|
 Before European
settlement, Aboriginal Australians ate rich and balanced diets
of seasonal fruits, nuts, roots, vegetables, meats and fish.
All these varieties and species were native to Australia. Bush
tucker is the name derived for this food.The Australian
continent covers an enormous range of environments - tropical
coast, rain forest, woodlands, open scrub, alpine mountains
and deserts. Aboriginal
people once lived in all these environments and continue to
live in most. The particular bush tucker eaten varied
according to what was available in the different areas, and
was also reliant on the seasons. An example of the main
types of foods consumed by Aborigines includes the following:
| FOOD |
PLACE |
SEASONS |
| Kangaroo |
Mallee, river
plains |
All year |
| Emu |
Mallee |
All year |
| Possums |
Scrub, bush |
All year |
| Wombat |
Burrows in
higher ground |
Spring to
autumn |
| |
|
|
| Snakes |
Sandhills,
scrub, bush, water ways |
Summer |
| Lizards |
Sandhills,
scrub, bush |
Summer |
| Frogs |
Waterways,
swamps |
Summer |
| |
|
|
| Witchetty
Grubs |
Red Gums |
Spring to
summer |
| |
|
|
| Ducks, Swans |
Waterways,
swamps |
All year
except breeding time |
| Galahs,
pigeons, other small birds |
Bush, scrub |
All year
except breeding time |
| Mallee fowls,
turkey |
Mallee scrub |
All year
except breeding time |
| |
|
|
| Turtle Eggs |
Trees, in or
on ground |
All year
except breeding time |
| |
|
|
| Honey Ants |
Mulga scrub,
land and plains |
After rain in
dry areas |
| Nectar |
Flowers |
All year |
| Manna |
Leaves/grass |
Late summer |
| |
|
|
| Honey |
Hollow trees |
Spring to
summer |
| Tree exudates |
Trunks,
branches |
Summer |
| |
|
|
| Fungi (a.k.a
'Black Fellows Bread') |
Underground |
Autumn |
| |
|
|
| Salt |
Dry water
course |
All year |
| Water |
Rivers,
lakes, tree root, dew on grass |
All year |
| |
|
|
| Fish |
Rivers, lakes |
All year
except breeding time |
| Crayfish |
Fresh river,
creeks, lagoons |
Winter |
| Yabbies,
shrimp |
Fresh water,
river, creeks, lagoons |
Summer |
| Turtles |
Rivers, lakes |
October to
march |
| Mussels |
In river bed
in sand |
Summer |
| Water rats |
Banks of
water holes, rivers |
Winter |
| |
|
|
| Bulb and
Stalk |
Billabongs |
Spring to
Autumn |
| |
|
|
| Yams |
Marshes |
Spring |
| Shoots |
Marshes |
Spring |
| Bracken
(roots) |
Anywhere |
Autumn |
| Wild onions |
Dry Areas |
Autumn |
| |
|
|
| Quandongs |
Mallee |
Spring to
summer |
| |
|
|
| Wild tomatoes |
Mallee |
Summer |
| |
|
|
| Berries
(toxic and non-toxic) |
Mallee,
bushes |
Autumn
(prepared if toxic) |
| |
|
|
| Grass seeds |
Mallee,
scrubland |
Summer |
| Acacia wattle |
Scrub |
Autumn |
| Salt bush
wattle |
Scrub |
Spring to
autumn |
With
their intimate knowledge of the characteristics of plants and
the habits of animals and sea creatures, Aborigines know what
is edible and what is not, where and when to find it, how to capture
or collect it, and how to prepare
it for eating. Food is closely interwoven with the
rich spiritual life of Aboriginal people. Aborigines
believe that people, the land, animals and plants are part of
a vast system created by the ancestral spirits of
Each food was created by the ancestral spirits, some are even
ancestral spirits changed into another form, such as the honey
ants of Papunya in Central Australia. Customs, rules
and religious laws govern most aspects of hunting, gathering,
cooking and eating of traditional bush tucker. Certain
people or groups of people have special links with certain
foods which are their totems. These people may be
forbidden to kill or eat their totems, except in special
ceremonies.
TRADITIONAL
COOKING
METHODS
Aboriginal
cooking methods appear deceptively simple that popular
accounts of Aboriginal culinary expertise provide little
insight into the range of procedures used or the suitability
of each process for particular foods. General accounts
talk 'of throwing the animal whole on the fire and eating
the meat near raw' or 'cooking damper on the coals'.
