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Sunshine Coast Food Scene: Local Producers Drive a Growing Reputation
Farm-to-table has genuine meaning on the Sunshine Coast, where the farms are close enough to visit.
Community
Farm-to-table has genuine meaning on the Sunshine Coast, where the farms are close enough to visit.
The Sunshine Coast's food identity has been built on a legitimate agricultural base. The Sunshine Coast hinterland produces ginger, avocados, macadamias, tropical fruits, and a range of specialty vegetables that find their way into Brisbane restaurants and direct-to-consumer boxes in addition to local hospitality venues. The density of production within an hour of the coast provides chefs with access that urban peers genuinely cannot replicate.
The Eumundi Markets have operated as the most visible retail expression of this produce abundance, drawing visitors who combine a market visit with hinterland exploration. The markets' longevity and scale, with more than 600 stallholders on peak days, reflects a genuine supply of craft and produce rather than the tourist simulation that similar formats produce elsewhere.
Restaurant investment on the Sunshine Coast has accelerated with population growth, and the calibre of dining available in Noosa and increasingly in Mooloolaba has begun to attract food media coverage that was previously reserved for capital city scenes. Chefs cite producer access, the coastal environment, and lower operating costs than Sydney or Melbourne as the combination that makes the region viable for serious culinary ambition.
The Sunshine Coast Food and Agribusiness Network provides a formal coordination mechanism for the industry, running programs from market access support to food safety training to export pathway development for producers ready to look beyond the domestic market.
This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.
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Published by The Daily Sunshine Coast
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