logo
This gold-rush town has plenty of pubs. But there's a lot to love at this nostalgic brewpub

This gold-rush town has plenty of pubs. But there's a lot to love at this nostalgic brewpub

The Age07-08-2025
From a tiny craft brewing operation to a full-blown bar and bistro, Love Shack proves the best country pubs are no longer the oldest.
Previous SlideNext Slide
Pub dining$$$$
There are a few things you can count on in Victoria's gold-rush towns. Grand, optimistic civic buildings line wide roads. There are many churches. Street corners will be inhabited by handsome pubs.
Castlemaine, an hour and a half north-west of Melbourne, had dozens of pubs in its 19th-century heyday, places for prospectors to celebrate, commiserate and gather in hope. You wouldn't think there'd be any need to create a pub on a wholly new site, but here's Love Shack, sprouting up among the existing high-street shops and giving the old-school hotels a 21st-century kick-along.
It's a vibe. Plaid-shirted arty types sit on the pavement with pots of lager and smash-pattie burgers. Day trippers from the city stash a haul of secondhand clothes in their front-bar booth and settle in for Sunday roast. There's a roar by the pool table as an eight-ball rockets into a middle pocket.
Love Shack is in a sweet spot: locals love it and the pub loves them right back.
Regulars compare their footy tipping tally: one's ahead on AFL, the other is smashing it in AFLW. I'm third in line at the bar, reading a poster advertising a Wax On event where anyone can bring in three vinyl records or CDs to play. If you lived here, would you ever have a night on the couch? There is so much happening at Love Shack seven days a week, and it's inclusive and friendly.
Love Shack started as a tiny craft brewery in 2021, when ex-Stomping Ground employees Conna Mallett and Harry Cox set up a brew kit out the back of the Theatre Royal. They partnered with designer Todd Vanneste and powered on with branding and brewing, developing beers that are well-crafted and quaffable, rather than wacky and attention-grabbing.
After a year, the owners put in a bar and made toasties, then two years ago they brought in a chef and boosted the menu. Just two months ago, they expanded into the cafe next door and turned it into a bistro. What the hell, guys, you made a pub!
The look is nostalgic, crafted with fondness and a bowerbird's eye for cool stuff abandoned on nature strips. There are Australiana prints, timber panelling and swirly carpet. There's sport on TV in the front bar, table service in the new bistro and fun times throughout.
Chef Joel Baylon is a Castlemaine boy who left 20 years ago when people were more likely to chat about the town's huge bacon factory than its dining options. Baylon cooked and learned at places including two-hatted Aru and The Moon wine bar, where he was head chef. Coming home for a quiet country life was the plan; sorry, Joel, you've got a hit on your hands.
The menu is proudly pub food, but there's also a bit of small-plate wine-bar pizzazz and a sprinkling of misty-eyed nostalgia. How else to think about the vol-au-vent, filled with mushrooms, parmesan cream and a jaunty tangle of balsamic-dressed frisee?
Whitebait was a customer suggestion: chips are one thing, crisp little battered fish with aioli and lemon are a better thing.
Scotch eggs are all about the reveal: is the yolk gooey, the mince layer moist and tasty within its crumb casing? This rendition is 'yes' all the way through and gets a 'hell yeah' for its vegan XO dressing made with roasted almonds and chilli crisp.
Baylon is having some good chats with Cliffords Quality Cuts, the butcher up the road. The shop is using local beef to make patties for the diner-style cheeseburger, and preparing cuts such as the Barnsley chop, a double-sided lamb loin that's on the menu as a special.
Obviously, there's a parma. This one is made with smoked mozzarella and the kitchen's own sugo.
Love Shack is in a sweet spot: locals love it and the pub loves them right back. Visitors to town can lock into the feedback loop just by walking through the door. Castlemaine's gold rush is long past, but the prospecting is excellent.
Three more country pubs to try
Parker Street Project
The Royal Mail is home to fine dining restaurant Wickens, which has its own pavilion, but there's also the Parker Street front bar and bistro in the old pub. Much of the produce is grown in a nearby market garden. Bar snacks include chicken wings with house-made hot sauce, a fried chicken burger, and a ploughman's platter with local cheese.
108 Parker Street, Dunkeld, royalmail.com.au
Criterion Hotel
Built in 1865, extensively renovated in 2013, and with new owner Chad De Lany (ex-Flinders Hotel) coming on board in 2019, the Cri is the kind of pub that makes a town, with good accommodation and hearty feeds for those passing through. The menu has everything from baked camembert to Korean fried chicken and local Gippsland steaks, with regional wine on the pour too.
90 MacAlister Street, Sale, criterionhotelsale.com.au
Swiss Mountain Hotel
Just west of Daylesford, this single-storey weatherboard pub has also been pouring beers since 1865. New management has recently taken over, and the happy hour is keen. Come for pub classics, craft beer and a chat under the old-timey verandah.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

