PLUS FRESH RECIPES | NEWS | WINE & BEER | REVIEWS Thursday, March 6, 2014 THE DEEP south Discover the producers and growers of WA’s Southern Forests region Pull-out seasonal produce calendar. P11-13 | Recipes from one of the area’s top cooks. P18-19 FRESH Thursday, March 6, 2014 INDEX Welcome ................................ 2 Intro & Road Tripping With Broadfield ..................... 3 Avocados, nuts & potatoes.............................. 4-5 Berries & finger limes ........... 6 Cherries & Broadfield............ 7 Beef, lamb, truffles & Broadfield........................... 8-9 Marron & Broadfield ........... 10 Seasonal calendar ........... 11-13 Garlic & Manjimup Fresh ... 14 Feijoas, Grilled & Broadfield............................. 15 Plums, lettuce, jams & Broadfield........................ 16-17 Recipe spread ................. 18-19 Wine & sparkling grape juice ................................ 20-21 Limes & olive oil ................. 22 Persimmons & Broadfield .. 23 Fun facts & attractions ....... 24 Welcome to our special southern forests edition of fresh T he magical Southern Forests region is renowned for growing world-class produce, including more than 50 types of fruit and vegetables, truffles, marron, avocados, cherries, beef . . . the list goes on. Only recently heard of it? That’s probably thanks to a group of passionate locals — and the State Government’s $7 million allocation from its Royalties for Regions initiative — who recognised the wealth and abundance of produce in the region and formed the Southern Forests Food Council in 2010, specifically to brand and unify the area to give it an identity much like its counterparts Margaret River and the Great Southern. In this edition we meet some of the growers and take a grassroots look at the region’s produce spanning from Manjimup and Pemberton to Northcliffe and Walpole, making its catchcry, Genuinely Southern Forests, ring true. “It’s all about creating awareness at this stage,” Southern Forests Food Council executive officer Allen Burtenshaw said. “It is such an isolated region . . . the water, the air, the soil . . . it’s all so clean and crisp, which makes for a top-quality product.” He said while much of the produce had not been branded in retail shops yet, he encouraged consumers to ask. “We want consumers to tap their retailer on the shoulder and ask about Southern Forests produce so then (the retailers) in turn are encouraged to stock it.” Genuine fresh local produce from genuine down-to-earth locals. I’m genuinely excited. Hermione Stott Fresh editor COVER SFFC chairman Bevan Eatts PHOTO Iain Gillespie FEATURES EDITOR Mark Mallabone, 9482 3574 features@wanews.com.au EDITOR Hermione Stott 9482 3451 fresh@wanews.com.au STAFF WRITER Olga de Moeller WINE Ray Jordan BEER Vic Crossland CONTRIBUTORS Amanda Lewis, Connie Clarke, Don Stott, Jennifer Susanto-Lee, Mark Irving, Berlinda Conti & Emma Chitty DESIGN Rochelle Smith ADVERTISING Marissa Owen 9482 3754 For more information on Southern Forests region, go online to southernforestsfood.com The isolated Southern Forests region produces a vast range of crisp, clean and exciting food products. Three-and-a-half hours south of Perth a large group of food and wine producers is relentless in its quest to claim the mantle of WA’s food bowl. Farmers, winemakers and chefs are in pursuit of excellence and innovation. So it was my great pleasure to spend a week with some of the great people of the Southern Forests region, bounded by Manjimup, Walpole, Pemberton and Northcliffe. I was lucky enough to visit unbelievably friendly folk nurturing potatoes, cherries, apples and grapes. Avocados are abundant and healthy cattle happily graze below towering karri trees. Prized truffles slowly mature, shaded by hazelnut groves. The food by Pemberton chef Sophie Zalokar at Foragers looked so incredible my job of shooting the dishes was a breeze. If you’re interested in where your food comes from and having a chat with some of the people who grow it, get down to this beautiful region. Iain Gillespie Photographer It’s producing the goods 3 FRESH PLUS Growing area is foodie heaven, writes OLGA DE MOELLER standards for fresh, premium local produce. “There are people like Kim Edwards, who grows Chinese cabbages — he’s fourth generation — and Al Blakers, who’s pretty much a pioneer of truffles; his family has been in the region for more than 100 years,” Allen Burtenshaw, SFFC executive officer, said. “But we’ve got new people coming as well. Just in the past 12 months, a strawberryraspberry grower from Bullsbrook has set up an additional farm in Pemberton because he’s seen the soil and conditions, which are optimum for what he does. “I’ve just experienced my first cherry season and can’t believe the quality. What a lot of people don’t realise is that it’s all grown in pristine conditions and has just been missed on the radar for so long,” Mr Burtenshaw said. “But with more and more consumers wanting to understand where their food comes from and how it’s produced, the region is becoming a pretty compelling proposition.” SFFC chairman and plum grower Bevan Eatts described Southern Forests as “WA’s premier food bowl” and said the ultimate aim was to establish it as an “internationally recognised culinary tourism destination.” A third-generation farmer working land established by his grandfather in 1946, he believed the Genuinely brand encompassed everything Southern Forests did best, with its multicultural and ‘The beauty of this area is you can grow just about anything.’ multi-generational community priding itself on its produce. “The beauty of this area is you can grow just about anything and there’s such an incredible variety,” he said. “We want to strengthen regional pride; we want people, when they go to the supermarket, to know our brand and know the produce from this region is well grown with care to an extremely high standard. We don’t have a lot of pests and diseases because of our isolation, which is largely the reason hardly anyone knows about us. “Hopefully, now, when people see the Genuinely stickers on produce in stores they will connect the dots and buy it.” Southern Forests Southern Ocean manjimup pemberton northcliffe walpole perth road tripping with broadfield At last. The possibility of doing a Jack Kerouac; hitting the road, as it were, to experience the lives of the great and the good, the princes and paupers of rural life and immerse oneself in the richness, both good and bad, of life off the freeway. Unlike Kerouac’s On the Road, this four-day journey to the south of WA was not likely to include sleeping in railway cars or desperate mendicancy or, in fact, any hardship at all. But seeking inspiration from the great man, I was reminded of his simple aphorism: “Nothing behind me, everything ahead of me, as is ever so on the road.” The idea was simple, go to the Southern Forests region and discover . . . stuff. To be a little specific, food, wine and restaurant stuff. And write a diary. “Tell it how it is, Rob,” they said. “Meet locals; talk to people who drive headers and know what crutching is; eat some food . . . enjoy.” The reason? The large and unwieldy group of farmers, food producers, wine makers and hospitality peeps who make up the Southern Forests Food Council wanted us to experience the bounty and potential of their region, which, probably like you, I thought was the Great Southern region, which it isn’t. Southern Forests is an entirely discrete “appellation” stretching in a long band from just north of Manjimup south to Pemberton and on to the south coast at Walpole. It includes towns like Northcliffe, Quinninup and some of the state’s most spectacular national parks: D’entrecasteaux, Beedelup, Greater Dordagup and Shannon. It is a complete surprise. Pemberton and Manjimup are known for truffles, marron and trout. But avocados? Artisanal dairy products with a national reputation? Fine wines? With the diary on the passenger seat, I headed south through Bunbury, Bridgetown and on to Manjimup, where we (photographer Iain “Dizzy” Gillespie and I) were to be based. Surprise #1: It takes no longer to get to the Southern Forests than it does Margaret River – just a bit over three hours. Surprise #2 Sophie Zalokar’s Foragers B&B is not all long-drop toilets and smouldering joss sticks. It’s sophisticated, minimal and comfortable chalets are complete with a barbecue on the veranda, massive five-star hotel bed, a view to a treed creek and the deep nothingness of a forest silence: an anechoic quiet that makes one’s city ears ring. Thursday, March 6 2014 N ext time you bite into an apple, slice an avocado, or mash a potato, chances are it was grown in WA’s Southern Forests, a picturesque, fertile region 300km south-west of Perth that’s earning a reputation for top-quality food. With 80,000ha of farmland and about 8000ha of crop plantings, it produces nearly 40 per cent of the State’s potatoes, 50 per cent of its apples, 70 per cent of its avocados and 90 per cent of its broccoli, not to mention 85 per cent of the southern hemisphere’s black truffles for a total gross agricultural value of more than $150 million a year. It’s home to the internationally famous Pink Lady apple, which is grown around Manjimup, and has nurtured one of Australia’s youngest and most exciting wine regions in the heart of karri country, Pemberton, where the rich, loamy soil supports more than 40 vineyards. Much of the agricultural and pastoral land is worked by third and fourth-generation farmers, who have joined forces in a 190-member Southern Forests Food Council, which was founded in 2010, followed by the Genuinely Southern Forests brand launch last November to identify produce from Manjimup, Pemberton, Northcliffe and Walpole. Fresh off the mark are Karri Country Potatoes, grown in the rich, red earth of Manjimup and Pemberton, and one of the first regional products to meet the SFFC’s Thursday, March 6 2014 FRESH PLUS 4 A passion for avos Stewart Ipsen says Southern Forests is perfect for growing, writes AMANDA LEWIS A s a fourth-generation Southern Forests farmer, Stewart Ipsen has seen everything from sheep and cattle to apples, cauliflowers, potatoes and broccoli grown on the family’s land — but his current passion lies with avocados. On a co-owned property west of Pemberton, he has set up and runs a 91ha 30,000 tree orchard, which on a good year produces 350,000-400,000 5.5kg trays of mostly Hass-variety fruit. “I’m the fourth generation in agriculture from our family,” he said. “My great-grandfather pioneered Mayfield, the family’s road tripping with broadfield First port of call, the enthusiastic, clever French family — father William, mum Debra and son Dean, pictured below — who own one of the biggest avocado farms in WA. Avocados? In the Southern Forests? Aren’t they a tropical fruit? Yes and no. According to William French the weather is perfect for them and the western growing season is counter to the east coast season, which puts WA in the avocado box seat, as it were, once the eastern seaboard’s season is over. There are no effective storage protocols for avocados (unlike like, say, apples which can be cold stored for over a year without any ill-effects), so they remain truly seasonal in this country, which means when all the eastern orchards have exhausted themselves, it’s WA’s avos which feed the nation from October to February. And how? The French family — which has a long history in the region as cauliflower and onion producers before moving into avocados — has about 16,000 trees over two properties on Channybearup Road producing about one million kilograms of avos a year. That’s just one family on one farm. They are magnificent specimens too (the avos, not the family). Big, rich and creamy, they lead a man’s thoughts to guacamole. Note to self: must make guacamole for the culinary-challenged Iain Gillespie tonight. The French family happily posed for some silly photos — “could you juggle some avos while we snap away” — and did so with great aplomb. Nice people. farm, from virgin forest in the early 1900s, originally running cattle and sheep and then adding apple orchards. “The apples were removed in the early 1970s and my father and uncle moved into producing horticulture crops including potatoes, cauliflowers and broccoli. We still run cattle but our main focus now is producing avocados. “We planted our first avocado trees at Mayfield in 1996 and from there, expanded down to Pemberton (their current location) in 2003.” Mr Ipsen, whose brother also grows avocados in the area, said the region’s good rainfall, rich soil and dry summer made for ideal growing conditions. All the fruit was picked by hand from the ground or using cherry pickers and during peak harvest times, up to 40 backpackers and locals were hired, he said. “The dry summer months during which we harvest helps to produce fruit which has a very low incidence of anthracnose, which is the main cause of internal defects in avocados,” he said. “Our main competitors during the harvest window, New Zealand, don’t have this advantage. “This dry Mediterranean climate also keeps problem insects away allowing us to produce fruit using virtually no insecticides. “Avocados will grow in a variety of soil types but they require large volumes of good water — up to 150 litres per day per tree during the summer months. “The Pemberton region is renowned for its high rainfall. Our farm averages 1200mm per year which helps to fill large irrigation dams on the property. “The soil consists of deep karri loams which support the large karri trees which surround the farm and which avocado trees also thrive on.” Pemberton grower Russell Delroy started growing avocados in 1987 and from humble beginnings has become one of the biggest growers and suppliers in the country. Mr Delroy, who grew up on a wheat/sheep farm in Esperance, said his 180ha Pemberton orchard produced 16 million Hass avocados last year, rising to 24 million pieces when the fruit he sourced and packed for other growers in the area were added. Delroy Orchards, was responsible for around half the total quantity of avocados produced in WA, with the fruit from Southern Forests’ growers accounting for more than half of WA’s $90 million avocado industry. “The South West of WA has a really good reputation for growing a very high-quality, consistent product — good flavour, good shelf life and much better internal quality,” Mr Delroy said. “The brilliant thing about avocados is that there are very few meals you can’t use them in from breakfast and lunch to dinner. “They just hit the sweet spot and tick all the boxes for convenience, health and taste.” Fontaninis add to apple pie I t was the apples that first gave Manjimup its reputation as a horticultural centre of excellence. One of its claims to fame is as the home of the pink lady. And while it’s still one of Australia’s best apple-growing areas, Manjimup has come a long way in recent years. Avocados, cherries and truffles have joined the humble apple and made a home for themselves in this fertile area of the South West. And just as Manjimup horticulture has diversified, so too the pioneering Fontanini family has spread its wings since its arrival in WA early in the 20th century. Germano (Jack) Fontanini migrated from Lucca, Italy to join his brother Archimedes (Archie). He took up land next to his brother’s and today, two generations later, three generations of Fontanini live on that 46ha. Shaun Fontanini, one of Jack’s great-grandchildren, has a home on the farm with wife Neysa and their five young children. So, too, does his father Tony and his wife Shirley. Shaun said the farm’s trees were divided roughly equally: one-third apples, one-third avocados and one-third nuts — chestnuts, walnuts and a few hazelnuts. Apples, he acknowledged, were a bit of a struggle at present, with rising costs, increasing competition from Eastern States’ growers and returns staying the same. “But then they’ve supported us for the past 20-30 years when we didn’t have the avocados,” Shaun noted. Tony said South Australian growers enjoyed warmer weather and were able to bring their apples to the market before the ‘You’ve got to keep up with the new varieties and the new growing practices.’ P otato grower Glen Ryan has a thing about Laura. Boiled, mashed or roasted, his favourite spud always comes up trumps. “It’s got the best flavour, texture and structure of all the varieties,” he said. “You can do anything with it. Royal blue is currently the standard bearer, but people we’ve given Laura to say it’s better; even chefs. When mashed, it already looks like it’s got butter in it — and it’s the only one I bring home to eat. Even those who love Delaware because of the flavour say Laura is better.” Mr Ryan and brother Dean have been growing potatoes for more than 30 years on part of the 512ha family farm started by their parents in the late 1950s near Pemberton. He said they weren’t expected to take over the business but family ties and the scenic landscape with the Warren River running through the property lured them back. “In fact, our parents never encouraged us to take this on but I guess it’s in your blood,” he said. “I finished school and took a gap year, then ended up staying. Dean came straight back to the farm after Year 12.” The brothers grow 11 varieties, including several under trial for better eating and cosmetic qualities. Red-skinned Laura has a rich yellow flesh and finally made it after four seasons, with production now close to 20 tonnes a week. “We thought it had a fair bit of promise pretty much from the start but had problems planting it up because the seed line was discontinued,” Mr Ryan said. “It was trialled in South Australia and they had trouble with it Manjimup apples were ready. But the Fontaninis have high hopes for a new variety of apple called kanzi, a crunchy red apple which was bred in Belgium. They’ve planted 5000 Kanzi trees on the farm over the past four years and got a small crop last year. “Everyone’s always looking for something new,” Tony said. Shaun added: “You’ve got to keep up with the new varieties and the new growing practices.” The nut trees were a way to spread the family farm’s interests. “The story used to be that if an apple tree died, they’d replace it with a nut tree — a chestnut or a walnut tree,” he said. But it also reflected something of Jack’s history. “He used to grow chestnuts in Italy in the wild and he knew that they’d go well over Chestnuts grow well in Manjimup, here,” Shaun said. enabling the Fontaninis to diversify Mark Irving beyond apples. Picture: Craig Kinder because the skin would peel away, but we’ve largely managed to get around that. I think once it gets going, it will become the new standard bearer because it’s such a good allrounder — and that’s what people want.” There are more than 20 potato growers in the Southern Forests region, which produced 19,911 tonnes — just over 38 per cent — of WA’s crop last year. All are around Pemberton and Manjimup. Mr Ryan said the farm was licensed to grow 3500 tonnes a year, with Nadine by far the biggest crop, but that was expected to change as different “make-do” varieties and trial crops succeeded. Maranca, Jelly, Sifra, Mozart and Senna were in the pipeline for commercial production down the track. “Nadine is a white-skin and flesh variety, but the flavour is traditionally in the creamier-to-yellow-flesh varieties,” he said. “When I started, Delaware was the only variety we had and it was the standard bearer for a long time. It’s a great potato when it comes to taste, texture and versatility; one that’s good for boiling, mashing and roasting, but it did not handle the washing process well and the shape can be questionable. “We haven’t grown it for 10 years. Unfortunately, consumers go a lot on appearance — they want their potatoes to look like apples, all shiny and bright — and that can be extremely frustrating for a grower. “At the moment, Nadine ticks all the right boxes in that it washes up magnificently, looks the part and has pretty good yields but we’re looking at better potatoes with our trial lines, so things will change as new varieties make the grade.” Thursday, March 6 2014 APemberton avocado grower Stewart Ipsen with some of his freshly picked crop. Third-generation potato grower Maurice Humphrey is carrying on a family tradition on the farm started by his grandfather just outside Pemberton in 1924. Top crop this time of year is the waxy, squiggly, yellow-fleshed kipfler that’s perfect boiled or steamed. “It makes a great potato salad,” Mr Humphrey said. “We were approached to grow them for the restaurant trade but popularity has picked up and supermarkets are stocking them. “It’s something different and you can get a nice, even shape without bends and twists in sandy soil or karri loam as it’s called down this way. We’ve been doing them for eight years and are slowly putting in more and more.” He said the season ran from January to May and he was trying to dig up about four tonnes a week. He also had supplied seed to a couple of growers in Busselton and Myalup with the aim of having kipflers available year-round. “They’re a good potato but probably too fiddly to use daily,” he said. “We would eat mainly Royal blues.” Potato variety shows its versatility, writes OLGA DE MOELLER 5 FRESH PLUS the king of the kipflers Lovely Laura has great taste Pemberton potato growers Glen and Dean Ryan. Thursday, March 6 2014 FRESH PLUS 6 Berry different A couple have switched from cattle to fruit, finds EMMA CHITTY W Jill and Rob Baker with their boutique fingerlimes. hen Phil and Kay Gravett decided to sell the family’s cattle farm, they searched high and low for a better place to live. “It was nearly two years later that we bought this property,” Mr Gravett said. “We looked at relocating in different parts of the State, interstate — we did have a good look around but we couldn’t really find anywhere that was better to live.” And so the Gravetts stayed in the Southern Forests region, moving into orchard management and choosing to grow figs. “I’d been picking and packing fruit for a neighbour around the road,” Mrs Gravett said. “He was going out of figs and we could see a niche market for them.” Mr Gravett said figs were a wonderful product to grow locally, as they were such a fragile fruit. “They do import from interstate but the fruit aren’t in as good a condition,” he said. “They’ve got to pick them greener and they don’t ripen once they’re off the tree.” The Gravetts have opted for smaller fig trees, but have a lot more of them — the trees cover 5ha of their property in a progressive plan that started in 2007. They said it made picking the figs easier, as well as keeping disease out of the trees. In addition to figs, the Gravetts have their very own form of berry growing on their property — fondly named the Rustleberry after a tiger snake that found its home under the berry bush. “When we were cleaning up the property, I walked along the dam wall and found this berry bush,” Mrs Gravett said. “It looked a bit like a blackberry but it was definitely different — we tasted it and it was absolutely delicious.” A cross between a European blackberry and an old English raspberry, their rustleberries have won accolades in Delicious magazine and become popular. Rustler the snake has since been featured on the berries’ logo and even influenced the name of the Gravett’s property, affectionately called Rustlers. Mr Gravett said branding their ‘I walked along the dam wall and found this berry bush . . . It looked a bit like a blackberry but it was definitely different.’ Kay Gravett product, as well as winning the award, had helped them. “We found it very hard to get the berries into retail — when they were just another berry, they just weren’t prepared to give them shelf space,” he said. “This year, we used our logo to promote them and were able to get rid of our whole production very easily.” The Gravetts have faith in branding their region — just like their rustleberries — to increase interest and trust in the area. While they are looking to their retirement, the Gravetts say they won’t become “grey nomads” and plan to stay on their beloved Manjimup property. Manjimup’s Kay and Phil Gravett with their delicious fruits. Delicious citrus yield tasty caviar jewels In recent years, Pemberton Finger Limes have become a household name in foodie circles, and it’s not surprising really. With their caviar-like balls of citrus jewels and a tiny window of availability that rivals the truffle season, they’re as rare as the proverbial. Jill and Rob Baker and their daughter Jacquie, who handles the marketing, are the masterminds behind the successful enterprise, which they established only a few years ago when the couple retired. “Rob and I have had a property down here in Pemberton for around 12 years now,” Mrs Baker said. “We were due to retire and knew we wanted to do something with the bit of free land we had. As we’ve always been wine and food buffs, we started looking around and came up with the idea of a little boutique industry. We jumped online and looked at all sorts of things, including tulips, and then someone suggested we grow limes. So we started researching limes and Australian native food, and finger limes came up.” The appearance and taste of a finger lime is one of a kind. Looking not dissimilar to caviar roe, the tiny orbs inside the fruit share the same texture. Once popped, they emit a wonderful citrus flavour. Pemberton is not short of a drop or two of rain and is renowned for its rich soil and Mediterranean climate, making it perfect for finger limes. “The pH of the soil down here is just right for limes and we’re in quite a protected spot from the wind,” Mrs Baker said. “The beautiful tall karri trees also protect the lime plants, which is really important as they have got lots of thorns on them. So if the wind blows and bashes the fruit onto the thorns, they get damaged. It’s lovely to have the protection of the karris.” In most cases, people tend to kick back a little during their retirement years, but not the Bakers. “It did feel like a bit of a risky venture at the time but basically we just got on with it and have learnt heaps,” Mrs Baker said. The couple planted hundreds of finger lime trees on their property in 2006, and it took about four years for them to start bearing fruit at a commercial rate. This year, they’re expecting 200kg from the season (1kg per tree), and the forecast is to produce 10kg per tree over the next few years. Starting about the end of March, the season only runs for six to eight weeks, making for a short but intense burst of activity. “We just pick like crazy during that time,” Mrs Baker said. Finger limes are great with seafood, especially when paired with freshly shucked oysters. They’re also good for topping a pavlova. Jennifer Susanto-Lee • This year’s popular Cherry Harmony Festival will be held on Saturday, December 13, with the Long Table Lunch to follow on Sunday, December 14. For more information, visit cherryfestival.com.au. • Cherries are super-seasonal and are only around for a three months of the year, so make sure you get in quick this December. road tripping with broadfield B eautiful, crimson cherries are undoubtedly one of the most anticipated fruits coming into WA’s festive season but if buyers can resist temptation until a little past Christmas, they will taste the pick of the crop, according to thirdgeneration cherry farmer George Grozotis and wife Kathy, of Cherry Lane Fields. “The later variety is always a better cherry,” said Mr Grozotis who manages 10,000 trees at his family’s Manjiump orchard which started life as a tobacco farm in the 1940s. Grower George Grozotis. “Cherries picked later have more crunch, more sweetness and grow bigger but Cherry trends have changed everyone, of course, wants them in significantly over the years, time for Christmas, so we try to particularly compared with 10 educate people on buying them a years ago when an acceptable little later.” premium cherry was about 26mm Cherry season starts in in diameter. November and finishes midToday, cherries need to be about January before the budding 32mm in diameter and Cherry Lane process starts all over again. Fields has adapted varieties to suit “It’s a big gamble growing them. market demand. All the hard work starts now (early “The cherries my grandfather February), when we look after the grew don’t even exist anymore. tree as much as possible by They were much smaller and watering and fertilising to achieve probably wouldn’t grow as well strong buds. Then we put the trees down here now,” he said. to sleep (into dormancy) until “Climate change has meant September,” he said. we’ve had to introduce new varieties that suit the warmer weather, even though the Southern Forests region is still perfectly suited for cherry production and they do taste better down here. “The region has very good water and the soils are excellent (a mixture of karri loam and sandy soils from jarrah and blackbutt