logo
How Pete McDonald & Howie Croft at Wedgetail Brewing made Australia's best beer: a stunning dark lager

How Pete McDonald & Howie Croft at Wedgetail Brewing made Australia's best beer: a stunning dark lager

West Australian27-05-2025
Tucked in a quiet corner down the back streets of Mandurah, no one would assume that Wedgetail Brewing is home to Australia's best beer.
But it's official: One of Mandurah's best-kept secrets is officially home to the country's best beer — a dark lager that snagged the champion Australian beer trophy at the Australian International Beer Awards, the world's biggest annual beer competition, earlier this month.
Pete McDonald and Howie Croft opened Wedgetail Brewing about 18 months ago and the taproom has quickly become a favourite among locals.
But the recent success at the AIBAs proved what locals already knew: the beers Howie and Pete and producing are something special.
It's a far cry from the shed on head brewer Howie's property, where the pair first began experimenting with homebrews.
'Our first beers were probably pretty ropey,' Pete laughed.
'Typically with home brewing, you start off with kits, a lot of the work is done for you, it's cheap alcohol at first, and then you start getting the hang of it, and with a lot of learning and reading, you realise there's a bit more to it.'
The duo met while working in WA's north decades ago and decided to take the plunge and open the taproom after Howie was made redundant.
The brewery's name comes from the Wedgetails the pair would encounter while flying choppers over the Pilbara.
The winning beer in question, the dark lager, is something Howie says he's been working on for a decade.
The dark lager is served looking as one would expect but the taste is a surprise. It has all the best tasting notes of a dark lager: coffee, malt, and chocolate.
But it leaves the drinker with none of the worst elements, no overwhelming bitterness and none of that fullness that discourages a second pint.
The dark lager didn't just take out the top gong at the AIBAs but also best independent beer and best dark lager.
Surprisingly, though, the brewery's newly crowned 'best' beer isn't the founders' favourite.
'Mine is the IPA. I keep going back to that, it's an older style traditional IPA and that's maybe my roots, I suppose,' Pete said.
'Mine's the draught, it's quite refreshing,' Howie added.
The venue is always busy and has been embraced by the community.
'This place wouldn't exist without them; we would have fallen flat on our face without that support,' Pete said.
Currently, the only way to drink a beer outside of the taproom is to fill up a growler, but the pair recently invested in a canning machine and are hoping to begin selling their products in local bottleshops soon.
'We'll get our heads around that, and we'll be canning our own product directly,' Pete said.
'It'll be a lot more flexible, a lot more efficient and cheaper. So watch this space, we'll be coming out with cans too.'
Wedgetail's hearty pub grub is also a standout, with young gun head chef Rhys Hura passionate about matching the quality of the beer to the food.
There's a roaring oven producing delicious wood-fired pizzas and Rhys hopes his steak sandwich will make the finals in WA's best steak sandwich awards.
'I've taken all the aspects of what makes a good steak sanga and reinvented it as something that's different, but also quite modern,' he said.
'We chose Scotch fillets because with the fat content, it renders down and comes apart really easily.
'There's a green tomato relish, which I made to be like a normal tomato relish, but green tomatoes have less tartness and less acidity than red tomato does.'
Rhys also uses the beer to flavour the food, with the darker beers going into the sauce on the ribs, the wheat beer in the fish finger batter and the barrel-aged beer being used to make ice cream.
The pair hope to have more success at the upcoming Perth Royal Show and have entered the dark lager, the double red ale and the draught.
'So we're hoping that the product will perform again,' Pete laughed.
Erskine's Boundary Island Brewery also earned a trophy for best traditional India pale ale with its The Deckie IPA, and King Road Brewing in Oldbury took home prizes for two of its King Road Short Stay Series beers: the American pale ale and NZ Cryo.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Young artistic talent recognised
Young artistic talent recognised

