On the Shores of Broken Bay

An immersive oyster-eating experience in Sydney, Australia

offline
An immersive oyster-eating experience in Sydney, Australia

Gliding over emerald bays and sparkling beaches, our seaplane sets down on the calm waters of the Hawkesbury river and surfs over to Mooney Mooney, a suburb of the Central Coast region of New South Wales, Australia. It is a cool, autumn day, with clear skies, and I am taking a weekend trip with some friends to explore the coastline outside Sydney. Today we are on our way to enjoy something wholly unique: an immersive dining experience at an oyster farm! As our plane slides to a stop next to a mini-boat, my friends and I find a tall, affable woman with long, blonde hair and a wide, ready smile, waiting for us. She introduces herself as Sheridan Beaumont, founder of Sydney Oyster Farms (SOF) and our host for the day.

We climb in to the open boat for the final leg of our journey, while Beaumont chats with us about her family and the farm. SOF began with her grandfather who set up a small patch 15 years ago. A third-generation oyster farmer, Beaumont now runs the farm that supplies oysters from Broken Bay to the Sidney Fish Market, the third largest in the world. The tour that she now runs is an attempt to diversify the business and an opportunity to work with tourists.

At the farm, we quickly don workmen’s overalls and wade towards the in-water dining area where, what looks like floating tables, await us. In fact, they were anchored into the mudbank, but this in-water dining experience felt dreamy, surreal. All of us excitedly take our seats, as Jason, our waiter, lays out the table with glasses and small plates. While we wait for the food to arrive, we soak in the magnificent views as the sweet chirping of birds punctuates the air. Soon, champagne, a cheese platter, dips and crackers arrive, and we get a quick tutorial on how to shuck an oyster as we eat: twist the tip of the knife in to the shell and puncture the bivalve until you hear a pop; separate the hinge to open up the shell; cup it in y...

Read more!