country).” The couple send about 70 per cent of production to longstanding customer Woolworths and the remainder goes to independent supermarkets such as IGA. “The main varieties we grow are sweetheart, sweet Georgia and Simone. The sweetheart is more of a rounded, bright red cherry, whereas the sweet Georgia has more of a heart shape and a deep mahogany colour,” he said. “Simones are similar to sweet Georgias. I think they are most likely a mutation of that breed.” Harvesting starts at the crack of dawn, with Mr Grozotis’ team picking while the sun is just rising, and stops once the temperature reaches 22C. “Once cherries get hot, it’s very hard to bring their temperature down,” Mr Grozotis said. “After the cherries are picked, they are transported from the orchard within 30 minutes, hydro-cooled and chilled for at least 24 hours before packing. This also helps with stem retention. “Cherries don’t ripen once they’re picked like a tomato or apricot might. You can’t pick them green — you can only pick them at their premium.” “I do love growing them — I can’t really imagine doing anything else.” Berlinda Conti Next morning it’s off to the King Trout and Marron Farm, a tourist venture which prospers as much on home cooking and a cheery welcome as it does on science, fish husbandry and water ecology. The unassuming couple who own the property, on the Old Vasse Road at Pemberton, are tree changers. Hubby and wife, Lisa Foley and Darrin Fitzgerald, pictured below, are running an accessible tourism venture “with no airs and graces”. Darrin manages the hatchery at one end of the property, paying forensic attention to the baby trout and marron and their highly technical diet and ecosystem management. Oh, and if you wonder why there are no weeds or reeds around the massive dam, marron are omnivores and they love nothing better than snacking on the grasses that ring their watery home. We dispatched a couple of plate-sized monsters which were promptly (and very well) cooked for lunch. Sweet. By the way, there is no such thing as a King Trout, just rainbows and browns. That was the name given to the business when WA Inc heavies Laurie Connell and Brian Burke built the hatchery in the 1980s as an investment. Don’t ask. If only they’d stuck to seafood. Nutritionally, their beauty is more than skin deep Perth-based naturopathic nutritionist and co-author of The Eat Well Cookbook, Jan Purser, says cherries can help reduce gout attacks by lowering uric acid build-up and inflammation and also assist with stabilising blood sugar. “Cherries are beneficial in reducing blood glucose levels as well as lowering the risk of gout attacks. If you suffer with gout seriously, consider having cherries or cherry juice.” Here are some facts from grower George Grozotis: Store cherries loosely packed in the fridge (0-4C is perfect) and leave stems on to keep them fresher for longer. Cherries are a top antioxidantrich food. Cherries are fat, cholesterol, and sodium-free with one cup having 3g of fibre, fewer than 90 calories and 16 per cent of the daily recommended dose of vitamin C. Cherries are rich in vitamin A, calcium, protein, and iron and also contain melatonin (which regulates sleep cycles). There is 260mg of potassium in one cup of cherries. Anthocyanins in cherries give the fruit its red colour and help protect the heart and surrounding tissues. Boron is found in cherries. It helps maintain calcium balance. Thursday, March 6 2014 Cherries have been part of the family for generations 7 FRESH PLUS Colour of Christmas Dinner that night was on the balcony at Foragers. Dizzy reckons the salted chargrilled quail I knocked out was: “Yeah . . . all right mate.” The finest review a man could get. The avocados were too firm for dinner that night. There’s always tomorrow. The Foragers cook-your-own breakfast arrives the night before in a wicker basket. All (or as much as possible) is local produce. The bread, an entire loaf of it, is made by Sophie in her restaurant kitchen just steps away from the chalet. It is a lavish brekky and sure beats the standard journo breakfast of espresso and a gasper. Thursday, March 6 2014 FRESH PLUS 8 Beefed-up hectares Manjimup farmer Ian Ryan. Margins are tight and cows are serious news B eef farming doesn’t get much better than this. Rolling hills, lush pasture and towering karri trees are an idyllic backdrop for grazing cows. “Our children, in particular the middle two, are mad-keen farmers and say they never want to leave,” Walpole producer Angie Cooper said. “We don’t go anywhere on school holidays because they want to help us, in particular our young bloke, Tommie. He’s obsessed with cows; has posters all over his room, studies breeds and wants to collect them all. He has his own small herd that’s calving now, so it’s hard to get him off to school at the moment.” It’s a generational thing. She married the boy next door — in these parts, the adjoining paddock — and they do everything from scratch. Husband Brad transports the animals for processing to keep track of their welfare every step of the way and the couple are working on a business plan to build up farmgate sales under their label, Cooper’s Beef, to supplement their mainstay milk-fed vealers. “We farm organically, which means no herbicides, no synthetic chemicals, no drenches or pour-ons,” Mrs Cooper said. “We are lucky enough to have this land and want to improve it. It’s not a big farm —120ha — and all our animals are valued right through to the end. “It’s a pity we can’t butcher them ourselves but we’re having a part of the old dairy shed converted into a retail outlet and hope to employ a butcher so he can cut up the carcases for us. The plan is to cut out the middleman over the next five to 10 years.” Forester Mark Bending has made the change over the past 15 years, buying properties to concentrate on beef farming because it’s less intense than running sheep. With 1500ha and 300 breeding cows, he sells 340-350 head a year and a lot of it ends up in Coles. It’s a Simmental-Angus cross for good eating and the combination works well in ensuring animals don’t get too fat. “Generally, just about everyone here would run a small herd for commercial production,” he said. “My wife’s from Manjimup, so it made sense. We’ve got a huge pasture potential, which suits grass fattening but we’ve just put in 1500 avocados because they grow so well in these parts. “I would say 80 per cent of meat in this region would be milk-fed vealers but it’s not a process I was interested in. We hold ours until they’re 18 months to two years old and try to get them as close as we can to 550kg for the domestic market.” Margins are tight. Industry veteran John Della Gola, who road tripping with broadfield Driving south out of Manjimup, I popped in to see John Della Gola, whose branded beef was famously embroiled in a dispute with super chef Neil Perry’s Rockpool Bar and Grill in Perth. He was appointed as a meat supplier to the restaurant to great fanfare only to be let go quietly a few months later. It was big news down Manjimup way but one suspects it’s now water under the bridge. The outspoken and laconic third-generation Italian/Australian leans on my hire car and explains his plans to diversify away from beef and into farm-machinery sales. On the day of our visit he was taking delivery of his first load of headers and tractors at his new showroom and offices. “I love it but the beef industry is really hard now. We need the Government to get real about an abattoir down our way,” Mr Della Gola said. “The two major abattoirs in WA are joined at the hip to the major supermarkets. It’s impossible to get time on the kill floor.” I left the likable larrikin as he hurried away to his office to make plans for his new business. He says he will never leave the beef industry entirely. He loves it too much. I missed the “mad” ebullient Al Blakers whose truffles are eaten from New York to Paris and from Singapore to Sydney. He was elsewhere apparently — probably Paris. I did manage, however, to pop by the Wine and Truffle Company’s trufferie and cafe and say hello to the truffle dogs. They won’t have long to wait until their super-sensitive noses are needed for truffle season 2014. A walk through the trees revealed large truffles beginning to push up the ground around them as they become fat and ripe. They had been carefully covered in sand to keep them “underground” until harvest time. Truffles have rapidly become an icon crop in the Southern Forests region: the only crop which is readily coupled to tourism events such as the annual Truffle Kerfuffle weekend and as a significant attraction for domestic and overseas visitors. It has put Manjimup on the map. Last year in New York, a waiter at a fashionable Tribeca restaurant informed us that: “Tonight, we have the most amazing truffles from Man-gee-mop in south-western Australia.” Every table got the same patter. Middlesex farmer Mark Bending aims for the domestic market. ‘Last year, our fuel bill was $130,000; this year it’s going to be $170,000, so it’s not getting any easier.’ John Della Gola started farming in 1970 at 14, runs 7000 head on 6000ha, and said he was getting $4.40/kilo for his cattle in 2000 compared with $3.40/kg now. “In 14 years our margins have gone down 25 per cent,” he said. “Last year, our fuel bill was $130,000; this year it’s going to be $170,000, so it’s not getting any easier. My youngest son, Joseph, doesn’t want to die a farmer, so we’ve just set up a tractor business — Southern Forest Machinery — for him and his wife, Chelsea, in partnership with myself.” It opened last month, with Mr Della Gola and his other son, Matthew, helped by Matthew’s partner Felicity Willett, working 100-hour weeks on the farm started by Mr Della Gola’s father as a 40ha plot in Pemberton in 1952. “Before I came along, he bought another 120ha in Pemberton, then 180ha for me in Northcliffe about the time I started,” he said. “I’ve built up the holding and never really thought of doing anything else.” He’s put his Della Gola Prime brand — supplied to Neil Perry’s Rockpool when it first opened in Perth — on the backburner, with 80 per cent of his meat sold under Bunbury processor DBC’s premium Tender Ridge label to food service. “No Della Gola cattle go on boats and that’s a conscious decision, so when my wife and I see them on the TV, we know those animals are not ours. It makes life easier because we know their destiny.” Olga de Moeller Mining for black gold Blue gum business leads to calculated punt on truffles growing lamb variety Lamb farmer Ian Ryan is in for the long haul on the family property just outside Manjimup. He’s just bought another parcel of land from his uncle that was sold off years ago and is now back to the original 400ha holding established by his father John 50 years ago. “Dad still helps but it’s mainly my brother Gary and I,” he said. “The farm’s gone from dairy, to spuds, then beef cattle, sheep and cauliflower for export — until the cauliflower market collapsed.” Vegetables — cauliflower, broccoli and several types of cabbage — are the mainstay, though Mr Ryan said they were more labour-intensive than lamb, which has had a good run this year. “We’ve had plenty of rain and an early start to the season, with a reasonably late finish,” he said. His flock of 2700 ewes is primarily merino for wool and prime lamb, with border Leicester and poll Dorset crossbreeds for meat. “It’s good eating lamb,” he said. “We try for the optimal amount of meat-to-fat using better genetics — and it also gives us a better lambing percentage.” Apple growers Stephanie and Jim Carstairs, who have a 120ha farm in Manjimup, have opted for Suffolk sheep to take advantage of the Great Southern’s cool climate and wet winters. They run them on adjoining land leased from truffle grower Al Blakers and have a small flock of Wiltshires and cattle on other blocks. Mrs Carstairs said the couple initially liked the look of the British-bred Suffolks — they have distinctive black heads — and found they were well suited to the region. “They do well down here and have really big, solid lambs, which has worked out well because we have foxes and they were eating our smaller Merino lambs; they wouldn’t survive the first 24 hours,” she said. “They’re also more economical to run for us because they’ll eat silage and hay — almost like cattle — so it fitted better with what we could produce ourselves. We try and grow them out entirely on grass but they get extra fodder sometimes.” She said the meat was more heavily marbled, which made for a better flavour, but the marbling was quite fine, so the fat cooked out. “That, reportedly, makes it leaner and adds to the palatability,” she said. “I think it’s nicer and sweeter (than other lamb); certainly distinctively different but not overpowering.” The Carstairs sell their lamb at the local farmer’s market and at Fontys Pool caravan park. Olga de Moeller market, Mr Blakers knew the million-dollar gamble he took in 1997 had paid off. And with the product improving with every harvest, Mr Blakers predicts the region will outstrip France’s production in less than 15 years. “The whole world is chasing truffles from Manjimup,” Mr Blakers said. “Our French distributor (Plantin) tells us they are as good if not better than those produced in France. We’re in demand. In culinary terms, we are the rock stars to rock stars.” The road to success was neither quick nor easy for Mr Blakers and his family, whose business growing Tasmanian blue gums led to their calculated punt Manjimup’s loam over clay soils would eventually deliver high-quality truffles for export. During an experiment on the Blakers’ Five Acre Nursery in the mid-90s Mr Blakers and a CSIRO research team attempted to transfer local mycorrhizal fungi on to the roots of the Tasmanian blue gum to improve growth rates, and it was then he had an epiphany. “At the time there were pinot grapes being harvested in the area and sold to Moet & Chandon,” he said. “That’s when I put two and two together and thought that inoculating the trees with truffle spores would work.” Mr Blakers planted 1600 hazelnut and oak trees inoculated with spores imported from France and waited — it takes up to seven years for the first truffle to mature. And what a difference a decade makes, with Manjimup Truffles now producing well over a tonne of black gold every year. Along with two other major producers in the Manjimup area, the truffle’s trajectory is moving higher and faster than ever. This year, the region will