In reality there are different methods for preparing and
cooking each food.
The
most common methods are roasting on the coals, cooking in
the ashes, steaming in a ground oven and boiling. Some
foods such as turtles, stingrays and sharks are cooked by a
process unique to themselves.
ROASTING
ON HOT COALS
This is
basically a technique for cooking flesh. Foods roasted
on the open coals of a fire include most meats, fish and
small turtles. Meat is usually cooked in this way when
it has to be eaten quickly, though it is generally agreed
that it is better cooked in a ground oven.
A freshly killed animal is generally
first thrown on to the flames of a fast burning fire.
In the case of a kangaroo or rabbit, the fur will singe
quickly and the animal is turned over to remove all fur.
After approximatley ten minutes, when it is bloated, the
animal is taken off the fire, the intestines removed and the
fur scraped off with a sharp implement. The animal is
then returned to the fire which has subsided to form a bed
of hot coals.
If large
animals such as wallabies are cooked using this method, the
result is near raw or red meat in which the blood still
runs. This warm partly cooked blood is a delicacy
drunk by men and rubbed on weapons for greater efficacy.
Small long-necked turtles, snakes,
goannas and fish are also cooked this
Small
long-necked turtles, snakes, goannas and fish are also
cooked this way and are quickly cooked through.
Meats of snakes, goannas and turtles are well done,
whereas kangaroos are more commonly eaten rare because of
their size and the hunger of the hunters.
When
combined with slow cooking in the coals, the roasting
method produces very juicy cooked meats which have a hard
skin. The flesh of the game stays chewy - considered
by Aboriginal gourmets as a reason for their excellent
teeth.
BAKING IN THE ASHES
All
types of dampers, seeds, nuts and root vegetables are
cooked in the hot ashes. It is important to select
good wood for this cooking fire; many Australian nativc
bushes have slightly irritant properties and some ashes
are never used by Aborigines for cooking. Acacias
are safe and fast burning.
Some foods such as witchetty grubs
are simply rolled in the hot ashes; some such as damper
and goanna are placed on the hot ground beneath the ash
and covered with more hot ash.
STEAMING IN A GROUND OVEN
Aboriginal
cooks have developed a range of ground ovens with distinct
regional variations. In Arnhem Land, ground ovens
are the preferred method of cooking large game. The
oven is prepared close to where the catch has been
made. A pit up to sixty centimetres deep is dug and
the fire is set balancing over the hole, stones are placed
on top of the fire. As the fire burns, the red-hot
stones fall into the pit, along with ash and coals.
The ash and coals are quickly swept out, leaving as far as
possible, a clean bed of hot stones lining the pit.
Meat, fish, vegetables and turtles
are all cooked this way. Sometime food is wrapped in
paperbark bundles and placed straight on the stones.
Although the procedure for earth oven cooking may appear
relatively straightforward, variables such as the size of
the game or vegetables determine the size of the pit, the
number of stones and the cooking time.
In many areas these purely
traditional cooking methods are improved with modern
inventions. Food is sometimes wrapped in aluminium
foil before being placed in the pit.
BOILING
In most
Aboriginal communities the local store sells billies and
large aluminium boilers which enable large quantities of
meat and other foods to be boiled. Consequently
ground ovens are not made as frequently and daily meals
are now more commonly provided from the boiler.
Kangaroo
legs are often boiled, the sight of the bent foot and claws
over the edge of the pot is perhaps the most common is
outback camps. The advantage of boiling for large
families is that the meat or seafood juices can be utilised
in big rice stews.
CONTEMPORARY
RECIPES
Cooking
at home can now be far more tempting by incorporating the
wild tastes of the bush. Leaves, berries, nuts,
native eggs, bugs, witchjetti grubs, and moths can all be
used to create very different tastes in the kitchen.
Quick
Lillipilli Vinegar Bundaberg Bunya Bunya
Stewed Quandongs & Sugarbark Wattle
Mousse Macadamia Nut Crisps Illawarra
Plum & Chilli Sauce Emu
Egg Pavlova Bugs in a
blanket Witjuti Grub
& Bunya Bunya Soup Moth
Damper Kurrajong
Muffins Warrigal
Pasta Wattle
Icecream Pop-Moth
QUICK LILLIPILLI VINEGAR
This
vinegar has a bright pink colour which darkens slightly with
age. The small-leaved lillipilli fruits add
a delicate touch of cinnamon, cloves and nutmeg flavour to
the vinegar.
