe serving very good expressions of the classics, but there’s also beautifully selected homewares and hampers, a plant studio, and a boutique bar and cellar door. Take your time to peruse and choose something savoury, such as pesto beans or souvlaki, or for something sweeter, you can’t pass up the buttermilk banoffee pancakes.
Address: 24 Main Street, Lobethal
This wholefoods coffee shop is keen on an all-day breakfast and is rather fond of cake – all with a healthy lean, of course. Gluten-free and vegan cakes are whipped up onsite and served with well-made coffee. For something more substantial, The Good Pantry caters to the Gumeracha community and wine-tasting transients with brunch-ish meals of French toast, smashed avo, eggs in all guises, salads and burgers with optional (but highly recommended) hash browns.
Address: 35 Albert Street, Gumeracha
Judging by the logo and namesake of this cute Stirling spot, Charlie Boy is a very good dog. Inside, there’s a cosy fire and excellent coffee, as well as pastries and sandwiches to go or plates to sit and savour, from breakie wraps to toasties and cupcakes featuring the floppy-fringed Charlie. On Fridays, a $10 pork bahn mi is a regular hit. You might even see the Charlie Boy mobile coffee caravan doing the rounds about town serving hot cuppas to spectators of local sports at nearby netball and footy fields.
Address: 4 Mount Barker Road, Stirling
Pouring cups of local Adelaide Hills’ Husky Coffee Co, this casual Nairne spot pairs your brew with a rotating menu of breakfast to brunch to lunch eats finessed with regional produce. It’s all friendly classics here with the likes of a Rueben, eggs benny, smoked salmon bagel and eggs your way complete with all manner of upgrades.
Address: 73a Main Street, Nairne
Sisters Maddy and Taylah are the ladies behind this bright cafe, but luck probably has little to do with the delicious delights and good coffee at Lady Luck. Instead, put it down to an astute curation of local produce and flavours for a menu with everything from warming mushroom and truffle toasties to pillowy pork dumplings and soba noodle soup. Coffee is by way of De Groot and the interiors feature a fondness for cowboy boots.
Address: 16 Walker Street, Mount Barker
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