produce close to five tonnes or 85 per cent of Australia’s truffles. “It won’t be long until Manjimup is the truffle capital of Australia,” he said. Connie Clarke Thursday, March 6 2014 I t’s known as black gold and retails for about $2000/kg, making it one of the most expensive foods in the world. Traditionally sniffed out for centuries by pigs in the forests of France and Italy, it’s now left to man’s best friend to unearth the spot where this fungal delicacy grows. Chefs are mad for it, and for the past few years third-generation Manjimup farmer Al Blakers has supplied truffles to restaurants from Paris, to New York and Sydney. Last August, when he found himself dining with 18 Michelin-star and three-hat chefs at the Hong Kong Yacht Club, Mr Blakers knew the rest of the world was sitting up and taking notice too. The sought-after Perigord truffle he Manjimup truffle grows from 3000 hazelnut and oak trees farmer Al Blakers on 42ha of rich Manjimup soil was already a is a thirdhit with Australia’s top chefs — including generation Matt Moran and Neil Perry — but with their farmer. wider acceptance in the lucrative Asian 9 FRESH PLUS Manjimup farmer Ian Ryan. I dropped in to see Anita and Wayne Edwards, pictured below, at their unassuming farmhouse. It is surrounded by machinery and Schutz containers. They are a clever couple charting a sustainable, organic course with their farms and their Bioveg brand of organic produce. I lunched with them at the farm where I sat down to my first “raw” meal. None of the ingredients are cooked in any shape or form. I hid my sneer and tucked in. How was it? Absolutely, bloody marvellous. I had a view that the raw-food movement was an extremist vegetarian splinter group with that back-to-the-16th-century agenda so loved by Greens and their fellow travellers. But the food, when prepared in such as expert manner, was superb. It was brilliant in its own right and real restaurant-grade stuff. Anita is a “certified raw chef” whatever that means (but she clearly has a professional touch) with a commercial kitchen on the farm where she prepares food for sale and catering. The Edwards’ Bioveg products get a premium at the Perth markets. And they can never grow enough to support the demand, Wayne says. road tripping with broadfield Thursday, March 6 2014 FRESH PLUS 10 Left: Forest Fresh Marron owner Dave Evans. Above: Blue Ridge Marron’s Steve Vidovich. Blue Ridge Marron’s Peter McGinty. Picture Craig Kinder Endemic marron a fine treat I f you sit down to a fine-dining establishment with marron on the menu, chances are it has come from the Southern Forests region, where they thrive like no other place in the world. Thanks to pristine conditions, marron are endemic to the region and of the world’s yearly supply, WA contributes three-fifths of it, according to Blue Ridge Marron’s Peter McGinty. Together with business partner Steve Vidovich, they source — and grow — 18 tonnes of marron annually, nearly a fifth of marron worldwide, which they then sell to restaurants, wholesalers and export to Europe. ‘Some lobsters have a tendency to get a bit stringy the bigger they get, whereas marron have more of a flaked-type flesh and the taste and texture doesn’t diminish the bigger they get.’ different kettle of fish “Trout that doesn’t taste like trout” is the way Blue Ridge Marron’s Peter McGinty describes the rainbow trout that he grows and sells in addition to marron. He said he started growing trout as a way to better use the dams at the Yanmah facility five years ago and attributed the trout’s different taste to the high-protein pellet diet he fed them. He sourced his baby trout — or fry — from the Pemberton Trout Hatchery. “Instead of just chucking them in the dam and letting them eat what’s naturally in the dam, they feed on different pellets depending on their size, so the fry are fed three times a day, seven days a week and once a day when they get bigger,” he said. “We can put on growth rates of about 1.2kg per year and because it is a full pellet diet and they’re not just eating what’s in the water column, they look and taste very similar to Atlantic salmon. “Traditionally, trout out of rivers are pretty average-tasting fish but if you tasted these, you’d go ‘Wow, they are different’.” This supplied marron comes from about 160 licensed marron producers from Perth down to Augusta and across to Esperance. “World production of marron is still less than 100 tonnes per year, so WA provides a huge chunk of it,” Mr McGinty said. “People have taken them to different countries and tried to produce them but because of poor water quality or temperature — they like a cooler climate — they simply won’t grow.” Mr McGinty, who has lived in Yanmah, 12km from Manjimup, for the past 35 years, said marron were grown semi-intensively in purpose-built ponds or through extensive cultivation, where people trapped existing farm dams. At the Blue Ridge facility, rainbow trout were also grown in the dams that supplied the ponds to make them more sustainable. “Below the trout, in the same water, we keep the marron and the waste from the trout feeds the marron, so we don’t actually feed the marron in these dams,” he said. While most Australians knew what marron was, outside of the country, not many people did and Mr McGinty said he was constantly asked what it was and what it tasted like. He said the best way to describe the delicacy was to compare it with lobster. “Some lobsters have a tendency to get a bit stringy the bigger they get, whereas marron have more of a flaked-type flesh and the taste and texture doesn’t diminish the bigger they get,” the former cherry farmer said. Like any food with a delicate flavour, the best way to cook marron was to keep it simple, Mr McGinty said. “Restaurants tend to take the flesh out for fine dining because it is less stringy and has a unique, delicate flavour, while some restaurants boil and chop the tail up into medallions and serve it back up in the shell. As for me, it doesn’t get much better than grilling it over a fire and eating it with crusty bread.” Pemberton’s Dave Evans is another man who knows his marron. He owns and runs the small family-based wholesale and retail business Forest Fresh Marron and said marron thrived in the region because every condition — from the water quality to the air, temperature and food availability — was ideal. While marron was still a little-known produce, exposure on television cooking shows had helped boost its profile. “The flavour of marron is quite unlike any other produce and is delicate, sweet and succulent,” he said. Amanda Lewis summer southern forests seasonal produce DECEMBER Apple juice Apricots - King Ross Avocados Baby spinach Beef Beef - vealers Boysenberries Beetroot Beetroot - organic Beans - cannellini white Broccoli Cabbage - Chinese - green - megatons - organic green - organic red - red Capsicum - green Cauliflowers Cherries Corn Cream Cucumbers - Lebanese Fish - redfin Grapefruit Herbs - basil red - basil green - chervil - chives - coriander - dill - mint - parsley - rocket - sage - thyme Honey Kale - green - organic - red Kohlrabi Lamb - fat - Suffolk Lettuce - coral - cos - iceberg - oak leaf Loganberries Loghurts Marron Milk Nectarines - white - yellow Nuts - macadamia Olive oil Pears - cocktail Plums - black - red - sugar Potato - almera - Delaware - Desiree Potato - Dutch cream - kestrel - Lady Christi - Laura - Nadine - red rascal - rodeo - royal blue - Ruby Lou - sapphire - white star - organic Pumpkin Rhubarb - organic Raspberries Rustleberries Silverbeet Strawberry Tomato - cherry - truss Wheat - buck Zucchini JANUARY Apple juice Apricots - King Ross - golden sweet Avocados Baby spinach Beef Beef - vealers Blueberries Boysenberries Beetroot Beetroot - organic Beans - cannellini white Broccoli Cabbage - Chinese - green - megatons - organic green - organic red - red Capsicum - green - red Cauliflowers Cherries Chilli/peppers Corn Cream Cucumbers - Lebanese Eggplant Figs - Preston - Deanna - black Genoa Fish - redfin Garlic Herbs - basil red - basil green - chervil - chives - coriander - dill Herbs - mint - parsley - rocket - sage - thyme Honey Jujubes (Chinese red dates) Kale - green - organic - red Kohlrabi Lamb - fat - Suffolk Lettuce - coral - cos - iceberg - oak leaf Logan berries Marron Milk Nectarines - white - yellow Nuts - macadamia Olive oil Beef - vealers Blueberries Blackberries Beetroot Beetroot - organic Beans - season starts Broccoli Cabbage - Chinese - green - megatons - organic green - organic red - red Capsicum - green - red Cauliflowers Cherries Chilli/peppers Corn Cream Cucumbers - Lebanese Eggplant Figs - Preston - Deanna - black Genoa Fish - redfin Passionfruit Plums - black - red - sugar Potato - almera - Delaware - Desiree - Dutch cream - kestrel - Lady Christi - Laura - Nadine - red rascal - rodeo - royal blue - Ruby Lou - sapphire - white star - organic Pumpkin Garlic Rhubarb - organic Raspberries Lettuce - coral - cos - iceberg - oak leaf Silvanberries Silverbeet Strawberry Tomato - cherry - truss Wheat - buck Zucchini FEBRUARY Apple juice Apples - gala - organic Avocados Baby spinach Beef Herbs - basil red - basil green - chervil - chives - coriander - dill - mint - parsley - rocket - sage - thyme Honey Kale - green - organic - red Kohlrabi Lamb - fat - Suffolk Marron Milk Nashi fruit Nuts - macadamia Olive oil Passionfruit Pears - Bartlett - red corella - rossi (little red) Plums - black - red - sugar - green - satsuma Potato - almera - Delaware - Desiree - Dutch cream - kestrel - Lady Christi - Laura - Nadine - red rascal - rodeo - royal blue - Ruby Lou - sapphire - white star - organic Pumpkin Quince Quince - organic Rhubarb - organic Silvanberries Silverbeet Strawberry Tomato - cherry - truss Zucchini AUTUMN southern forests se MARCH Apple juice Apples - gala - golden delicious - green star - hi early - Jonathan - kanzi - organic Baby spinach Beef Beef - vealers Blackberries Beetroot Beetroot - organic Beans - cannellini white Broccoli Cabbage - Chinese - green - megatons - organic green - organic red - red Capsicum - green - red Cauliflowers Chilli/peppers Corn Cream Cucumbers - Lebanese Eggplant Feijoas - Duffy Figs - Preston - Deanna - black Genoa Fish - redfin Garlic Herbs - basil red - basil green - chervil - chives - coriander - dill - mint - parsley - rocket - sage - thyme Honey Kale - green - organic - red Kohlrabi Lamb - fat - Suffolk Lettuce - coral - cos - iceberg - oak leaf Limes - Tahitian - native finger limes Marron Melon - honeydew Melon - rock - water Milk Nashi fruit Nuts - macadamia Olive oil Passionfruit Pears - Bartlett - comice (French) - Packham - red corella - rossi - gold rush Plums - black - red - sugar Potato - almera - Delaware - Desiree - Dutch cream - kestrel - Lady Christi - Laura - Nadine - red rascal - rodeo - royal blue - Ruby Lou - sapphire - white star - organic Prickly pears Pumpkin Quince Quince - organic Silverbeet Strawberry Tomato - cherry - truss Trout - rainbow APRIL Apple juice Apples - Fuji - gala - golden delicious - Granny Smith - green star - hi early - jazz - Jonathan - kanzi - pink lady - splendour - organic Baby spinach Beef Beetroot Beetroot - organic Beans - cannellini white Broccoli Cabbage - Chinese - green - megatons Cabbage - organic green - organic red - red Capsicum - green Cauliflowers Chilli/peppers Corn Cream Cucumbers - Lebanese Eggplant Feijoas - Duffy Figs - Preston - Deanna - black Genoa Fish - redfin Garlic Herbs - basil red - basil green - chervil - chives - coriander - dill - mint - parsley - rocket - sage - thyme Honey Kale - green - organic - red Kohlrabi Lamb - fat - Suffolk Lettuce - coral - cos - iceberg - oak leaf Limes - Tahitian - native finger limes Marron Melon - honeydew - rock - water Milk Nashi fruit Nuts - chestnuts - walnuts - macadamia Olive oil Passionfruit Pears - Bartlett - comice (French) - gold rush - Packham - red corella - rossi Persimmons - non stringent Plums - black - red - sugar Pomegranate Potato - Almera - Delaware Potato - Desiree - Dutch cream - eureka - kestrel - Lady Christi - Laura - maris piper - Maxine - Nadine - norland - purple Congo - red rascal - rodeo - royal blue - Ruby Lou - sapphire - organic Prickly pears Pumpkin Figs - Deanna - black Genoa Fish - redfin Quince Quince - organic Nuts - chestnuts - hazelnuts - walnuts - macadamia Silverbeet Strawberry Tomato - cherry - roma - truss Trout - rainbow MAY Apple juice Apples - fuji - gala - golden delicious - Granny Smith - green star - hi early - jazz - Jonathan - kanzi - Lady Williams - pink lady - splendour - sundowner - organic Baby spinach Beef Beetroot Beetroot - organic Beans - cannellini white Broccoli Cabbage - Chinese - green - megatons - organic green - red Capsicum - green Cauliflowers Chilli/peppers Corn Cream Cucumbers - Lebanese Eggplant Feijoas - Duffy Figs - Preston Garlic Honey Kale - green - organic - red Kohlrabi Lamb - fat - Suffolk Limes - Tahitian - native finger limes Marron Melon - honeydew - rock - water Milk Olive oil Pears - Bartlett - gold rush - Packham - red corella - rossi Persimmons - non stringent Pomegranate Potato - Almera - Delaware - Desiree - Dutch cream - eureka - kestrel - Lady Christi - Laura - maris piper - Maxine - Nadine - norland - purple Congo - red rascal - rodeo - royal blue - Ruby Lou - sapphire - organic Pumpkin Silverbeet Strawberry Tomato - cherry - Roma - truss Trout - rainbow Truffle - black Watercress winter AND SPRING ts seasonal produce JUNE Apples - Fuji - gala - golden delicious - Granny Smith - green star - hi early - jazz - Jonathan - kanzi - Lady Williams - pink lady - splendour - sundowner Beef Beetroot Beetroot - organic Beans - cannellini white Broccoli Corn Cream Cucumbers - Lebanese Garlic Fish - redfin Honey Kale - green - organic - red Kohlrabi Lamb - fat - Suffolk Lemons Limes - Tahitian - native finger limes Marron Milk Nuts - chestnuts - hazelnuts - macadamia - walnuts Olive oil- new season Oranges Pears - gold rush Persimmons Potato - Almera - Delaware - Desiree - Dutch cream - eureka - kestrel - Lady Christi - Laura - maris piper - Maxine - Nadine - norland - purple Congo - red rascal - rodeo - royal blue - Ruby Lou - sapphire - organic Pumpkin Silverbeet Swede Tamarillo Tangello Tomato - cherry - Roma - truss Trout - rainbow Truffle - black Turnip Watercress Wheat - buck JULY Apples - Fuji - golden delicious - Granny Smith - green star - hi early - jazz - Jonathan - kanzi - Lady Williams - pink lady - splendour - sundowner Beef Beetroot Beetroot - organic Beans - cannellini