4 kg
magenta lillipilli
200 g small-leaved lillipilli fruit
6 litres good quality white wine
vinegar
Bring
all the ingredients to the boil, preferably in a stainless
steel pot.
Simmer for 4 hours. This should
reduce the mixture by half. Stand overnight in
cool place. Drain the
Vinegar. Bring gently to the boil, strain through
muslin cloth and bottle in sterilised jars. Store in
cool place upright to allow sediment to settle.
BUNDABERG BUNYA-BUNYA
This
recipe is probably best for the Early Bird Chef as it
needs to be stored for at least 3 months prior to
usage. It is recommended that the storage duration is
longer, however 3 months is sufficient for tasty bunya
nuts. Bundaberg bunya-bunya nuts make uniquely
Australian gifts.
2 kg
bunya-bunya nuts, boiled, shelled and halved
3 cups (800g) castor sugar
1 litre Bundaberg rum
water
preserving jars, sterilised
Prepare
a toffee by bringing 200 ml of water to the simmer and add
sugar while stirring constantly. Continue stirring
until the mixture turns a golden brown. Cool
slightly. Lay out the halved nuts on to a greased tray
and cover each nut with the toffee. Leave to
cool. Bring the rum and 500 ml of water to a
gentle boil in a saucepan. Carefully bring a flame to
the liquid to ignite the vapour. Extinguish the flame
after 5 seconds by covering with saucepan lid. Place
the toffee bunya-bunya nuts into the sterilised jars, cover
with the rum and seal. Store for at least 3 months
before using.
STEWED QUANDONGS AND SUGARBARK
Quandongs
or native peaches are a delicately acid fruit with a
peach-like texture when stewed.
FRUIT STEW
150 g
dried quandongs
3/4 cup castor sugar
juice of 11/2 lemons
500 ml water
Soak the
dried quandongs in the water until they soften. Bring
them to the boil with the sugar and lemon
juice and simmer for no more than 5 minutes, otherwise the
fruit will discolour and lose its texture. Stand
overnight. This is the only way to obtain the real
flavour of the quandong fruit.
*For the
Sugarbark recipe, refer to Emu Egg Pavlova
WATTLE MOUSSE
Delicious
recipe made to suit any season. Best served with
whipped cream, crushed macadamia nuts, and chocolate
shavings, hmm.....YUM!!
250 ml
milk
1/4 cup castor sugar
3 eggs, separated
2 tsp. Australia's Own wattle seed
mix
1 1/2 tbsp gelatine
750 ml thickened cream
Prepare
mousse moulds by lightly brushing with vegetable oil.
Soak the gelatine in enough water to make a paste. Set
aside. Add the wattle and half the sugar to the milk
and bring it to the boil, stirring. Make a mixture of
the egg yolks and the remaining sugar and pour in the hot
milk while stirring. Add the
gelatine paste and stir to dissolve. Cool at room
temperature. Half whip the
cream. Whip the egg whites until firm. To the
cool wattle milk mixture, fold in the beaten
egg whites and then the cream. Pour into the mould and
refrigerate for a few hours. To serve, tip out onto a
plate and garnish with custard or fresh fruits.
MACADAMIA NUT CRISPS
Sick
of chocolate biscuits?, well here's the answer. These
mouth watering biscuits are sure to tempt your taste buds,
and keep you away from chocolate......at least for a little
while anyway!!
250 g
butter or margarine
1/3 cup castor sugar
60 g macadamia nuts
1 2/3 cups plain flour
1/2 cup desiccated
coconut
Cream
the butter and sugar until light brown and fluffy.
Grind the macadamia nuts in a food processor or blender
until the nuts resemble coarse breadcrumbs. Mix into
the creamed butter and sugar mixture. Add the flour
and mix well. Spoon heaped tablespoons of the mixture
onto a lightly greased baking or biscuit tray. Flatten
slightly with a fork and sprinkle each biscuit evenly with
coconut.
Bake in a moderate oven (1800C)
for 15 minutes or until lightly brown. Allow biscuits
to stand on the trays for about 5 minutes before removing to
a wire rack to completely cool.
Makes app.
