Healthy Ethical Tasmanian

Chefs, this page is for you.

Why our wallaby should be on your menu.


Photo credit Smudge Publishing

Endorsements

“Lenah Wallaby from Tasmania is one of the finest red meats I have had the pleasure to work with. Being wild harvested it is free of agricultural intervention and is harvested in a highly sustainable and very humane manner. Lean, sweet and delicate in flavour with a tender texture, Lenah Wallaby is much milder than any other game meat. The versatility of this product allows it to be simply and quickly grilled, barbecued or pan fried but it can also enjoy a long slow braise for heartier winter dishes. Lenah Wallaby features on my menu regularly as I know my patrons like to enjoy unique and top quality Tasmanian produce.” Craig Wills, Stillwater Restaurant Co-owner/Executive Chef



Uniquely Tasmanian

Wallaby is only produced in Tasmania. The whole world produces beef, pinot, lamb and brie but only Tassie does wallaby. So let’s give a little shout out to some of the restaurants utilising this wonderful, truly unique product.

Mt King William Shane Viper

Becker Minty

Sugar Cured Wallaby – candied walnuts, tongola curdy, wild roquette, aged balsamic, extra virgin olive oil.

Frogmore Creek

Pepper berry rubbed wallaby, cassis gel, smoked macadamia and hazelnut crumb, pickled radish, button mushrooms and cassis jus.

Stillwater

Tasmanian wallaby topside, macadamia, green wheat, nasturtium, lemon myrtle, pear and ginger.

Luz Restaurant

Wallaby with cauliflower, onion, capers, sage, red wine jus.

South Wine Bar

Wallaby ribs

Bayviews

Sous vide Tasmanian wallaby porterhouse marinated with Tasmanian pepperberries and juniper buttermilk pastry tart filled with slow cooked onions, macadamia romesco sauce, whipped feta and roasted beetroot.


Wild – not farmed

Wallaby is wild harvested directly from Tasmanian grasslands. The animals are wild, living their natural life free from antibiotics, chemicals or human intervention.

All wallabies processed by Lenah must be brain shot by harvesters that have undertaken a TAFE course and been assessed in the field for competence by government inspectors. There is no stress at dispatch. This is important for animal welfare ethics and delivers consistently high quality meat.

With written permission from Smudge Publishing

Product specifications

UsePortion & Pack size
Porterhousepan fryfully denuded, weight graded  medium (120-160), large (160-200) 1 Kg pkt
Topsidepan fryfully denuded, weight graded. Medium (120-160) large (160-200) 1 kg pkt
Rumppoach, roast, braiseAvg wgt 100gm 1 kg pkt
Legsroast, braisetunnel boned, 500 gm – 1 kg
ShanksbraiseSmall 1/entrée ( av weight 100gms)
Large 1/main ( av weight 200gms )
10/pkt
Rib racksslow cookSelf frenching, 300 gm, 5/pkt.
Wings (forelegs)slow cookGreat finger food. 10/pkt
Tails & bonesconsommés, stocks, soups
Diced, mince, trimbraise, pies, terrines.

Versatility

Wallaby is very versatile. Cuts are available for pan frying, stir frying, slow cooking, roasting, braising, bones for stocks. We even have some unusual cuts like wallaby wings. Curious?

Stillwater Dark Mofo 2025 Char grilled wallaby wings, gochujang glaze, cavolo Nero and black barley 

Got a question?

Our GM, Michael Elfwing, is an Executive Chef!

Carpaccio and Tartare

Whilst wallaby is versatile, there is one way we don’t recommend wallaby be served. Raw. Read here why.



Nutritional Data

Can be found here

Stillwater Restaurant. Photo credit Smudge Publishing

Carbon

Wallaby produce very low levels of methane, unlike cattle and sheep.

A financial year 2023 carbon life cycle assessment concluded wallaby’s carbon footprint is negligible compared to beef, at just 2.39kg of carbon per kg of meat produced.

“Every time you chose to eat wallaby rather than beef you save approximately 5.5kg of embedded carbon”.

Over Lenah’s lifetime, this has abated over 92 million kilograms of carbon emissions by displacing the consumption of an equivalent quantity of beef.

If all the Bennett’s wallaby that are culled each year across Tasmania were processed by Lenah and consumed rather than beef it is estimated more than 24 million tonnes of carbon would be abated each year.


Frogmore Creek Wallaby Topside Dish Photo credit Jarrod Hellmuth