white Broccoli Cream Garlic Figs - Preston - Deanna - black Genoa Fish - redfin Honey Jujubes (Chinese red dates) Kale - green - organic - red Kohlrabi Lamb - Suffolk Lemons Limes - Tahitian Marron Milk Nuts - macadamia - hazelnuts Olive oil Oranges Pears - gold rush Persimmons Potato - organic Pumpkin Silverbeet Swede Tamarillo Tangello Tomato - cherry - truss Trout - rainbow Truffle - black Turnip Watercress Wheat - buck AUGUST Apples - Lady Williams - sundowner Beef Beetroot Beetroot - organic Beans - cannellini white Broccoli Cream Cucumbers - Lebanese Garlic Figs - Preston - Deanna - black Genoa Fish - redfin Honey Kale - green - organic - red Kohlrabi Lamb - Suffolk Leek Lemons Limes - Tahitian Marron Milk Nuts - macadamia Olive oil Oranges Pears - gold rush Persimmons Potato - organic Pumpkin Silverbeet Swede Tamarillo Tangello Tomato - cherry - truss Trout - rainbow Truffle - black Turnip Watercress SEPTEMBER Asparagus Beef Beetroot Beetroot - organic Beans - cannellini white Broccoli Broccoli - organic Cream Cucumbers - Lebanese Garlic Feijoas - Duffy Figs - Preston Figs - Deanna - black Genoa Fish - redfin Honey Kale - green - organic - red Kohlrabi Lamb - Suffolk Leek Marron Milk Nuts - macadamia Olive oil Pears - gold rush Potato - organic Pumpkin Silverbeet Swede Tamarillo Tomato - truss Trout - rainbow Truffle - black Turnip Watercress OCTOBER Avocado Asparagus Beef Beef - vealers Beetroot Beetroot - organic Beans - cannellini white Broccoli Broccoli - organic Cream Cucumbers - Lebanese Feijoas - Duffy Figs - Preston - Deanna - black Genoa Fish - redfin Herbs - basil red - basil green - chervil - chives - coriander - dill - mint - parsley - rocket - sage - thyme Honey Kale - green - organic - red Kiwi fruit Kohlrabi Lamb - Suffolk Marron Milk Nuts - macadamia Olives- table Olive oil Pears - gold rush Potato - organic Pumpkin Silverbeet Tamarillo Tomato - truss Trout - rainbow Watercress NOVEMBER Avocado Asparagus Beef Beef - vealers Beetroot Broccoli Beans - cannellini white Broccoli - organic Cream Cucumbers - Lebanese Grapefruit Feijoas - Duffy Figs - Preston - Deanna - black Genoa - redfin Herbs - basil red - basil green - chervil - chives - coriander - dill - mint - parsley - rocket - sage - thyme Honey Kale - green - organic - red Kiwifruit Kohlrabi Lamb - Suffolk Lettuce - coral - cos - iceberg - oak leaf Loquats Marron Milk Nuts - macadamia Olive oil Pears - gold rush Pumpkin Rhubarb - organic Silverbeet Stawberry Tomato - truss Trout - rainbow Thursday, March 6 2014 FRESH PLUS 14 United front for growers A decision to band together has been successful fresh approach to garlic harvest T he south-western French winegrowing region of Bordeaux’ oceanic climate and clay soils are credited with producing world-class wines for centuries — and it’s Manjimup’s similar climate and loam over clay soils that is fuelling the town’s growing reputation for high-quality fresh produce, according to broccoli specialist Brad Ipsen. Essentially the conditions in both places were similar, he said. “We have hot days and cool nights and you only have to look at the size of the trees to get an idea of how good the soils are.” Mr Ipsen is typical of the growers in the town with a population of just over 4200 people. His family has been in the area for generations, from when his great grandfather arrived in 1906. By the mid-1970s, grandsons Eric and George had become cauliflower pioneers, exporting to Singapore until 2003, when the SARS virus and a weak Australian dollar saw their market fall away dramatically. “We grew potatoes and kept up with the cauliflower for a few years before we decided to branch into broccoli,” Mr Ipsen said. “My father (Eric) and uncle’s (George) partnership had dissolved by 1993 and that’s when I came back from Europe to help Dad in the business.” Around them, several other growers were doing the same, growing a number of different vegetables for WA and Eastern States markets and sending them away to be packed and shipped. The Asian markets including Singapore were being inundated by cheaper Chinese produce and avenues for export were limited. By 2009, half a Kim Edwards Picture: Craig Kinder E Manjimup garlic producer Rick Scoones bought custom-built machines from France. dozen growers got wise and banded together. “We came together under one brand. That’s when Manjimup Fresh was born,” Mr Ipsen said. “The whole operation (including packing, shipping and marketing) just kind of evolved.” While the growers still produce several different vegetables lines, each of the families specialises in one. At his Goodonga farm 8km north-west of the town centre, Gary Ryan grows cauliflowers, something his father Ian started doing in the mid-1970s. “Back then our biggest market was exporting into Singapore and Malaysia but we’re now concentrating on the WA market. We target the high end,” Mr Ryan said. Their success is built on the back of earlier generations who cleared the bush and made little income in the first few years. What keeps this crop of growers moving ahead is science. Working smarter is paying dividends for several families, with leaf and nutrient testing allowing them to grow vegetables with better flavour and fewer blemishes. “Leaf testing allows us to detail trace minerals in each vegetable,” Mr Ryan said. “We may need to lower the copper levels or lift zinc levels but it means we can produce healthy plants all year. If you produce healthy plants in the first place, there is less need to spray.” At Kim and Donnette Edwards’ property, Chinese cabbage has become the specialist line and the couple produce 8000 individual cabbages every year, along with smaller quantities of cauliflower and broccoli. “The consumer is getting fussier, and so we need to keep an eye on everything,” Mrs Edwards said. “We do our testing fortnightly. We record the wind and take soil samples. People want a bigger, sweeter vegetable that lasts longer and that’s what we’re now able to deliver.” Connie Clarke very time he wakes up on his property, which is halfway between Pemberton and Manjimup and surrounded by towering forests on three sides, Rick Scoones knows he made the right decision. Three years ago, the former marine biologist started the ultimate tree change and — without a farming background — decided to try his hand at growing garlic. Garlic is not traditionally grown in the region, with just a handful of producers embarking on growing programs in the past few years. Yet, such was their faith in their ability to make a decent living from the region’s loam-rich soils, that last May, Mr Scoones and his wife Barbara Loessl finally took the plunge, selling everything and making a permanent move to the Southern Forests region. “The rat race was no longer attractive and I’d always wanted to try farming,” Mr Scoones said. “I don’t have a farming background but I have an environmental science background and worked in aquaculture for many years, so I knew we could bring a scientific approach to farming.” Despite leaving behind a well-paid position, and swapping standard office hours for an average 50 to 55-hour week, the successful harvest of almost 10 tonnes of top-quality purple garlic last season made it all worthwhile. The decision to buy custom-built machines from France to split the bogs in the soil, sort and plant the cloves and even brush down the sorting tables, meant the couple could get by with just two backpackers for a few hours a day during the seven-month harvesting season. With their product already selling at the Bunbury Farmers Market, the search for new markets has started. “We’d love to see our product on the chopping boards of chefs from Perth’s top restaurants,” Mr Scoones said. By the time Easter rolls around, the couple, along with their two French backpackers, will start their third growing season, which spans from April until late November. After higher-than-expected rainfall and little sunshine last September, they are hoping for a much better commercial crop to sell to the Perth markets this year. “We want our product to be as good as it can be. In that way we are no different to other growers in the area that have been here for generations — we want to be consistent, and we won’t let a second-rate product on to the shelves.” It’s a sentiment shared by Northcliffe born-and-raised farmer David MacDonald, who has also tried his hand at raising garlic for the past two years. Last season he and his partner Catrin Iversen produced a tonne of high-quality purple garlic, under their JaHa label using a clean-and-green approach. “Best of all is that you know that it’s locally grown and where it’s coming from — it comes from a pristine part of the world and the flavour is fantastic,” Mr MacDonald said. Connie Clarke road tripping with broadfield I There was much more I saw on this whirlwind tour: serious art galleries (as opposed to gloomy shop fronts masquerading as art galleries, selling macrame installations, wooden fruit bowls and rustic pottery to coach tours). There’s the incredible edible products from the Holy Smoke shop in Manjimup; the stunning grounds and restaurant at the Silkwood Winery out on Channybearup Road, which this month beat all comers to take Red Wine of the Show at the local wine show. And there is the extraordinary multimilliondollar business success story that is the trendbucking Bannister Downs Dairy. Orchardist and feijoa pioneer Robert Taylor. Picture: Craig Kinder t takes several mouthfuls to get a taste for feijoas. “The first one always tastes like soap,” Manjimup grower Robert Taylor said. “You need to eat three or four, then you just can’t stop. They grow on you and are wonderful on ice-cream. You can eat the flowers too — and they’re magnificent. They’ve got a sweet, honey flavour and I’m told the leaves make a good tea, though I haven’t tried it.” A cross between pineapple, strawberry, passionfruit and guava on the palate, the feijoa is native to South America and looks like a stunted avocado. Mr Taylor, an electrical contractor, has been growing them on his apple orchard for 12 years and giving them away to friends because nobody knew what they were. He’d always wanted to farm and bought the run-down orchard in the 90s so he could follow his heart, then took out a couple of mates in the know and asked them what he should do. One told him to bulldoze the apple trees; the other suggested cutting off the tips and watering them so they would grow. Luckily, that worked. Feijoas — sometimes called pineapple guavas, though they’re neither — went in later, again on advice from one of the mates, a Kiwi agricultural consultant, who said they were popular in New Zealand. “I had no idea what feijoas were,” Mr Taylor said. “It took about five years to get the first crop but nobody seemed to want to buy them. I hung on and kept watering them and giving them to friends . . . until last year one of the other growers in the area told me he’d just sold some for a good price and that they were chasing them. “Unfortunately, mine were earlier than his, so I was at the end of my run. But since then I’ve had people coming to me and saying ‘we’ll buy everything off ya’.” He can’t account for the turnaround but it’s given him the confidence to keep growing the fruit, which was introduced to Australia in the early 1900s and is sometimes used as an ornamental hedging plant and windbreak. There are many varieties of fruit. Mr Taylor, one of about three growers in Manjimup, planted 98 Duffy bushes, which he’s let grow into trees. And they’re in season now. “This one is a little bit sweeter and has a crinkly skin,” he said. “Just remember, it’s from the guava family so you get all these other flavours. A lot of people don’t like them at first. Even my grandkids told me not to eat them because they tasted like soap but they love them now.” Cut them in half and eat them like a kiwifruit, minus skin. “A lot of people make jam from them; in New Zealand they make wine, too.” Best of all, feijoas are the quintessential tree-ripened fruit because they’re almost ready to eat when they fall to the ground. “Supermarkets are buying the fruit now, so it looks like their time has finally come.” Olga de Moeller GRILLED Dingup House Historical B&B and restaurant chef/owner PETER ELLIOT WHAT IS YOUR FIRST FOOD MEMORY? Plucking and eating Cape gooseberries at my grandparents’ house. It was great fun just peeling them open and chewing on them — it’s a memory that’s stuck with me for years and years. I now grow my own Cape gooseberries and I make relish with them and put them through salads. WHAT IS YOUR FAVOURITE MEAL? Beer-battered nannygai and chips. If any sort of battered fish is on the menu when I go out I’m into it. Nannygai’s a lovely southern fish that’s a bit like snapper. BEST COCKTAIL? I drink red wine. BEST CHEAP AND CHEERFUL? Karridale Tavern. I haven’t been there for a bit but they used to do this seafood platter that I loved. It’s just a nice environment — good food, well presented, you can have a cold beer and it’s not as touristy as most other places, so it’s a little bit quieter and out of the way. When we’re in that neck of the woods we definitely try and get into that place for a meal and a beer. WHAT WAS YOUR LAST OMG FOOD MOMENT? We had a weekend in Melbourne recently where I ate everywhere. The whole family went over for a weekend, ate out every meal and just enjoyed every bite. WHAT IS YOUR ONCE-A-YEAR FOOD INDULGENCE? I spoil myself whenever possible. I do love my marron or any sort of shellfish though, any chance to eat all that sort of stuff and I tuck in. I keep it really simple — just boil it up, shell it and eat. Little bit of pepper, little bit of lemon and I’m happy. I can get marron all year round here, too. Sometimes when I get special requests for marron on the menu I’ll get a couple of extra and me and my son usually knock off one or two just because we can. BUCKET-LIST RESTAURANT? St Betty in Hong Kong. Shane Osborn, the chef, came and stayed here last year for the Truffle Kerfuffle and I met him. He’s just this nice, down-to-earth, family bloke. He keeps the food simple, uses good produce, and presents it well. Plus he’s a West Australian boy. WHAT ARE THE MAJOR BENEFITS OF BEING IN THE SOUTHERN FORESTS REGION? Just having the best variety and quality of Australia’s produce right at your doorstep, as well as learning from the producers. WHAT PART DO YOU PLAY IN THE SOUTHERN FORESTS REGION? The business that we run here is just my wife, me and my son. It’s a family business and we do