DANDENONG STAR JOURNAL
Home » It’s the best of British

It’s the best of British

By Casey Neill

Rob Boyle’s British butcher shop has been a Dandenong fixture for 26 years this November.
“I used to work for a firm in Dandenong called Peter’s Meats,” he said.
“They were behind the post office. I started there in ’88, I think.
“They were Dutch background butchers. They were well-established, very good name.”
He worked there for six years.
“I was happy as a pig in mud,” he said.
“After working around the traps for a while, in Australia, finding my feet, I really felt at home there.
“But they said they were closing down by the end of the year.
“I think they’d been in Dandenong since the ’60s, or something like that.
“I wondered what to do. I thought I’d go out on my own and do a little bit of what I’d learnt from them.”
Rob went to extraordinary lengths to find the perfect location.
“I sat outside an empty shot in McCrae Street in Dandenong,” he said.
“An old butcher’s shop had shut down. It was up for lease and I sat outside it every day in my lunch hour and counted the people going by to see if there was enough to make a living.”
He sussed out his Lonsdale Street storefront in the same way. The previous tenant had gone bankrupt and owed the landlord money.
Rob covered the debt and took on the lease.
“I opened up Rob’s Continental Butchers,” he said.
“I tried to make things I’d learnt. It was steadily going along. But people kept asking me, with my accent of course, ‘why don’t you make pork pie’.
“I thought that was old hat and it wouldn’t go.”
But Rob decided to give the food from his homeland a chance.
“I asked the abattoir for a bucket of blood and he sent me 20 litres,” he said.
“I took two litres of it and got an old recipe out.”
The black pudding he produced sold out within hours.
“Now we make 260 kilograms of black pudding a week,” he said.
“We send it all over Australia.
“A lot of the hotels in the city here use it, like the Windsor.”
He slowly made the transition to the British specialty butcher he runs today.
Rob and his team make about 90 products, from British sausages to haggis.
“We don’t just do English, we do Scottish and Irish,” he said.
“The Scots were the first ones that came when I started making the products. They love the black pudding.
“The Scots are a tight knit community. The word soon got around.
“I think the British were a bit suspect. They’d had pork pies from the supermarkets. I had to reignite their tastebuds.”
Rob has won countless awards over the years and is in the running for more from the Australian Meat Industry Council (AMIC) for his chicken snags, chorizo and kransky.
“They say behind every good man is a better woman,” he said.
“Jill is always there to encourage me. It’s been a long road but it’s been a good road and I’ve always enjoyed coming to work and doing what I do.
“A lot of small businesses, especially in the meat industry, have gone under in the past few years. It’s pretty hard out there.
“Supermarkets are always trying to underdo you.
“It’s really up to the people to make sure small business keeps going.
“It’s about getting off your backside.”

Digital Editions


  • EPA, Veolia at odds over toxic-waste cell

    EPA, Veolia at odds over toxic-waste cell

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 228738 The state’s pollution watchdog says it remains opposed to a new toxic-waste cell at a controversial hazardous-waste landfill…

More News

  • Minister’s warm welcome to Wellsprings

    Minister’s warm welcome to Wellsprings

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532816 Wellsprings for Women welcomed the Federal Minister for Multicultural Affairs, Dr Anne Aly, who saw first hand the South East-based centre’s efforts to…

  • Food for thought ahead of bigger Ramadan Night Market

    Food for thought ahead of bigger Ramadan Night Market

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 467847 Excitement grows ahead of the upcoming three-week Ramadan Night Market that promises to be bigger and better, but existing traders in Dandenong have…

  • Two men arrested after Wallace Road assault

    Two men arrested after Wallace Road assault

    Two men have been arrested following an assault in Cranbourne on the morning of Friday 6 February. Officers responded to reports of three men involved in a physical altercation on…

  • Opposition inquiry call rejected after peak-hour train disruption

    Opposition inquiry call rejected after peak-hour train disruption

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 183562 The State Opposition has called for a formal inquiry into Tuesday 3 February rail network disruption, where peak-hour disruption left thousands of Cranbourne…

  • Roadworks cause havoc for Casey commuters

    Roadworks cause havoc for Casey commuters

    Roadworks on a major Clyde North intersection has caused gridlock during peak hours for many Casey commuters, some saying that their usual 10 minute drive has taken them close to…

  • Looking Back

    Looking Back

    100 years ago 11 February 1926 The new “Keep to the Left Rule”, which the Dandenong Shire Council has not brought into force, is not very strictly observed in the…

  • What’s On

    What’s On

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 390730 Victorian Mosque Open Day Mosques open their doors to visitors on this annual open day organised by Islamic Council of Victoria. Venues include…

  • The power of self-acceptance

    The power of self-acceptance

    Intrinsic in feelings of hope is the acceptance of the self and then the acceptance of the situation with the faith that there is some benefit in it. This attitude…

  • Jail for armed carjacker targeting elderly driver

    Jail for armed carjacker targeting elderly driver

    A would-be carjacker who held a screwdriver to his elderly victim’s neck and threatened to kill him in a home driveway in Keysborough has been jailed. Petap Kong, 31, of…

  • Letter-to-the-editor: Who will grow the trees?

    Letter-to-the-editor: Who will grow the trees?

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 492338 This summer’s repeated 40-degree days have made one thing unavoidable: Melbourne’s suburbs are heating up, and trees are no longer decorative extras. Councils…