@hacks4pancakes @Firesphere Halal Snack Pack.
Chips (fries), doner kebab meat (chicken/lamb), cheese, your choice of sauce (BBQ, garlic etc.)
Suitable for eating whenever you'd normally have a doner kebab, but with a fork rather than a massive mess down your shirt.
Annoying stereotypes about Australia: Do you ride a kangaroo to work?
(Photo taken in my work car park)
@hacks4pancakes I was under the impression handrolls/temaki are traditionally uncut in Japan and therefore not a unique Australianism. Although I’m sure our ingredients will differ. We may also blur lines between maki and temaki 🤷♂️
Being a small country with significant migration sources changing over time means our food influences have come in distinct waves. You can follow it in the suburban growth patterns. It’s like culinary geology
@VWDasher @hacks4pancakes damper is probably close to unique to us. Although I’m sure similar things exist elsewhere.
Generally the best thing about Australian food is the quality you can get for not much money…
Also good banh mi is available almost everywhere now…
No lies detected. Potato cakes til I die (probably from advanced potato cake consumption...) and "parmi" sounds just plain weird.
To boldly nom where no one has nom nom nommed before.
@hacks4pancakes It is weird.
A lot of things have a timestamp on them. 20 years ago I probably couldn't have told you what a HSP was.
When I was kid in the 80s, "take-away" was 'Chinese' or pizza. That was it.
Australia actually does have stronger claim to what we know as the Pav than NZ with a receipe from a 1922 cookbook titled "Australian Home Cookery". NZ did came up with the name after a famous Russian ballet dancer, but your version was very different (more akin to an ice block or sorbet). That said the Pavlova a food isn't particularly unique which why it's origins remain so messy.
The Flat White NZ has basically no substantial claim to it, if anything it's more likely English. As a primitive version was found in records there from the 1950s. Including a 1963 British film that has a character ordering one. Though much of what we know what would be a modern flat white would come later likely from Aus.
@Ali you can keep your sugar disguised as fruit and Russel Crowe, thanks!
But we’re keeping Jacinda because she’s awesome.
@hacks4pancakes ”You have a cuisine. It's mostly adopted from other cultures and stitched together, and mostly made to eat while 3 beers in, but you definitely have a cuisine.”
Yes, and except for the ”3 beers”, that’s like every cuisine in the world that has been in any relevant kind of contact with other cultures.
@hacks4pancakes if this were Sydney¹ and not Melbourne I would unhesitatingly say “pad Thai” and Thai food in general.
You were never more than 5 minutes' walk from a Thai place that'd serve a good meal for $10.
¹: at least, as of 15 years ago when I lived there
I would love to know about First Nations folk and their routine foods (pre colonisation).
@grb090423 @hacks4pancakes I'm not the person to ask, but here are some pre-colonisation foods I know from the western Victoria area:
Kangaroo: tail roasted on a camp fire is said to be practical and delicious.
Murnong / yam daisy: a tuber cultivated by people in western Victoria, it was often roasted. It's described as tasting like radish, although sounds like it has more sugar and starch.
Bogong moth: a migrating moth that spends the summer on mountains in Victoria and Tasmania, attracted large gatherings of people to mountains.
Witchetty grub: large off-white larvae of a few different moths, especially important as a food source in the desert.
Bonney Upwelling: this is an area of particularly rich fishing off the coast of western Victoria during the summer months due to a nutrient rich deep water upwelling. Oral histories of this phenomenon including utilising beached whales.
@coolandnormal @hacks4pancakes
Thanks for this! I'd heard of witchetty grub but not about any of the others. It's good to learn about this. Murnong sounds really tasty 😋
@coolandnormal @hacks4pancakes
Excellent. Thanks very much for the replies. Today I learned 👍🙂
@hacks4pancakes we are also honoured to have a thing called Chinese Food which isn't.
It seems some Chinese people came here, took one look at working class australians, dumped everything in the deep fryer, covered it in honey and put it on jasmine rice. Obviously everyone loved that.
We're now all aware this isn't Chinese Food and these days it lives under a subheading called Aussie Classics at many Chinese restaurants.