Describe patterns of change in Australia’s food industries and cultures, and through practical activities critique contemporary uses of foods indigenous to Australia and those foods introduced through migration.
Detailed example
Recipes of Australian cuisine
Students design and prepare a recipe that reflects their considered and justified interpretation of Australian cuisine. The choice of dish must include aspects of Australia’s food history while also appealing to contemporary Australian tastes.
The following is an example of a ‘practical activity’ and a ‘record of practical activity’.
Introduction and overview of the topic: What is Australian food anyway?
Australian chefs and food writers are forever pondering the above question. ‘Australian cuisine’ is both dynamic and evolving as well as being subject to perennial discussion. There should be no expectation that students reach a ‘correct’ position; this activity should provide ample opportunity for creative, enjoyable, hands-on participation.
Students devise their own answers to the question. To get them thinking about the question, present some of the prevalent opinions among Australian ‘foodies’ (or ask students to discover a range of opinions themselves). For example, consider the following quotations:
- ‘A uniquely Australian food culture can only be based upon foods indigenous to this country’ (Vic Cherikoff, author of
Uniquely Australian: a wild cookbook: the beginnings of an Australian bushfood cuisine 1994)
- ‘Unlike other societies with a dominant agrarian history, we have inherited no cuisine in the traditional sense’ (Michael Symons, author of
One continuous picnic 1982)
- ‘From earliest colonial days, Australian cooks have improvised and invented, transforming and ‘Australianising’ foods and recipes from other countries, along the way laying the foundations of a distinctive food culture’ (Barbara Santich, author of
Bold palates: Australia’s gastronomic heritage 2012)
- ‘Restaurants whose product includes contemporary adaptations, interpretations or fusions of exotic influences are frequently termed Modern Australian’ (‘Australian cuisine’, Wikipedia).
Also consider some of the many sources (YouTube, Instagram, food blogs, online magazines) of ‘iconic Australian foods, which may include Vegemite, meat pies, Tim Tams, pavlova, Anzac biscuits, vanilla slices, burgers with beetroot, prawns on the barbecue and so on. Ask students to consider: Are these products important to a discussion on national cuisine or are they just about nostalgia and marketing?
Activity
Students draw conclusions about their own concept of ‘Australian cuisine’ and design a recipe based on that concept through critiquing contemporary uses of foods indigenous to Australia and those foods introduced through migration. Their records should include an explanation of their recipe design, as related to the topic of ‘What is Australian food’? Students critique contemporary uses of foods indigenous to Australia and those foods introduced through migration.
Students are encouraged to be creative in their approach but they should use ingredients indigenous to Australia and / or ingredients introduced through migration. Students reflect on these two factors in their decision-making and refer to them in their two- to three-minute podcast, which is their record of practical activity.