03 April 2024
8 mins Read
Ranging from ornate, heritage dining rooms to forward-thinking eateries with a rustic and sustainable ethos, the restaurant scene in the Blue Mountains is thrillingly diverse and ever-expanding. With an unwavering focus on local and seasonal produce to bring vibrancy to the plate, the area attracts serious culinary talent and is well-endowed with plenty of eateries to match any occasion.
Best for: Intimate date nights
Local chef Mate Herceg has Mountain blood in his veins, which he calls upon to bring a deep respect for the land and the seasons to the table.
Helming the contemporary fine diner at Kyah Boutique Hotel, Herceg keeps his kitchen focussed on the provenance of the fare by working with local farmers and producers. The approach sings on the plate with dishes such as brined kangaroo with broad beans and goat’s curd to a classic Junee lamb rump.
Address: 13–17 Brightlands Avenue, Blackheath
Best for: Good times with good friends
Firing up Mediterranean share plates from the depths of a 150-year-old ironbark-fuelled oven, Ates (which, incidentally, means ‘fire’ in Turkish), is a place to clink glasses of beautiful wine over well-considered, locally crafted food.
Relish the char on dishes such as slow-roasted Rangers Valley sirloin or Clarence River octopus and toast to a good time with a local Darragh Chardonnay from the Megalong Valley.
Address: 33 Govett’s Leap Road, Blackheath
Best for: Special occasion fare
This yearly, twice-hatted fine diner in Springwood has levelled up the culinary scene in the mountains since opening in 2022. Inspired by the area’s rough-hewn, bush-bound beauty and history, the kitchen, led by executive chef Daniel Cabban, deliciously entwines native ingredients within each dish. Fold your napkin across your lap and settle in for dishes of quail with muntries and white asparagus or spanner crab with yoghurt and lemon myrtle. Choose from the four-course ‘darrbi’ menu or the seven-course ‘marri’ menu.
Address: 9–12, 125 Macquarie Road, Springwood
Best for: Relaxed and refined evenings
A restaurant underwritten by the values of sustainability, community and place, this sleek but welcoming Katoomba favourite serves incredible modern Australian fare designed to delight without costing the planet.
Share in freshly plated flavours that savour the current season, while also preserving it for later, such as in pork terrine with fennel jam, snapper with smoked tomato and za’atar, and confit trout with chive puree. Designed to share and enjoy alongside interesting Australian wines, this is uncomplicated yet elevated dining.
Address: 66 Katoomba Street, Katoomba
Best for: Dining with the in-laws
Refined elegance is the order of the day at Darley’s Restaurant at Lilianfels Resort and Spa. With views that tumble over manicured gardens and across the Jamison Valley, it’s one part Jane Austin setting, and one part Man from Snowy River.
The graceful dining room is full of knock-out bygone charm with crystal chandeliers, white-clothed tables, lead-light windows and ornate fireplaces. The food is as equally embellished but, despite the gilt dining room, undeniably contemporary with dishes such as coral trout with zucchini and koji, and marinated scallops with lemon myrtle.
Address: 5–19 Lilianfels Avenue, Katoomba
Best for: Come-as-you-are casualness
A place to worship flavours and friends, this restaurant and bar is set in the former St Andrew’s Church, but these days, the service here is geared to more convivial congregations and everyone is welcome to come along and partake in fresh eats and some well-shaken cocktails.
From brunch to dinner and drinks, enjoy dishes of lemon-garlic roast chicken, slow-braised osso buco and bush tomato spiced barramundi.
Address: 56–64 Waratah Street, Katoomba
Best for: Purposeful paddock to plate
With organic produce plucked from right outside the dining room to land artfully on your plate, this fine diner set on a working farm certainly practices what it preaches. And what it preaches is to eat well, regionally and seasonally. You’ll do all of the above here as you take your place in the elegant, warm-textured, 60-seater restaurant and embark on a set menu that may meander from a smoked Murray cod starter to simple but beautifully cooked lamb, and a sweet fig leaf semolina.