There are plenty of shows talking footy – this one takes on the AFLW
There are plenty of shows talking footy – this one takes on the AFLW

Sydney Morning Herald

timea day ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

There are plenty of shows talking footy – this one takes on the AFLW

AFL broadcaster Kate McCarthy, who joined Seven's commentary crew in 2024 following a playing career with the Brisbane Lions, St Kilda and Hawthorn, takes a 'holistic' view of the women's game in light of reports it is suffering annual losses of $50 million. As co-host of Talking W, Seven's AFLW answer to the now defunct Talking Footy, McCarthy says there are more important markers of sporting success than money. 'When you invest in something, you invest in it for the long run,' she says. 'If you sit back and think of the impact that women's football has had, it's been far greater than the financial returns … If you look at it holistically, that it's here to stay – and the AFL have been very strong in their discussions about that – it's got huge momentum.' Launched last year to plug a gap in longer-form AFLW analysis, Talking W covers the 10th AFLW season with a different line-up. McCarthy's original co-host, former Adelaide player and Australian Survivor contestant Abbey Holmes, is taking a break after the birth of her baby in June. In her place is former Fox Footy reporter Riley Beveridge. 'We wanted to have a show that was covering the women's side of things and to be able to analyse and critique, or talk about the positives of women's football and AFLW because there hadn't been a lot of coverage from these sorts of shows on networks,' says McCarthy. 'We have plenty of football shows dedicated to men's football, and Seven was really keen on having one that was dedicated to women's football as well. To be able to build on what we created last year is going to be important.' In a sign of the continuing evolution of TV footy chat, which has been steadily moving away from male-dominated formats, Seven's footy show slate has shifted this year. Instead of Talking Footy, there are two new shows: The Agenda Setters (with Craig Hutchison, Kane Cornes, Caroline Wilson and Nick Riewoldt) on Mondays and Tuesdays on 7plus, and Hamish McLaren's Unfiltered on Wednesdays on Seven. The latter follows the decade-old Front Bar at 8.30pm, with Mick Molloy, Sam Pang and Andy Maher. 'I've only worked in really respectful environments,' says McCarthy. 'The men or women that I've worked with have done it in a way where there hasn't really been any of that locker room talk, or talk where it would be not accepted. We've moved past that now as a footballing community.' McCarthy also welcomes the perspective her new co-host Beveridge will bring. 'We have done the round so far together on and Riley is a fantastic analyst and very well versed across both men's and women's football, and has been since season one of women's football,' she says. 'So it's going to be great to be alongside him … It's important to have diverse voices.'

There are plenty of shows talking footy – this one takes on the AFLW
There are plenty of shows talking footy – this one takes on the AFLW

