Great Places to Eat and Buy Victorian Seafood in and around Melbourne

Melbourne is one of the world’s great food cities with a broad and deep dining culture from fast and cheap street food to fine dining establishments. It is also a city that, more and more, is celebrating the rich and diverse resource of fresh seafood that is caught in the waters off our coast and raised in inland aquaculture facilities. Our top chefs understand the huge difference in quality that fresh, local seafood offers and make a point of using it to star on their menus. They often buy directly from Victorian fishers but also use retail outlets located around the metro area and peninsulas. Here’s a quick list of go to Vic seafood dishes and Vic seafood retailers.

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Victorian Seafood Lover’s Guide to The Great Ocean Road

The West Coast of Victoria boasts some of the best fishing in the country with three commercial fisheries based along the shores. Fresh seafood from southern rock lobsters to abalone to gummy shark and calamari is caught off the coast of the fishing ports of Apollo Bay, Warrnambool, Port Fairy and Portland. With the opportunity to dine on delicious local seafood and buy Victorian seafood direct from the boat, from fishermen’s co-ops and from fish processors a seafood trip along the Great Ocean Road is one to put on the list.

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Victorian Seafood Lover’s Guide to East Gippsland

The busy fishing port of Lakes Entrance is home to a fleet of small to medium fishing boats that work the waters just off the coast and further offshore around Bass Strait. A colourful array of boats anchor in the sheltered harbour in the heart of this East Gippsland seaside village and bring in a large selection of seafood harvested from the cool, clean waters. While a lot of the catch is sent to markets in Melbourne and Sydney, a good portion stays in the region supplying local restaurants making this one of the best places in Victoria to dine on fresh, straight-from-the-boat, local seafood.

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The Melbourne Seafood Centre

It’s five o’clock in the morning. The streets are dark and quiet. But in a large white building in West Melbourne, there is the daily theatre of commerce that is the Melbourne Seafood Centre. This is Victoria’s central wholesale seafood hub where fish from all the fisheries around the state are bought together with fish from across the nation to be sold to retailers and distributors.

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Lachlan McKinnon - A first generation eel fisher

Based in Sale, Gippsland, Lachlan McKinnon has transformed from a fisheries scientist investigating and researching different aspects of fish biology and fisheries ecology into a first generation eel fisher. Born and bred in Melbourne, Victoria, Lachlan spent many school summer holidays hanging around the fishing boats at Queenscliff and Apollo Bay, scoring the odd day trip out to work cray pots and troll for couta. ‘I loved the idea of being able to catch and supply such fantastic food in Victoria, supplied by mother nature’.

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Caring for Country. Below the waterline.

Luke Anedda pulls his boat onto the boat ramp at Port Welshpool. He has been out on the waters at Corner Inlet neat Wilsons Promontory since before dawn. Here the waters are shallow, comprised of five channels and seagrass meadows. Luke is just one of 18 commercial fishers working Corner Inlet. The fish from here, such as King George whiting, rock flathead, and garfish are considered some of the best in the nation and favoured by world renowned chefs such as Neil Perry and Ben Shewry.

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Victoria's Great Lobster Fishers. Part III

When Dayle Pranskunas was a three-year-old girl she watched her mother head off to sea to work on a scallop boat. “I just wanted to be like her,” says Dayle. “It seemed like the most adventurous way of making a living.” When Dayle was 20 she landed a job as a deckhand on a scallop boat working out of Port Welshpool in South Gippsland. “It was brilliant.

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Abalone and Fox - A match made in heaven

Craig Fox is a man on a mission – to ensure the long-term sustainability of the wild-catch abalone fishery in Victoria for his fellow fishers, and for his daughters Bree and Zara. ‘I am passionate about a long term sustainable wild-catch abalone industry and a secure future for both my daughters. Responsible fishing is critical to ensuring that we have an industry for many years to come’.

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A Brief History

Lobsters were regarded as "poor man's food," and there was no established market for the crustacean until they were canned and sent to feed the troops during World War Two. The American troops developed a taste for our lobster, and an export market into America began after the war ended and the fishery boomed. The lobsters were caught by fishermen from local Co-ops, and the lobster tail meat was sent to be canned by seafood processing companies for export.

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