25
ILLAWARRA PLUM AND CHILLI SAUCE
This
delicious sauce has three flavours which separate on the
palate as sweetness, then chilli heat and lastly the
delicate pine and plum flavour of the plums. Lamb or
fish dishes are well complimented bv this sauce.
1 kg
Illawarra plums
1750 ml water
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup vinegar
1 tsp. fresh chillies
2 tsp. minced garlic
2 tsp. grated ginger
2 tsp. clarified butter
orange liqueur
3 heaped tbsp cornflour
extra 1/2 cup water
In a
stainless steel saucepan add the washed plums to the
water. Do not use aluminium cookware. Simmer for
approximately 2 hours.
Drain and push through a sieve,
measure the volume. Cool and store overnight.
Make a syrup from the sugar and
vinegar. Add 1 1/2 cups of the syrup
to the strained plum liqueur and reduce the volume by 1/4
over low heat. If the sauce at this stage is
overly bitter or dry, add more of
the syrup.
Very gently
fry the chopped chillies, minced garlic and grated ginger in
clarified butter. Add to the plum syrup and add a
touch of orange liqueur. Bring to the boil and thicken
with a slurry of the cornflour in the remaining water.
Store refrigerated in a sterile container.
EMU EGG PAVLOVA
Emu
egg has a very strong game flavour which can be made a
little less noticeable. If desired, by leaving the
separated egg to stand overnight. This dessert is
certainly a contender as a trade mark of Australian cuisine.
1
emu egg
1 tsp. lemon juice or vinegar
2 cups (465g) castor sugar
1 tsp. cinnamon
2 tbsp Australia's Own wattle seed
1/2 cup macadamia nuts,
finely ground
300 ml whipped cream
CRUST
Mix 100g
castor sugar with cinnamon and a small handful of ground
macadamia nuts.
CREAM FILLING
In a
saucepan bring to the boil 200 ml water, 2 heaped
tablespoons Australia's Own wattle seeds, and 3
tablespoons sugar. Reduce the volume by 25 per cent,
strain syrup, then return half of the grounds to the
liquid.
PAVLOVA
Whip
the egg white with lemon juice and 160 g of the sugar
until stiff. Fold in another 160 g of sugar.
Line a Swiss roll tray with greaseproof paper.
Lightly grease and coat the paper with cornflour. Spread
the meringue and sprinkle with the crust mixture.
Bake 20 - 25 minutes at 1500C. Turn
on to a tea towel to cool
then spread with the cream filling and roll up like a bush
man's swag.
SUGARBARK
GARNISH
2 tbsp
castor sugar
1 tbsp raw sugar
1 tbsp coffee crystals
To
make the sugar bark:
Lightly grease a sheet of foil on a
tray and evenly sprinkle the castor sugar, raw sugar and the
coffee crystals. Bake in a hot oven (2200C)
until a 'glass-sheet' of sugar forms - about 4
minutes. Cool and peel away the foil sheet.
BUGS IN A BLANKET
Balmain
bugs can be replaced by any local crustacean: yabbies,
marron or crayfish. The burrawang flour imparts a very
delicate yeasty-cheese taste, but note that it needs
extensive preparation to render it safe.
BLANKETS
(pancakes)
2 large eggs
1 1/2 cups milk
1 cup plain flour
1 -2 tbsp burrawang flour
(processed)
1 tbsp finely chopped, boiled
warrigal greens
butter for frying
Blend
all the ingredients to a smooth mix and leave covered
for 1 hour. Heat and butter a frying pan.
Ladle in sufficient pancake mix to thinly cover the
pan. Cook until bubbles appear and surface is dull,
then turn and cook the other side for 1 - 2 minutes.
Place pancakes on lightly greased dariole moulds (shallow
dishes). Bake in a moderate oven for 5 - 8 minutes.
BATTERED
BUGS
1 2/3 cups (250 g ) plain flour
3/4 cup (125 g) kurrajong flour,
milled from roasted seeds
pinch salt
warm water
Balmain bugs, 2 or 2 per serve
extra flour
oil for frying
warrigal greens, blanched
honey (sugar bag)
lemon juice
Blend flour,
salt and enough water to make a batter and leave stand
for 20 minutes. Coat bugs with flour, dip in batter
and fry in hot oil until golden brown. Place in
pancake lined with warrigal greens. Heat honey until
frothy, add lemon juice and drizzle over bugs. Garnish
with shallot curl and red capsicum strips.
