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WHERE TO VISIT >The region's best cellar doors

VISIT > CHALK HILL WINES, McLaren Vale SA

Nestled into the slope above McLaren Vale with a long, low view across vines to the ranges, Chalk Hill feels less like a single cellar door and more like a small, well‑edited village built around wine, gin, and golden hour. APPEARANCE > Nestled into the slope above McLaren Vale with…

VISIT > PAXTON WINERY, McLaren Vale SA

Paxton’s cellar door at historic Landcross Farm makes a strong first impression: biodynamic vines rolling down to the valley, a repurposed 1850s shearing shed, and a quietly confident organic ethos that runs from the soil to the glass. This is McLaren Vale in a slower, more grounded key – relaxed…

VISIT > D’Arenberg, McLaren Vale SA

Founded in 1912, D’Arenberg is family created a winery that has become synonymous with the McLaren Vale region, today many of the visitors are just as familiar with the architectural cube museum and the restaurant. I grew up in the McLaren Vale region and D’Arenberg winery was part of…

VISIT > PRIMO ESTATE, McLaren Vale SA

Step through the glass doors at Primo Estate and the first thing you notice is the light: refracted off pale stone, softened by timber, framed by rows of vines that run towards the Willunga foothills. It feels more like a contemporary Italian villa than a conventional Australian cellar door –…

VISIT > BATTLE OF BOSWORTH, McLaren Vale SA

Battle of Bosworth is one of McLaren Vale’s most characterful cellar doors: organically farmed, family-run, and set in a restored 1850s chaff shed and stables with sweeping vineyard views to Gulf St Vincent, it combines serious wine credentials with a relaxed, regionally grounded setting. VARIETALS > Battle of Bosworth is…

VISIT > KAY BROTHERS, McLaren Vale South Australia

Kay Brothers is a heritage-rich, red‑focused McLaren Vale address where old vines, traditional winemaking and elevated vineyard views come together in one of the region’s most characterful cellar doors. VARIETALS > Kay Brothers is, at heart, a Shiraz house, with the variety accounting for the majority of production and underpinning…

McLaren Vale >

South Australia’s McLaren Vale unfolds just 45 minutes south of Adelaide, where vineyards roll gently towards the Gulf St Vincent and sea breezes temper the warmth of the Vale’s sunlit days. While now synonymous with expressive Shiraz, Mediterranean varietals and a progressive winemaking culture, the region’s story begins long before vines took hold. In the mid-19th century, McLaren Vale was shaped by slate mining, its rugged geology yielding building materials that would underpin South Australia’s early development. As the industry waned, the landscape shifted again—this time to almond orchards, which flourished in the Mediterranean climate and remain a quiet but enduring thread in the region’s agricultural identity.

Today, that same terrain—undulating, coastal, and richly textured—has become a defining feature of both its wines and its broader cultural appeal. It also serves as a dramatic stage for the Santos Tour Down Under, the Southern Hemisphere’s premier UCI WorldTour cycling event. Each January, the peloton sweeps through McLaren Vale’s vine-lined roads and coastal climbs, drawing global attention to the region’s scenic beauty and reinforcing its reputation as a destination where lifestyle, sport and landscape intersect.

At the heart of the Vale’s community spirit is the McLaren Vale Bushing Festival, an annual celebration that speaks to both tradition and conviviality. Held during the summer harvest period, the festival’s centrepiece is the ceremonial “blessing of the vines,” a nod to European winemaking heritage where growers gather to mark the vintage ahead. What follows is a weekend of long lunches, open-cellar tastings and immersive food and wine experiences, where visitors can engage directly with winemakers, chefs and growers. It is less a festival in the conventional sense and more a curated expression of place—grounded in agriculture, shaped by history, and elevated by the region’s enduring commitment to craft.  >

WHERE TO EAT >

The Best Places To Eat in the McLaren Vale Region
EAT > Pearl, Aldinga Beach (15/20)
Pearl is the kind of beachside restaurant that instantly feels like the South Australian coast in miniature—the salt in the breeze, surf in earshot, layered sunlight painting the tiles and timber. This is Aldinga Beach at its best: relaxed, elemental, a setting that delivers unvarnished Australian hospitality with chef-driven finesse.…
EAT > Star of Greece (18/20)
If ever asked about where to eat in Willunga, The Star of Greece is on the top of my list, actually if its top of my list if someone asks me the best places to eat in South Australia (but maybe I am a little biased). I spent some…
EAT > Salopian Inn, McLaren Vale (17/20)
Salopian Inn is a location firmly lodged in my childhood mind, it was the home of family friends in my primary school years and I visited often. Decades later I returned to the restaurant with the same couple who had lived there in the late 1970's when I was…
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