Wellness
Central Coast Discovers Affordable Protein in Eggs, Legumes, Seafood
Central Coast eaters are finding affordable protein in eggs, legumes and local seafood as meat prices stay elevated.
Wellness
Central Coast eaters are finding affordable protein in eggs, legumes and local seafood as meat prices stay elevated.

Residents along the Gosford waterfront bought more chickpeas and canned tuna at weekend stalls than in previous months, according to stallholders at the Gosford Farmers Market on Mann Street.
House prices across the Central Coast remain nearly double their level from ten years ago, pushing households to stretch grocery budgets while still meeting daily protein needs of roughly 0.8 grams per kilogram of body weight. Recent national figures show average weekly meat spending in NSW households at $48, up from $39 in 2021, prompting many locals to mix in non-meat options that cost less per serve.
The Avoca Beach Surf Lifesaving Club runs a monthly community barbecue on the foreshore that now features lentil patties alongside the usual sausages, drawing 120 volunteers and members each session. Further north, the Terrigal cycle loop around Tuggerah Lake passes the Lake Haven Health Foods store, where bulk bins of almonds and edamame sell at $6.99 a kilogram, a price that has held steady since early 2025.
Australian Bureau of Statistics data released in March 2026 recorded a 14 per cent rise in egg purchases in regional NSW over the past year, with a dozen large free-range eggs averaging $5.20 at Central Coast supermarkets. The same dataset showed legume sales climbing 9 per cent, reflecting steady demand for lower-cost protein that stores well in coastal humidity.
Walkers on the Gosford to Terrigal beach path can stop at the small produce stand near Copacabana for fresh broad beans at $3.50 a kilo, enough for two protein-rich salads when combined with local ricotta from the Wyong Dairy Co-op. Cyclists finishing a loop at Tuggerah Lake often pick up Greek yoghurt tubs at the same Lake Haven outlet, each 500-gram container supplying 25 grams of protein for under $4.
Surf club canteens at both Avoca and Terrigal now stock hard-boiled eggs and hummus cups for members finishing patrol shifts, replacing some of the higher-priced chicken wraps that sold for $9.50 last season.
Start with one non-meat protein at each main meal this week, such as adding a tin of sardines from the local IGA at Wamberal to a lunchtime salad or stirring silken tofu into a stir-fry using produce from the Gosford market. Track weekly spend for a month and compare against the $48 meat benchmark to see the difference on household bills.
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Published by The Daily Central Coast