On a bend of the Barossa's Pheasant Farm Road sits the working property Maggie Beer and her husband Colin have built over four decades, part vineyard, part orchard, part production line for the verjuice, quince paste and pâté that made Beer a household name. The farm shop sells those pantry staples alongside preserves and produce from other regional makers, with a tasting counter where visitors try before they buy. The adjoining Eatery serves lunch built from the same paddocks, and a cooking school runs demonstrations through the week. It is a rare thing: a self-made regional food brand that never decamped to the city, still rooted in the same ground where the recipes were first tested on family and neighbours. Wandering the orchard paths past quince trees and the original farmhouse gives a sense of the place behind products found in supermarkets nationwide, and the daily rhythm — tastings, a coffee, a wander past the chickens — has made it one of the Barossa's most visited stops outside the wineries themselves.