Perth Now

timea minute ago

  • Perth Now

Young artistic talent recognised

A Perth Modern student has been awarded first prize in Subiaco's annual Shaun Tan Award for Young Artists, with judges describing his portrait as 'subtle, beautiful, and skilfully rendered'. Raadin Ebadi won first place on Tuesday night in the upper secondary category with his piece titled 'Future Serenity'. Lower secondary category winner Jasper Lindon, from John Curtin College, was acclaimed for his artwork Father's Portrait, described as an 'honest and charming portrait with a refined colour palette'. In a pre-recorded video message, Tan — the Australian artist, writer, filmmaker and patron of the competition — shared his painting and drawing progression from childhood and showed some of his first artworks. He said a 'liveliness, colour, diversity and technical skill' was on show this year and people would be 'hard pressed to find any art show with this much diversity of subject and style and sheer energy'. The winners from the primary aged categories were Tanya Ziya Xu from St Columba's Catholic Primary School for 'Moonlight over the Lotus Pond', Eason Li from Arty Studio WA for 'Peekaboo', and Diarmuid Gannon from Bannister Creek Primary School for 'A Lion Who Wants a Friend'. Subiaco mayor David McMullen said the city had a longstanding commitment to nurturing the next generation of artists. 'This is the 23rd year the city has hosted this prestigious award for young artists. I'd like to congratulate the deserving winners and all of the talented artists who submitted their pieces on their imaginative creations,' he said. There is one final award up for grabs — the People's Choice Award — which people can vote for online or by visiting the exhibition in person at the Subiaco library. Winning artworks were selected by a panel of judges comprising artists and illustrators. The exhibition can be viewed at Subiaco Library until Sunday, August 3, or online via this link.

Sam Stosur annnounces birth of second child, daughter Emmeline Grace
Sam Stosur annnounces birth of second child, daughter Emmeline Grace

7NEWS

time5 hours ago

  • 7NEWS

Sam Stosur annnounces birth of second child, daughter Emmeline Grace

Australian tennis legend Sam Stosur has announced the birth of her second child, a daughter named Emmeline Grace. The former US Open winner took to Instagram to announce the news on Wednesday night. 'And beautiful chaos reigns once again,' she wrote. 'Welcome Emmeline Grace. Evie is beyond happy to have a little sister and we are over the moon. We love you so much little Emmy.' Stosur has been in a relationship with Liz Astling, who gave birth to Evie five years ago, since 2016. This time around the former world No.4 carried the child. The Queenslander retired from tennis after the 2023 Australian Open, following a mixed doubles loss alongside countryman Matt Ebden. She had retired from singles the previous year after a career which netted more than US$21 million in prizemoney. Stosur's straight-sets US Open final win over Serena Williams came the year after her maiden grand slam decider at the French Open, which she lost to Francesca Schiavone.

'Magic': The $5 Bunnings item Australians just can't get enough of
'Magic': The $5 Bunnings item Australians just can't get enough of

Sky News AU

time10 hours ago

  • Sky News AU

'Magic': The $5 Bunnings item Australians just can't get enough of

A US based cleaning expert has detailed a new hack to clean her trainers, and it is found in the aisles of a titan of Australian retail. Caroline Solomon shares cleaning content to her social media channels, including a thread of videos that have show her trying to clean dirty trainers. A But there is one video that she has posted which has led to a popular product sold in Australia repurposed as a cleaner for dirty trainers. 'I'm sharing two easy ways to make your white leather sneakers look brand new again,' Caroline said at the start of the video that she posted to her TikTok. 'The first thing you need of course is a Magic Eraser,' she told her followers on the video sharing sight. In Australia, the item in question is sold as a Mr Clean Eraser pad for $4.98, or a four pack which sells for $7.49. Caroline explained the method to clean dirty white sneakers with the Magic Eraser, starting by first running the melamine sponge under water to get it 'damp, but not soaked'. Then, she demonstrated gently scrubbing the foam block along both 'the sneaker and the rubber sole of the shoe'. The result? Instantly refreshed looking sneakers. Commentators were quick to praise the self-styled home guru. 'This worked for me,' read one reply. Another read 'I cut mine in half to get more use out of them that way! They get worn faster when wet so I also only wet half of sponge.' On the Bunnings website, the Mr Clean Eraser Pod Block has a 4.9 stars rating, with many reviews raving about how it 'works great' to remove scuffs and marks from walls and floors. However, none of the reviews made mention of its bonus use to clean up dirty sneakers.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store