everything from cooking to cleaning to gardening — we do lock, stock and barrel. We enjoy what we do and we’re very happy about it. Dingup House, Dingup Road, Manjimup 9772 4206 or dinguphouse. com.au Thursday, March 6 2014 Feijoas will grow on you, says a fan who’s nurtured them for years FRESH PLUS A time to blossom 15 Success in cool climate The Easts have a window of time to grow lettuce Thursday, March 6 2014 FRESH PLUS 16 W It’s picking time for Manjimup plum grower Bevan Eatts and his kelpie Pip. henever you ask for lettuce at Subway or sink your teeth into a Big Mac, you’re probably eating David East’s carefully grown produce. The Manjimup-based lettuce grower supplies his harvest to big processors throughout WA in summertime, who then supply many fast food and chain stores. “You’d be quite surprised at the amount of people in WA who don’t know what Manjimup does or what we’ve got down here,” he said. After working on his father’s cattle farm when he was younger, Mr East had an ambition to move into horticulture. He began his new career in 1983, growing cauliflower. “I left school in 1982, came home and couldn’t see a future in just doing cattle,” he said. “I looked to diversify into vegetables and cauliflower was one of the biggest vegetable products grown in the area for export. “I spoke to a friend of ours and he taught me how to grow it — that’s how I got involved.” When China entered the export market as a fierce competitor in the late 1990s, Mr East said many vegetable growers couldn’t compete and were forced to bow out of the industry altogether. “We could see the writing on the wall. Within about four years China virtually wiped us out. A fair few growers sold their properties and moved on,” he said. “In about 95 when they started to put pressure on us we could see we needed to get into another commodity, so that’s what we did.” David and his wife Lee moved to lettuce growing in 1998 and have continued to use their rich Southern Forests soil to make it their specialty. They grow, manage and harvest 120ha of lettuce varieties, including iceberg, cos and gourmet and baby leaf spinach. A key component to their success is that they can produce lettuce at a time of year Perth growers can’t — in summer. The Easts grow and harvest their lettuce from December to midMay, when they hand the reins back to Perth. The capability for this successful summer harvest is all thanks to Southern Forests’ temperate climate. “The opportunity to grow lettuce came when they couldn’t get quality out of Perth in We do enough turnover in six months (of harvesting) to last us 12, so we’ve got to go really hard for that period of time. David East summertime and were looking for regions to grow the iceberg lettuce and other products,” he said. “All their modelling suggested Manjimup had the climate specific to suit the things they needed, so they came and saw us about it.” When the Easts are in their production period, it’s all hands on deck for long days of harvesting and planting. “My boys are now back with us on the farm and they want to be involved in it — it’s a great place to live.” Emma Chitty David East and his crop. Picture: Craig Kinder It’s a plum way to make a living T hird-generation farmer Bevan Eatts has been tilling the soil around west Manjimup his whole life. Plums are the name of the game and the farm has a wide range of varieties on the go for five months of the year. The 275ha farm wasn’t always so loyal to stone fruit, however. The family first took ownership of the land in 1946 — a far smaller property back then — and built it up over time. They ran a dairy herd on the land, which was milked the old-fashioned way (by hand), before evolving into sheep farming. It was nearly 40 years ago, in 1976, that the family decided to try their hand at growing vegetables instead of running livestock. “We used to grow cauliflower for export in the boom days, and we had a regular truck run where we used to drop produce off at Busselton, Bunbury and Donnybrook,” Mr Eatts said. The family was looking for a better quality of life, one that didn’t involve working seven days a week, when they decided to delve into an industry they’d never considered and which was right out of their comfort zone — stone fruit. They knew the Manjimup region was suitable for growing the fruit and were attracted by the plum season’s short time frame. “Coming from a vegetable background, we knew nothing about fruit trees,” Mr Eatts said. “So we thought we’d start with stone fruit, which is meant to be easier than apples. There aren’t many stone-fruit growers in WA. It’s pretty much a niche market now.” The orchard took a few years to kick into gear and start bearing fruit and now the farm is all plums, with more than 5000 trees flourishing on the property. There are 11 plum varieties on the farm, including black Amber, candy Rosa, fortune, Amber jewel, Kelsey, midnight sun, Tegan blue and Angelino. “The way it works is that we start picking one variety between Christmas and the new year, and then two weeks later another variety comes on, then another one two weeks after that, and so on,” Mr Eatts said. “That goes right through to the end of April. Purple majesty is the first plum variety we pick, which is about Christmas time.” As all farmers know though, you can have good and bad seasons. “The last season wasn’t so great. In September 2012, we had some hail, when the fruit had only grown as big as a thumbnail. The hail left a mark and, as the fruit grew, the mark got bigger. As a result, it meant we couldn’t sell our crop as a first-grade fruit,” Mr Eatts said. “Generally, first-grade plums sell at about $2.50 a kilogram, while second-grade plums sell at about $1-$1.50 a kilo. So that’s a huge difference, despite the fact that the same amount of work goes into growing them and that they taste the same. “That’s probably something we need to educate consumers on.” Jennifer Susanto-Lee Manjimup’s Beth Shorthouse. People want to know the origins of their food, writes CONNIE CLARKE A good jam should have plenty of fruity lumps and should be at least 50 per cent sugar or it’s not worth the effort, according to Manjimup berry farmer Beth Shorthouse. “You need to be able to taste the fruit,” Mrs Shorthouse said. “And you need the sugar to make it a jam, otherwise the flavour isn’t right.” Retired schoolteachers Mrs Shorthouse, 70, and her husband John, 75, bought their property in 1985, charmed by the beautiful karri forest that surrounded it. In 1996, they decided to turn their hobby into a business and now grow almost 500kg of berries every year. Whatever is not sold at the Manjimup Farmers Market, where Mrs Shorthouse is co-ordinator, goes into a colourful array of jams, preserves, jellies and sauces. The Yallamurrup range is made from their 17ha property in the Middlesex Valley, about 8km south of Manjimup. Seven varieties are grown and handpicked by the couple, including raspberries, loganberries, boysenberries and English gooseberries. “John grows the orchard full-time now after he retired in 1998,” Mrs Shorthouse said. “I like to try lots of different combinations. We don’t sell to Perth, it would be too big an operation, especially since we are getting to the age where we’ll have to hand over to somebody else. But there’s lots of interest and our products are available in the tourist bureaus and wineries. “While we’re still healthy we’ll continue — we love it, especially meeting so many different, interesting people all the time.” A in Britain and Aldi over east. Mr Giblett bought the Newton Brothers’ Orchards outright in 1990, converting one of the three orchards to organic in 2008. He has since watched his three adult children become integral parts of the operation, and hopes his grandchildren will continue in what has become one of the country’s biggest suppliers of organic fruit. “I see myself as just a caretaker,” Mr Giblett said. “Whether they share our passion and are in tune with what we’ve created remains to be seen, there are no guarantees.” With the big two throwing their weight behind organically produced fruit and vegetables, along with a growing consumer demand for safe food, Mr Giblett can only see a bright future for the Southern Forests region. Family-owned and family-run growers have been diversifying into organics for many years. “People want to have a connection with the farm and the farmer,” Mr Giblett said. “They want to know the origins of their food sources — how it was grown and by whom. We’re in tune with that. These are the apples that my grandchildren eat and there is a sense of trust and a relationship that we forge with our customers. “The last crop was a really nice one and we have bigger and better things in store this year. We want to produce a premium apple and quality fruit that will last in market all year. There is a certain crunch and taste factor that you want to achieve each time. We’ve been supplying the Woolworths Macro brand for a while, and the fruit for the ValleyView label (Coles) has been really good. There have been very few problems. I couldn’t be happier.” Horgan that a large facility for tastings and special events and VIP wine events would be the way of the future. As it turns out Mondavi was nothing short of a prophet because, many years later, there’s nary a serious wine business in WA that doesn’t have facilities above and beyond a bench and a spittoon. The gardens alone are worth the visit to Salitage: they are manicured and lush. And, in a region impoverished for hotel rooms, his luxury chalets are in great demand. And then there’s those exceptional cold-climate wines made by Sue Mountford, pictured right with me . . . Harvey Giblett with Newton Orchards apples. Picture: Craig Kinder Connie Clarke road tripping with broadfield It’s hard to get a good coffee in Pemberton or Manjimup but then that’s always the way once you get more than 100km from a capital city. So, drink juice, or better still, wine. Along the ridiculously picturesque Vasse Highway, on the way to Pemby, lies some of WA’s most celebrated wineries. John Horgan’s Salitage is a case in point. And something of a surprise. If I had any expectations about this place it would have been of a small cellar door made from undressed timber and with samples being doled out by a Dutch backpacker with a nose ring and an immediate need of depilatory cream. The Salitage cellar door is anything but. It is a massive building inspired by the ideas of America’s most famous wine producer Robert Mondavi, who suggested to John Thursday, March 6 2014 they’re jammin’ s he watches his grandchildren Jasper and Sacha run around picking fruit from the orchard founded by “10 pound poms” George and Harold Newton in 1929, Harvey Giblett feels a deep satisfaction. After decades of hard work, the 85-year-old business started by Mr Giblett’s father-in-law George is tasting the ultimate success with their royal gala, fuji, jazz, Granny Smith and pink lady apples now being carried by both of Australia’s supermarket giants, as well being shipped interstate and overseas, including to Marks and Spencer FRESH PLUS Apples customers trust 17 Thursday, March 6 2014 FRESH PLUS 18 Southern comfort Foragers’ Sophie Zalokar shares some of her best recipes using Southern Forests produce Roasted cauliflower with caraway, pickled walnuts, kale and macadamia pesto VEGETARIAN Serves 4 300g kale, ribs removed, coarsely chopped 2 cloves garlic 1 tsp salt plus extra 1 cup macadamia nuts, lightly toasted 1 cup extra virgin olive oil small lemon, zest only 2 1⁄2 tbsp lemon juice 1 cup parmesan, finely grated plus extra 1 medium cauliflower olive oil sea salt flakes 1 tbsp caraway seeds 4 whole pickled walnuts, sliced Italian parsley leaves, to garnish freshly cracked black pepper Blanch the kale in boiling salted water, cooling under cold running water. Drain well before rolling in a tea towel to dry. Crush the garlic with the salt in a mortar and pestle until a creamy consistency. Place the kale, macadamias, half the extra virgin olive oil, lemon juice and zest and crushed garlic in a food processor. Process until a coarse puree. Transfer to a bowl and fold through the grated parmesan and remaining extra virgin olive oil. Check seasoning and adjust if needed. Preheat oven to 220C. Slice the cauliflower from top to bottom into 2cm thick pieces. Place the slices and small pieces that will break off as you slice on to an oiled baking tray and drizzle with olive oil. Season with sea salt flakes and caraway seeds and roast for 20-25 minutes until browned at the edges and tender. Serve the roasted cauliflower slices layered on a platter, garnished with small spoonfuls of the kale pesto, slices of pickled walnut, a little extra grated parmesan, Italian parsley leaves and freshly cracked black pepper. Manjimup white-bean puree with potato and buckwheat flatbread PERFECT STARTER Makes 3 cups 250g Manjimup white beans or dried cannellini beans 2 cloves garlic 1 fresh bay leaf 1 tbsp sea salt 1 tbsp fresh rosemary, finely chopped plus extra 1 ⁄3 cup extra virgin olive oil freshly cracked black pepper local extra virgin olive oil Soak the white beans overnight. Drain before putting into a big saucepan with water to cover the garlic cloves and fresh bay leaf by 5cm. Bring to the boil and simmer until just tender. Add salt and cook further until the beans are soft. Drain, reserving the cooking liquid and the bay leaf. Allow the beans to cool a little before pureeing in a food processor together with the rosemary, extra virgin olive oil, third of a cup of the reserved cooking liquid and freshly cracked black pepper. Leave to cool to room temperature before serving drizzled with a little best-quality local extra virgin olive oil, a scattering of more finely chopped rosemary and garnished with the bay leaf. Serve with flatbread (see recipe). Makes 4 flatbread 300g mashed potato, cooled 100g buckwheat flour 1 ⁄2 tsp baking powder pinch of salt 1 large free-range egg olive oil sea salt flakes Preheat oven to 220C. Mix the mashed potato, buckwheat flour, baking powder and egg with a pinch of salt until a soft dough. Divide into four portions and place on a lined baking tray. Flatten each with flour-dusted fingers into round disks, prick the breads with a fork, drizzle with a little olive oil and bake for 20 minutes until the edges are browned. Serve sprinkled with salt flakes. 