Address: 3–7 Peachtree Road, Megalong Valley
Best for: Gazing outwards
Set in the boutique hotel of the same name, this is the place to choose if you just can’t get enough of those hazy blue peaks. Perched for panoramic views of the Jamison Valley, Echoes Restaurant still manages to draw your attention back to the table with plates of well-finessed classics, such as grass-fed lamb rump backstrap crusted with herb butter and served on a bed of couscous or the char-grilled angus tenderloin with parsnip gratin. Sunny outdoor dining is the top billing, but dinner here on a wintry evening is just as lovely.
Address: 3 Lilianfels Avenue, Katoomba
Best for: Cottage vibes
It doesn’t get more Blue Mountains than dining in the charming heritage cottage that houses Pins on Lurline. A Katoomba icon built in 1898, the cottage has lived many lives, but perhaps is living its best yet as this light-filled and elegant dining room where a degustation of six or 10 courses are enjoyed alongside wines from the region and beyond.
You may encounter slow-cooked wagyu beef cheeks or black garlic and rosemary pork belly, but you’ll most certainly encounter a good time.
Address: 132 Lurline Street, Katoomba
Best for: Casual sessions
Beginning its life as the Kurrajong Heights Hotel in 1928, this vast establishment was purposefully built with eyes clamped on the scenic vistas toward Sydney. Its modern incarnation is as the Archibald Hotel and this Hawkesbury Hideout on Bells Line of Road is the perfect place to raise a glass to a hike well-completed or a weekend away from it all. Gastro pub classics of braised beef cheeks and sausage linguini are pleasingly rib-sticking in the cooler months, while burgers and pizza will fuel summer walks.
Address: 1349 Bells Line of Road, Kurrajong
Best for: Long lunches in the garden
Set in the exquisitely manicured 15-hectare Mayfield Garden, Mayfield Restaurant makes a lovely bookend to a day strolling the elegantly landscaped green spaces. Start with a coffee before you explore the gardens, then return for a luxurious lunch in the seasonally-driven restaurant.
You can also book in for the three-course dinner after the garden closes. Expect prettily plated dishes the likes of sugar-salt cured duck salad, confit chicken Maryland or chilli and lime prawns.
Address: 530 Mayfield Road, Oberon
Best for: Hatted elegance
Sourcing their produce from within a one-hour radius, this restaurant located between the Blue Mountains and the Hawkesbury is blessed with a cornucopia of seasonal harvests within easy reach. Awarded a chef’s hat in the Good Food Guide 2023, the kitchen team helmed by chef Will Houia creates playful but uncomplicated dishes that allow the ingredients to speak for themselves. Set in the luxe Spicers Sangoma Retreat and open to all for lunch and dinner seven days a week, you’ll find intricate flavours arranged in plates of spring lamb with peas and jus, corn fritters with zucchini, and charred asparagus with custard and lemon.
Address: 70 Grandview Lane, Bowen Mountain
Best for: Bubbles and tea with views
A mountains classic, Wintergarden at the Hydro Majestic is a must-do experience when visiting the region. While you can partake in the nightly two- or three-course dinner, the real show-stopper is the daily high tea, which runs from 11am–3pm.
Between morsels of petit fours and finger sandwiches, take in those drama-filled Megalong Valley vistas and, if you’re in a celebratory mood, be sure to opt in for the Eastern Luxurious High Tea, which includes a glass of French Champagne.
Address: 52–58 Great Western Highway, Medlow Bath
Best for: Fireside steak
Floor-to-ceiling windows showcasing the Jamison Valley beyond already places this restaurant located in the Fairmont Resort Blue Mountains in our best dining list. But it’s the expertly tended grill that imbues cuts such as ribeye, beef tomahawk and wagyu rump with perfect char that ensures it earns its position. Open daily, the restaurant takes pains not to sideline those who prefer seafood or vegetables with equally delicious dishes such as flame-licked hibachi octopus with chimichurri and globe artichokes with whipped Stracciatella. But if you’re here for the meat, reach for your inner carnivore with the exquisite Angus Reserve bone-in ribeye at $120 per kilogram.
Address: 1 Sublime Point Road, Leura
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