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From Pop-Up to Powerhouse: How One Hobart Chef Built Tasmania's Most Talked-About Restaurant Group

A decade after launching from a Salamanca Place kitchen, a local entrepreneur is reshaping the island's dining landscape with sustainable sourcing and community-first values.

By Tasmania Business Desk · Published 29 June 2026 at 10:09 pm

3 min read

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From Pop-Up to Powerhouse: How One Hobart Chef Built Tasmania's Most Talked-About Restaurant Group
Photo: Photo by Harry Tucker on Pexels

The Tasmanian hospitality scene has undergone a quiet revolution over the past eighteen months, driven largely by operators willing to challenge convention. At the forefront is a growing network of venues that prioritise local producers, seasonal menus, and staff retention in an industry notorious for burnout and turnover.

Industry data from the Tasmanian Chamber of Commerce suggests the hospitality and food sector contracted by 3.2 per cent in 2024, following pandemic-related closures and shifts in consumer spending. Yet pockets of genuine growth tell a different story. Venues focusing on locally-sourced ingredients and experiential dining have reported year-on-year revenue increases of between 8 and 14 per cent, bucking broader trends.

One operator quietly leading this charge has transformed a modest catering operation into a three-venue collective spanning North Hobart, Salamanca, and the northern suburbs. The group's flagship location, which opened on Goulburn Street in early 2023, now seats 85 covers nightly and maintains a waiting list stretching weeks into advance bookings.

The approach is deceptively simple: work exclusively with farms, fisheries, and producers within a 50-kilometre radius of Hobart. Menus change weekly based on seasonal availability. Staff are offered permanent contracts, professional development budgets, and a genuine stake in the business through equity schemes. Average hourly wages across the group sit at $28–$32, substantially above the current award rate of $23.23.

"The cost-of-living crisis has forced hospitality operators to make hard choices," explains a spokesperson from the Tasmanian Tourism Industry Council. "What we're seeing is that venues investing in their people and their communities are weathering economic headwinds more effectively than those cutting corners."

The group's third venue, which opened in Launceston's Cataract Street precinct last month, has already attracted attention from interstate operators curious about the model's scalability. Early trading data suggests average spend per cover sits at $62–$68, with 78 per cent of customers booking return visits within six months.

Supply chain resilience has also proven crucial. By building direct relationships with producers rather than relying on centralised distributors, the operation has maintained consistent ingredient availability despite broader hospitality sector supply challenges that plagued competitors throughout 2025.

As Tasmania's economy grapples with modest growth and shifting consumer preferences, the success of ventures marrying sustainability, fair employment, and quality dining offers a blueprint for others. Whether the model proves replicable across the broader sector remains to be seen—but early indicators suggest the island's food and hospitality renaissance may be just beginning.

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 Tasmania

This article was produced by the The Daily Tasmania editorial desk and covers business in Tasmania. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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