19 FRESH PLUS Photography & Styling Iain Gillespie Thursday, March 6 2014 Marron, roasted walnut, avocado and pink lady apple salad with truffle salt and apple cider vinaigrette SUNDAY LUNCH Serves 4 1 cup walnut kernels 4 x 300g fresh marron, purged 1 tbsp apple cider vinegar 1 tsp lemon juice 1 ⁄2 tsp sea salt 3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil 1 small iceberg lettuce, torn into bite-size pieces 2 radishes, thinly sliced 1 avocado, sliced 1 pink lady apple, thinly sliced 1 small bunch fresh dill, tips plucked from stalks truffle salt to garnish cracked black pepper Dry roast the walnuts in a 200C oven for 20 minutes until just brown then transfer to a dry tea towel. Gather the corners of the tea towel together and rub the skins away from the walnuts. Transfer to a coarse sieve to separate the skins from the roasted walnut. Reserve to the side. Place the live marron in the freezer for 20-30 minutes until they no longer move but are not yet frozen. Bring a large pot of water to the boil and add the salt. Gently put the marron in the boiling water, cover immediately and cook for 3-4 minutes. Remove from the pot and plunge into iced water. Twist and pull the head away from the tail. Using kitchen scissors cut up the middle of the inside of the tail and ease the flesh away from the shell. Pull back the flap from the top of the meat and gently remove the alimentary canal before thickly slicing the marron meat. Make the vinaigrette by whisking together the apple cider vinegar, lemon juice and salt and then the extra virgin olive oil until emulsified. Compile the salad by scattering the iceberg on a platter, topped with the radish slices, marron pieces, sliced avocado and apple. Drizzle over the dressing and garnish with the roasted walnuts, fresh dill tips, truffle salt and freshly cracked black pepper. Honey and rustleberry semifreddo with toasted hazelnuts SWEET DELIGHTS Rob Broadfield chews the fat with Southern Forests champion Sophie Zalokar. Don’t miss West Weekend magazine’s Gourmet Edition on Saturday. Serves 8 1 large egg 4 large egg yolks 100g plus little extra honey 300ml whipping cream 250g frozen rustleberries, roughly chopped 1 ⁄2 cup toasted hazelnuts, roughly chopped Line a 1 litre loaf tin with baking paper, overlapping the top edge of the tin. Beat the egg and egg yolks with the honey in a bowl over a saucepan of gently simmering water for about 10 minutes until the mixture is pale and thick. Allow to cool in the fridge, whisking occasionally to incorporate the edges. Whip the cream until thick and then gently fold in the egg and honey mixture. Fold through the chopped rustleberries and pour into the prepared tin. Cover with a piece of baking paper before freezing for a minimum of 4 hours. Serve drizzled with a little more honey and the toasted hazelnuts scattered over the top. • Foragers is a farm-based cooking school and dining room with self-contained accommodation in the Southern Forests region, 6km south of Pemberton. • Sophie Zalokar and her husband, Chris, moved from Fremantle to this breathtaking 7.4ha property with their two children in 2005. • The property now sports newly built luxury accommodation for guests, a productive kitchen garden, and a 40-seat dining room with a large commercial kitchen. Foragers is at 1 Roberts Road, Pemberton. Phone 9776 1580. Kinship of the vine RAY JORDAN shines a spotlight on the families behind this region’s vineyards Thursday, March 6 2014 FRESH PLUS 20 T Olde Eastbrook Winery’s Justin and Jodie Omodei with daughter Charli, 4, and Gus the dog. he wines of Pemberton and Manjimup within the Southern Forests region are some of the most exciting in the State. Yet they are also the most frustrating. Just when you think it has come of age with a great pinot noir, a chardonnay or even a merlot, it lets you down the next time around. It’s not always its fault. But quite why is hard to put a finger on. Vintage certainly plays a part and this region is susceptible to significant and subtle vintage variations that can be as frustrating for the producers as they are for the consumer. There is no doubt that when things go right, this region produces some of the best fruit in the State. The climate and soils seem ideal for quality wine. It sits on a huge mass of granite rock called the Yilgarn Craton, recognised as the oldest rock formation on Earth, dating back more than three billion years. The gravelly ironstone soils that have formed on the higher ground above the craton are found throughout Pemberton and the Smithbrook vineyard. The chardonnays have an elegance and refinement that is the most akin to the modern restrained expression of this variety becoming so popular, especially in the Eastern States. Sauvignon blanc is another white variety that really excels and there have been some marvellous examples made by Houghton over the years that take it to another level of complexity and expression. Of the reds, the most likely to succeed has been pinot noir. The climate and soils seem right yet, over the years, the wines have not had quite the consistency you would like to see — still that’s pinot noir isn’t it — although the past few years have seen this change. Having said that, some of the best examples of this variety made in WA have come from producers such as Picardy, Salitage and Batista Estate. ‘All we are doing is going back to practices that have been commonly used over many generations.’ Dan Pannell Special for sparkling With their propensity for producing high-class chardonnay and pinot noir, the Pemberton and Manjimup regions with the Southern Forests area are well placed to produce quality sparkling wine. In the early days, producers such as Domain Chandon in Victoria’s Yarra Valley and Houghton took fruit for their sparkling wines. And while it is not quite cool enough to produce the type of fruit currently required for the finest Australian sparkling wines — most of that is coming from down in Tasmania — the fruit from this region is well suited to sparkling wines, with the longer, cooler ripening period ideal for quality bubbles. Two producers who are making a statement with this style are Olde Eastbrook and Smithbrook, who have bitten the bullet to make this time-consuming and quite expensive style of wine. Both the wines are first class and the Smithbrook The Yilgarn blanc de blancs 2010 last year won the title of Best Sparkling wine in the annual West Australian Wine Guide. The Olde Eastbrook chardonnay pinot noir 2010 is full-flavoured style of sparkling, made in the traditional method and aged for 30 months on lees. Merlot is another red variety that has risen to lofty heights in some years with Chestnut Grove making some truly exceptional wines. Other producers also have produced some beauties and I remain convinced that, given the right clones, it may well rise above pinot as the red wine of the region. One of the most impressive producers in the region is Salitage, which was established in 1989 by John and Jenny Horgan. It hit the ground running with some excellent chardonnays and pinot in the early years and has continued to produce a mix of top-shelf premium wines with a value-formoney range under the Treehouse label, with chardonnay and pinot noir the features. Jenny Horgan lost her courageous battle with cancer last year and John is continuing with the business at this stage. His background is impressive. He was a key part of the establishment of Leeuwin Estate with his brother Dennis and also studied under famous Californian winemaker Robert Mondavi before taking equity in Domaine de la Pousse D’Or in the Cote D’Or region of Burgundy. Horgan said: “This is a magnificent region to grow grapes and I have no doubt that the quality of our wines over the years has been a direct result of the viticulture and how we have maximised the natural environment to produce the best fruit.” Picardy has been one of the high-profile producers of the region since being established by Clockwise from above: John Horgan, of Salitage; Vic Peos, of Peos Estate; Picardy winemaker Dan Pannell. Pictures: Iain Gillespie and Craig Kinder a grape-drinking escape the vineyard through to the winery and I have no doubt this contributes to the excellent quality of the wines.” While pinot has been a strong suit here, the chardonnays also are outstanding with finesse and great complexity while cabernet franc, shiraz and merlot also contribute to a range of first-rate wines. Another interesting producer in the region is the Olde Eastbrook vineyard, which is owned by the Omodei family. The 20ha were planted in 1998 but as well there is a big planting of avocados, a trufferie and trade cattle. “We have an ethos here to work as hard as we can, while we can,” Justin Omodei said. “As long as we keep the right attitude, work hard and stay healthy, we’ll keep doing our bit.” In addition to an impressive range of table wines which are made by Mike Garland at the Castelli winery near Denmark, Olde Eastbrook also has released a sparkling wine which is showing some encouraging results. The Peos family have been part of the Manjimup region for the best part of 80 years, although they were making wine in Macedonia more than 100 years ago. The Peos venture into wine in Manjimup started when the brothers Vic, John, Kon and Chris banded together in 1996 to create their vineyard as a legacy to their father Jim and grandfather Py who had made wine in Macedonia before coming to Australia. Previously, the Peos family have lived off the land farming. The Peos Estate wines are consistent and deliver on quality and value for money with the reds a highlight. Vic Peos said: “We have found the climate in Manjimup ideal for all of the farming we have pursued. It allows consistency and gives distinctive characters which say these wines are from Manjimup.” Another of the excellent producers is Smithbrook, which is now part of the Fogarty Wine Group. The focus in the past seven years has been on getting the vineyard back to its “natural expression” with low yields supported by minimal inputs. This fits in with the overall environmental strategy, where vines for Smithbrook are grown without irrigation. The range is exceptional. Alana Starkie with her non-alcoholic sparkling grape juice, which has proven popular. Thursday, March 6 2014 Bill and Sandra Pannell, who had previously set up boutique icon Moss Wood at Margaret River. The Pannells were joined by son Dan and have been turning out some first-class wines, with the focus on creating great pinot noir a driving influence. The vineyard is where much of the attention has been focused. The Pannells have been strongly influenced by what is done in Burgundy and, as a result, the vines are close planted to promote competition between vines and trained low to enable them to use heat radiating from the gravelly soils in the evenings. Picardy is very aware of its pristine environment and so undertakes a strong environmentally friendly approach. Dan Pannell said : “All we are doing is going back to practices that have been commonly used over many generations. It’s not about just taking from the land, it’s about giving back too. “Our philosophy here is to be hands-on in every part of the process from because we can’t leave it on the skin, so it doesn’t have as many tannins as a red wine,” Mrs Starkie said. Mrs Starkie, a former agriculture project manager with the South West Catchment Council, is devoting herself to the business full-time as production increases to meet demand. Three years ago, they picked 5 tonnes of grapes; this year it’s 15 tonnes, as outlets from Albany to Perth snap up the range. “The first year, we did a fairly small batch because we wanted to see people’s reaction and sold it mainly through farmer’s markets and local shows,” she said. “We’ve now got a viable business and want to grow it within our means.” The plan is to produce their own grapes in three to five years as they plant up their 50ha Middlesex property — about 5km from Manjimup — where they got married two years ago. ‘We’re putting in sauvignon blanc, shiraz and also Canada muscat, which is the main flavour in our muscat juice,” Mrs Starkie said. “It’s a little-known grape but we think it’s got real potential. Those cuttings will go in this winter. But the really nice thing about the property we’ve bought is that it’s next door to Sally Starkie’s original family farm.” Olga De Moeller FRESH PLUS M iddlesex producers Alana and Paul Starkie are on to their third vintage of sparkling grape juice and this year is set to be a corker with production up three-fold since they made their debut with Sally’s Lane in 2011. Named after Mr Starkie’s great grandmother, Sally Starkie, the range is a premium alternative to wine and uses grapes from David and Monica Radomiljac’s Pemberley Estate, in Pemberton, topped up with pickings from Mrs Starkie’s family vineyard, Shedley Wines, in Bridgetown. “We call it sparkling grape juice because it’s non-alcoholic,” Mrs Starkie said. “My husband and I are both non-drinkers but coming from a winemaking family I like and appreciate the taste of wine but don’t like the effect alcohol has on me. So we’re doing varietals under our own label to fill that niche for people who don’t drink. These people still want a nice option when socialising so they don’t feel out of place, because Paul and I know what’s it like to be stuck with ginger beer or orange juice when there’s just nothing else on offer.” The Starkies pick grapes about two weeks before winemakers, so they’re lower in sugar but higher in acidity for a more balanced flavour and process close to 0C to stop fermentation. Everything is hand-bottled and hand-capped. Varieties include sauvignon blanc, shiraz, taminga — an Australian cross-bred grape — and muscat. “Winemakers generally pick grapes when they have quite a lot of sugar and the sugar is converted to alcohol but if you were to drink that as straight juice, it would be too sweet,” Mr Starkie said. “We’ve always hand picked our grapes but this year we’re experimenting with some machine picking, so we can do it at 3am when the grapes are really cold, then crush and press straight away and have the juice in tanks by 7am.” The couple started with two sparkling grape juices — sauvignon blanc and cabernet sauvignon, which has been replaced with shiraz. “The shiraz is a little bit different to what you’d expect 21 Thursday, March 6 2014 FRESH PLUS 22 Learning on the land has yielded results for this couple Pemberton lime grower Brian Thornley and his wife Val Icanovska. Limes the perfect tonic Y ou can’t make a decent gin and tonic without a slice of lime and one of the people we have