WITJUTI GRUB AND BUNYA-BUNYA NUT
SOUP
This
delicious soup will vary in flavour depending upon the
particular grubs used. It will most often be described
as nutty.
15
large grubs (or 20 smaller ones)
15 boiled and peeled bunya-bunya
nuts
4 sticks celery
1 leek
2 onions
2 litres chicken stock
seasoning
bay leaves
whole black peppercorns
Bring
chicken stock to the boil and add finely chopped celery,
leek and onions. Bring back to the boil. Puree
grubs in a blender (partially frozen grubs blend
well). Roughly chop bunya-bunya nuts and add nuts and
grub puree to the simmering stock. Add bay leaves and
peppercorns and simmer for 1 - 1 1/4 hours.
Season to taste. Garnish with
cream and freshly chopped parsley.
MOTH DAMPER
This
damper is a delicious alternative to plain white bread, and
complements many foods, such as the Witjuti and Bunya-bunya
nut soup.
A
generous handful of moths
1 cup plain flour
1 cup self-raising flour
1 cup powdered milk
1/4 tsp. raising agent
water
Using a mortar
and pestle (or near equivalent, e.g. bowl and the base of a
tin cup) pound up the moths with the powdered milk.
Mix in the remaining dry ingredients. Add
sufficient water to make a stiff dough and shape into a
ball. Flatten the ball to a height of 2.5 centimetres.
Lightly flour the surface and cook in ash, camp oven,
bedourie or domestic oven until cooked through. Serve
hot when cooked or as toast.
KURRAJONG MUFFINS
These
muffins can be made in a microwave oven using a variety of
bush foods, including wild tubers from native parsnips,
yams, bush carrots etc. As flavouring try wattle seed,
whole small-leaved lillipillies, wild ginger fruits with a
few ground seeds or the kurrajong flour as below. This
flour gives the high fibre muffins a peanut buttery
taste. Try them with sour or whipped cream
1 cup
grated tubers (use carrots if wild tubers unavailable)
1/ 2 cup muesli or corn flakes
1 cup self-raising flour
1/4 cup kurrajong flour
1/3 cup brown sugar or honey
1/2 tsp. baking powder
3 / 4 cup milk
1 tbsp macadamia oil
Combine all
the ingredients, add remaining items and drop teaspoons of
mixture into a greased muffin pan. Cook in a microwave
on high for two minutes. Turn out to cool.
WARRIGAL PASTA
Perfect
served hot for a winter night's supper or chilled as a
summer dish with fresh damper.
2
large handfuls warrigal greens
250 g plain flour
150 g semolina flour
4 medium eggs
pinch salt
Blanch
the warrigal greens in a large volume of water for at least
3 minutes. Drain and lay out the leaves
on a towel to dry. Chop finely. Mix the dry
ingredients in a food processor and with the motor running
add the chopped warrigal greens and the eggs. Add
extra flour if the dough is still sticky or a few drops of
water to take the dough from the meal stage. Knead the
ball by hand for 3 - 5 minutes. Rest the dough for 15
minutes covered with a tea towel. Pass through a pasta
machine and allow to dry. Store frozen and prepare as
for commercial pasta.
WATTLE ICE CREAM
The
similarity of the wattle to a flavour mix of hazelnut,
coffee and chocolate comes through strongly in this chilled
dessert.
250 ml
cream
500 ml milk
3 / 4 cup (180 g) sugar
4 egg yolks
1 heaped tbsp Australia's Own wattle
seed
Heat the milk
and sugar in a saucepan, stirring. Remove from
heat. Slowly pour onto beaten egg yolks while beating
with a whisk. Add the wattle seed and return the
mixture to the stove over low heat and stir until it begins
to thicken (5 - 10 min). Allow to stand for 15
minutes, then add the cream and mix well. Cool and
churn in an ice cream machine.
POP-MOTH
Heat a
little macadamia oil (or other less exotic import) in a
saucepan. Throw in a handful of popcorn and two
handfuls of whole Bogong moths. Cover the saucepan and
continue heating while mixing the contents by shaking the
pan until the corn has all popped and the moths are
hot. The oil can also be sweetened by adding a
spoonful of golden syrup or honey after popping the corn.
Return
to home page
Return
to home page
|