27-05-2025
Munster producers championed at Euro-Toques Ireland Food Awards
It was another mighty Munster showing in the West yesterday at the 2025 Euro-Toques Ireland Food Awards, held in Ashford Castle Estate, in Co Mayo, as three of seven awards on offer went to food producers from the Southern province with many other Munster producers amongst the nominees.
Euro-Toques Ireland, founded in 1986 by Myrtle Allen, is the Irish chapter of a European-wide chefs-led organisation dedicated to preserving and championing local food culture, traditional food craft and gastronomy, and the Irish awards carry a special prestige as chef members, numbering some of Ireland's finest, nominate and then vote on eventual award winners.
This year, themed as 'Honouring Ireland's Kitchen Table', brought together over 100 chef members, food producers and others to salute some very exceptional food producers across seven categories: Water, Land, Farm, Dairy, Artisan Produce, and Traditional Craft.
Tom Leach and Moe McKeown of Dingle Sea Salt
Dingle Sea Salt triumphed in the Water category as highly innovative producers of Ireland's first solar-evaporated Atlantic sea salt using a fully off-grid, low-carbon process, with Salt of Kinsale, Cork, and The Sea Gardener, Waterford, also nominated.
The highly progressive Moy Hill Farm, to the fore of the new wave of regenerative farming in Ireland, prevailed in the Farm category for sustainable animal rearing, for their ethical egg production and holistic approach to farming, while Tinnock Farm, Co Tipperary, was the other Munster nominee in this category.
Sarah Richards' Seagull Bakery, Waterford, was a very popular winner in the Traditional Craft/Skill section for the artist-turned-baker who began out with a tiny oven in her back garden studio and now employs 30 people in their bakery and two retail outlets, in Tramore and Waterford city.
Richards' business/life partner Conor Naughton said: 'We were chuffed to win amongst such great company, some really great Irish bakers nominated, and it is great to see real bread bakers celebrated for their craft at such a prestigious awards.'
Sarah Richards and Conor Naughton, Seagull Bakery
Richards has long championed real bread made from Irish-grown grains and works with local grain farmers in her region.
'It's great to be recognised for our commitment to developing an Irish grain network to really complete the cycle of farm to fork, to support local farmers and systems change to ensure genuinely sustainable food security for Ireland in the future.'
Winners in the other categories were: Coole Farm, Co Louth (Land – Honouring Our Heritage); Ballylisk, Co Armagh (Dairy Soft Cheese), with Cork's Durrus Cheese also nominated; Wild Irish Foragers, Co Offaly (Artisan Produce – Irish Preserved Ingredients); and Salt Rock Dairy, Co Wexford (Dairy - Cultured Butter), with Irish Gourmet Butter, Waterford, and Toonsbridge Cultured Butter, Co Cork, also nominated.
Hugo's Bakery, Co Clare, and Wild Flour Bakery, in Innishannon, in Co Cork, were also nominated alongside Seagull Bakery in the Traditional Craft/Skill category.
Fergal Smithof Moy Hill Farm, Co Clare, which won the Farm award.
After the awards ceremony, guests enjoyed a celebratory seasonal lunch of local produce prepared by Ashford Castle chefs Liam Finnegan and Jonathan Keane, the meal accompanied by a beautifully curated Harvest Table showcasing the wares of the 30-plus nominees.
'The Irish kitchen table is a symbol of trust, care, and resilience,' said
Irish Examiner
food writer and Goldie head chef Aishling Moore, who is also Head of the Euro-Toques Food Council.
'It is where we learn the fundamentals of food – not just how to cook, but how to value what we eat and who we share it with.'
Conor Halpenny of Square Dundalk, Chair of Euro-Toques Ireland, added: 'We are honouring those who have kept Irish food grounded – producers and craftspeople who quietly shape our national identity through their work every single day.'