to thank for being able to enjoy that magic ingredient is Brian Thornley, of Pemberton Limes, now one of the biggest producers of Tahitian limes in the southern hemisphere. Mr Thornley is not a citrus grower by nature: he’s an accountant. For many years he ran a successful practice on the Terrace until he sold it to one of the international firms. At the time, 60 per cent of his clients were rural based and included large family businesses, motels, large trucking outfits, timber companies, and growers of one sort or another — potatoes, wheat, barley, beef, sheep and cattle. Among other places, his work took him to the Southern Forests area, where he developed a particular affinity for Pemberton — so much so that he bought a property there which he shares with wife Val Icanovska. “Then about six years ago we decided one particular block was very undulating country where we were out on the edge of the forest, and we decided to put a crop in there,” he said. There were a number of reasons why he chose limes as the crop. First, he was looking for a taxeffective investment, particularly one which no one else was using: “No one was growing them — the tax schemes weren’t interested in them. You had avocados, which were heavily involved with tax schemes; you’ve got the wine industry which, as you would appreciate, is flooded with them, and there have been others around the nut industry — until it all backfired over the last couple of years,” he said. Climate change was another. “It may seem a bit strange that we decided on limes because it’s not sub-tropical down there but we were working on the fact they were saying we were having a 2C or so climate change. That meant that the Pemberton climate would probably be where Harvey is at the present time, which is one of the major citrus growing areas.” Pemberton Limes is into its second year of commercial production and from an initial yield of 16,000kg from 1100 trees, this year they expect about 24,000kg, with a projected peak production of 50,000kg in two years time. “This is the normal yield for those types of trees and that’s what we expect to turn out year after year for about 20 years,” Mr Thornley said. “Fifty-thousand kilos is quite a sizeable amount and would probably flood the WA market, so we are actively looking at exporting.” Interestingly, Mr Thornlie has achieved this remarkable level of output without much formal expert advice: “We couldn’t find anything from the Department of Agriculture in WA. In fact, they were mortified that we’d even thought of doing it.” What he did use, though, was the experience he had gained ‘We were working on the fact they were saying we were having a 2C or so climate change.’ working with and listening to his clients. “I believe we’ve adopted those good habits that a lot of my clients who are successful in the horticultural business use in grain growing and the like; that if you look after things and you get the timing right, you should end up with a good product,” he said. Don Stott Harry Hercock. olives love growing conditions It is called the good oil for a reason and the olive oil being produced in WA’s Southern Forests region is a real corker. First-generation olive oil producer John Higgins, who has produced and processed olives for the past decade that he has lived in Pemberton, put this oil richness down to the area’s lengthened olive growing season. “The area is ideal where we live as it allows us to have one of the longest growing seasons in the world — this slow growth rate helps the quality and the taste of the fruit,” he said. “The soil is mainly karri loam and the rainfall average is 1200mm — the olives love it.” Though winding olive oil production back, Mr Higgins, an electrician by trade, said he had harvested about 80 tonnes of olives and produced 11,000 litres of extra virgin olive oil annually on his 42.49ha property under his family’s Channyridge label. These olives came from 4500 robust, mild and fruity-flavoured olive trees including Minerva, WA mission, coratina, Zues, Kalamata and jumbo Kalamata varieties. “We have stopped producing but are still selling the remaining stock of our single-variety extra virgin as well as our mandarin and lime-infused olive oils,” he said. Manjimup’s Harry Hercock also knows a thing or two about olives — in fact, his whole family does. DON STOTT talks to a persimmon grower Together with wife Leanne, the Hercocks first planted olive trees in 1996, had their first harvest in 1999 and are behind the small production Bookalaam olive oil label, which they sell at the Manjimup Farmers Market and the George Street Merchants in East Fremantle. He said the family’s small 300-tree grove comprised of a Spanish milling variety called WA mission (from New Norcia) and an Italian variety called frantoio and yielded nine tonnes of olives and about 1200 litres of extra virgin and lime-pressed olive oils last year. He said olives grew in a wide range of environmental conditions and thrived in the cooler South West, and he used minimal intervention (chemicals, fertiliser and water) and minimal machinery to grow and harvest his olives. “In general, South West oils are different to warmer area oils but WA olive oils all have their own merits,” he said. Mr Hercock said his wife, children and extended family were crucial to the day-to-day running, production and marketing of the Bookalaam ‘We started out with 150 trees but we decided to take some of them out, and we’ve netted off 30 to 35 trees with a cover over the whole lot to keep the wildlife out with an electric fence.’ range of products, which also included dukkah; lime-roasted almonds; plum and lime jam; plum, lime and fennel conserve; and limeand-plum-roasted almonds. Julian Sharp is another small olive oil producer who hails from near Pemberton, his home for the past 36 years. Despite no family history of oil production, he has been producing organic-certified olive oil for four years from the olives harvested from his 2.5ha, 540-tree grove which is mainly comprised of olive-oil varieties. He also has 50 trees for table olives. Olives WA executive officer Vanessa Hawthorn said most Southern Forests region olive growers farmed relatively small groves yet produced high-quality oil for the gourmet market. She said of the 16 million kilos of olives harvested in WA in 2012, WA Olive Council members in the Southern Forests region produced 973,000kg of olives, yielding 160,000 litres of extra virgin oil. Amanda Lewis persimmon that bear edible fruit. The most popular for cultivation are those from China and Japan. There are others from The Philippines, India and America. The main types of commercially grown persimmons are the astringent variety, which is only edible when fully ripe, and the non-astringent variety, which can be eaten when still firm or when fully ripe. In a good year, Mrs Backhouse would probably pick two to three 500kg bins. It’s not easy, however. “We started out with 150 trees but we decided to take some of them out, and we’ve netted off 30 to 35 trees with a cover over the whole lot to keep the wildlife out with an electric fence as well,” she said. It seems the emus will walk through the electric fence for a feed of persimmons, the kangaroos eat the flowers, and the possums tear their way through the netting to get to them. Then there are the wattlebirds, the parrots and the silvereyes, for whom the persimmon is the fruit of choice. “If you take into to account the repair of the netting, the weed spraying and mowing and the fact that they have to be pruned every year up on a Hydralada, it’s hard work,” she said. No wonder Australia hardly ranks as a producer. So what does one do with 1500kg of persimmons? “I do sell them into my local supermarket,” she said. “My son sells them into the co-op in Northcliffe. We don’t normally make a lot of money out of them. I’d hate to try and survive on persimmons.” Mrs Backhouse also dries them and cultivates the non-astringent variety, which is crunchy like an apple. Apart from the avocados, the persimmons, and quite a lot of livestock, the Backhouses have a few fig trees, about 40 lime trees, a couple of macadamia trees and goodness knows what else. Mrs Backhouse also has a little shop — a roadside stall, in fact — where she sells her excess produce. What with the netting, the pruning, the possums, the kangaroos, the emus, the birds, and a shop, a city slicker might be forgiven for thinking twice about that hobby farm. Don Stott It took three days but in a flash of afflatus (ancient Greek for “bugger me”) I got it. I mean, I really got it. The Southern Forests region of WA is like Margaret River 20 years ago but less touristy and more agrarian. The people are open, cheerful and, as we discovered roaming from farm to farm and hearing their stories, damn smart. The Southern Forests is unspoilt. It is predominantly a rural economy and while it doesn’t have the tourism chops of Margaret River, it has none of the pressures associated with the often conflicting agendas of Margaret River’s wine producers, tourism operators, developers, holidayhouse NIMBYs and the vestigial hippie culture with its romantic notions of a tie-dyed community of the 1970s. The afflatus hit while sitting on the balcony at Bill and Di Pannell’s house at the family’s vineyard. With us were Bill’s son and one of Australia’s most accomplished winemakers, Dan Pannell, and a couple of hungry young itinerant vineyard workers, taking their crib. We were sipping a cappuccino — Bill’s a dab hand at homemade espresso — and talking about, you guessed it, wine. It was a warm day, the white noise of insects was rising from the trees and the breezes, such as they were, wafted through the vines. It could have been the Southern Rhone. It was the Pannells’ Picardy vineyard, just outside Pemberton at the very heart of the Southern Forests region of WA. Bill Pannell, who famously created the Moss Wood vineyard and its much awarded Bordeaux-style cabernet, is a scientist (he was for decades the former muchloved Shenton Park GP) and his son is a winemaker, one of the best in the country. It’s no surprise then that their winemaking is informed by both science Picardy Wines. and heurism, which gives the wines their rapier- sharp flavour profile and that little extra which one suspects comes from the vines and perhaps an unconventional flourish or two from the winemaker. One talks about “livin’ the dream” but rarely does that extend to actually wanting other people’s lives. Sitting on that shady balcony, with those people in that place . . . well, one had a tinge of envy. I said farewell to Sophie Zalokar and drove homewards after just a measly four days in this extraordinary region — the fruit-and-veg basket of WA and an emerging tourist destination with natural and cultural attractions to burn. I was the richer for it, especially the people I met, but I left nearly $1000 poorer with some of the staggeringly good Picardy Merlimont and Reserve pinot noir in the boot. I pressed my nose against a real estate agent’s window on the way out of town — 60ha (150 acres), some fat tail lambs and a good cellar, that’s all I need. 23 Thursday, March 6 2014 E ver thought of getting away from the stresses of city life and buying a hobby farm? That’s what Tom and Faye Backhouse did after 28 years in the old Forestry Department. It’s a bit more than a hobby farm now, though — more a country cornucopia. “I started off in Gosnells when we were first married,” said Mrs Backhouse, left. “And then we transferred to Grimwade for four years, and then transferred to Walpole for two and a half years, then to Quinninup for 18 months, and then we transferred to Pemberton in 1976. “So we’ve been around the blocks a bit . . . but we loved Pemberton so much we decided to buy this hobby block out in the Warren National Park — 4ha — which has been our livelihood since 1984. But now we’ve got about 32ha. We mainly grow avocados, but I like persimmons, so hubby had to put some persimmons in for me.” It might be just a sideline, but it still puts the Backhouses among the very few people in Australia Faye Backhouse. who grow persimmons in any sort Picture: Craig Kinder of quantity at all. There are many species of road tripping with broadfield FRESH PLUS A particular dedication the attractions Southern Ocean walpole perth SPRING – Beetroot “We believe organic farming is the only way to go and whole point of growing organically is to have your finger on the pulse and understand what’s lacking in the produce and fix the cause.” – Wayne Edwards SUMMER Pictures: Craig Kinder WINTER – Tomatoes “We use locally sourced jarrah sawdust in the hydroponics and it’s all on a recirculating system. This is good for us because water waste is minimal . . . the benefit to us is that we have protected crop, minimal sprays and not much is left to chance.” – Shane Ylioff manjimup pemberton northcliffe AUTUMN SUMMER – Cauliflower “We do our testing fortnightly – we record the wind and take soil samples. If we’re going to sell to Coles and Woolworths as well as the smaller retailers, people want a bigger, sweeter vegetable that lasts longer and that’s what we’re now able to deliver.” – Kim Edwards AUTUMN – Apples “We want to produce a premium apple and quality fruit that will last in market all year. There is a certain crunch and taste factor that you want to achieve each time.” – Harvey Gibblet. Southern Forests fruit and vegetables – Manjimup being the heart of the region’s food production – and has a gross agricultural value of $127 million per annum. Equally impressive is that 70 per cent of Australia’s avocados come from this region, 90 per cent of WA’s broccoli and 90 per cent of WA’s potato production. And let’s not forget about wine, with Pemberton and Manjimup producing some of the most exciting in the State. WINTER Just a three-hour drive from Perth is the major agricultural producer in the South West of WA the seasons This region has 80,000ha of agricultural land, 50 per cent of WA’s apples come from here and it is the home of the internationally recognised pink lady apple. It is renowned for black truffles and the highly anticipated fourth annual Truffle Kerfuffle on from June 27 to 29 is expected to attract foodies and chefs from across Australia and around the world. Another major foodie event is the Cherry Harmony Festival held annually in December. Not just all about truffles and cherries, the region has more than 50 varieties of SPRING Tony Fontanini on his Manjimup property. Picture: Astrid Volzke