The Age

timea day ago

  • The Age

There are plenty of shows talking footy – this one takes on the AFLW

AFL broadcaster Kate McCarthy, who joined Seven's commentary crew in 2024 following a playing career with the Brisbane Lions, St Kilda and Hawthorn, takes a 'holistic' view of the women's game in light of reports it is suffering annual losses of $50 million. As co-host of Talking W, Seven's AFLW answer to the now defunct Talking Footy, McCarthy says there are more important markers of sporting success than money. 'When you invest in something, you invest in it for the long run,' she says. 'If you sit back and think of the impact that women's football has had, it's been far greater than the financial returns … If you look at it holistically, that it's here to stay – and the AFL have been very strong in their discussions about that – it's got huge momentum.' Launched last year to plug a gap in longer-form AFLW analysis, Talking W covers the 10th AFLW season with a different line-up. McCarthy's original co-host, former Adelaide player and Australian Survivor contestant Abbey Holmes, is taking a break after the birth of her baby in June. In her place is former Fox Footy reporter Riley Beveridge. 'We wanted to have a show that was covering the women's side of things and to be able to analyse and critique, or talk about the positives of women's football and AFLW because there hadn't been a lot of coverage from these sorts of shows on networks,' says McCarthy. 'We have plenty of football shows dedicated to men's football, and Seven was really keen on having one that was dedicated to women's football as well. To be able to build on what we created last year is going to be important.' In a sign of the continuing evolution of TV footy chat, which has been steadily moving away from male-dominated formats, Seven's footy show slate has shifted this year. Instead of Talking Footy, there are two new shows: The Agenda Setters (with Craig Hutchison, Kane Cornes, Caroline Wilson and Nick Riewoldt) on Mondays and Tuesdays on 7plus, and Hamish McLaren's Unfiltered on Wednesdays on Seven. The latter follows the decade-old Front Bar at 8.30pm, with Mick Molloy, Sam Pang and Andy Maher. 'I've only worked in really respectful environments,' says McCarthy. 'The men or women that I've worked with have done it in a way where there hasn't really been any of that locker room talk, or talk where it would be not accepted. We've moved past that now as a footballing community.' McCarthy also welcomes the perspective her new co-host Beveridge will bring. 'We have done the round so far together on and Riley is a fantastic analyst and very well versed across both men's and women's football, and has been since season one of women's football,' she says. 'So it's going to be great to be alongside him … It's important to have diverse voices.'

Melbourne community football coach sacked after vile Tammy Hembrow comment
Melbourne community football coach sacked after vile Tammy Hembrow comment

News.com.au

timea day ago

  • News.com.au

Melbourne community football coach sacked after vile Tammy Hembrow comment

A community football coach has been sacked after making a crude social media remark about fitness influencer Tammy Hembrow's relationship with AFL star Bailey Smith. The Harvey Brunswick Leschenault Football Club confirmed on Friday that League coach John Baggetta had been terminated after he posted the offensive slur to Facebook, where he referred to Hembrow as a 'c** bucket'. FOX FOOTY, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every match of every round in the 2025 Toyota AFL Premiership Season LIVE in 4K, with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1. The full comment read: 'He's trying to keep his relevance and she's a c** bucket.' Earlier this week, Smith and Hembrow were spotted on a Gold Coast date, kissing and sharing lunch at a waterfront restaurant. The sighting fuelled speculation of a new romance just two months after Hembrow's split from her former husband, Matt Zukowski. Later, she appeared online wearing what looked like Smith's jacket. Smith has not confirmed the relationship, responding only with a string of expletives when questioned by reporters at Geelong training. Their public outing attracted a wave of online commentary, much of it targeting Hembrow with misogynistic remarks. Baggetta's comment, left under a news article, quickly sparked calls for his dismissal. 'The board of the Harvey Brunswick Leschenault Football Club wish to inform all players, members, officials and supporters that John Baggetta has been terminated as League coach,' the club said in a statement. 'Regarding the social media post made by John, we do not condone those comments, and they do not reflect the values or standards of the Harvey Brunswick Leschenault Football Club at any level.' The club said such remarks were 'not to be tolerated in society'. Journalist Sherele Moody demanded his sacking in a post on social media. 'I shared a post recently with a range of disgusting misogynist slurs by Australian men directed at Tammy Hembrow after she went on a date,' she wrote. 'Old mate John Baggetta's comment was the worst – he called Tammy a C** Bucket. A man responsible for mentoring and shaping the points of view of young men is just casually throwing around sexist slurs.' The club said it consulted with its women's team and members before making the decision. 'We are incredibly proud to have a women's team, female representation on our board and women actively involved as members of our club. 'We have consulted with members of our women's side and we are committed to offering them and all the females in our club any support necessary. 'We also remain committed to supporting anyone else affected by these comments and welcome open communication with those who may have concerns.' It has been an intense week for Brownlow Medal fancy Smith and fitness queen Hembrow since news of their date first broke. Paparazzi photos showed the couple leaving a ritzy, chef-hatted venue at Burleigh Heads last Saturday — the day after the Cats' victory over Essendon in Geelong. According to The Herald Sun, it is the second time the pair have been spotted together on the Gold Coast. Love Island he was the one who chose to end their marriage. Smith's ex, Izzy Armitage, who dated the footy player back in 2021, earlier this week.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store