Australian Food / Cuisine (2024)

Australian Food / Cuisine (1)

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There is no better way to understand a culture than to pick up a fork or tilt one's glass. Australian cuisine has come of age...

Food in Australia

Thanks to our multicultural society you can find almost any food that you fancy in Australia. People from all over the world have emigrated to Australia, and bringing their culinary traditions with them. Australia has an abundance of fresh food all year round.

Eating out is a popular pastime in Australia and we have a huge choice of fabulous restaurants, cafes, pubs, and bars in our cities and towns. In addition to speciality restaurants in a variety of cuisines such as Chinese, Thai, Japanese, French, African, Greek, Turkish, Italian, Mexican (the list goes on) many Australian chefs are renowned worldwide for ‘fusion’ cuisine which brings together European cooking styles with Asian and Australian flavours.

Does Australia have its own cuisine?

The Aboriginal peoples of Australia have hunted and gathered their food in the Australian bush for thousands and thousands of years. This food is known as ‘Bush tucker’ and is still eaten today by Aboriginal peoples in remote areas of Australia.

Bush tucker includes kangaroo, emu, crocodile, witchetty grubs, Quandong, bush tomato, yams and macadamia nuts. Many of these native foods have been incorporated into contemporary cuisines, and you may find these ingredients on the menu of restaurants and cafés in Australian cities.

Iconic Australian Foods

You are likely to come across these best-loved Australian foods when you move to Australia:

  • Vegemite – this thick dark brown yeast spread is a great source of vitamin B and is adored by many Australians. Australian children have it ‘for breakfast, lunch, and tea’ according to the ‘Happy Little Vegemites’ jingle of 1954.

  • Chiko roll – these spring-roll-like, deep-fried snacks can be found in convenience stores and fish & chip shops across Australia.

  • Tim Tams – made by Arnotts the Tim Tam is probably Australia’s favourite chocolate biscuit.It’s impossible to have just one: prove us wrong!

  • Lamingtons - invented in Australia, they are squares of sponge cake filled with jam, and dipped in chocolate and coconut. Perfect for afternoon tea.

  • ANZAC biscuits - crunchy cookies made of rolled oats, golden syrup and desiccated coconut named after the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps: these flapjack-like biscuits were easy to send to the troops fighting overseas, as they kept extremely well.

  • Pavlova - an Aussie BBQ is not complete without a Pavlova at the end. This meringue, fruit and cream dessert was created in honour of the ballerina Anna Pavlova who toured Australia in the 1920s. New Zealand also claims credit for the Pavlova - like religion and politics, it's best not to bring up the subject at dinner!

  • Weetbix – you can’t really get more Australian than these wheat biscuits eaten for breakfast which are endorsed by the Australian Cricket Team (Cricket being Australia’s national sport).

  • Meat pies & sausage rolls – an Aussie icon sold at football matches and bakeries across the nation. These snack-sized takeaway pies contain mincedmeat andgravy.

  • Damper – you may hear of this traditional bread but it is rarely eaten by most Aussies. Cooked over a campfire, it was the go-to source of energy for travellers, stockmen and drovers. Made with flour, water and sometimes milk.

  • Fish & Chips – a popular food to eat on the beach: delicious fish deep-fried in batter.Common types of fish on offer include Hake, Whiting, Hoki and Flake - a flake fillet is actually a fillet of Gummy Shark!

  • Hamburger with ‘the lot’ – despite the invasion of American Hamburger food chains you can still get a traditional Aussie hamburger with the lot – it’s a massive mouthful of meat, tomato, bacon, pineapple, beetroot, egg and lettuce.

  • Shrimp on the barbie – referred to in a famous television ad by the Australian Tourism Commission in the mid-80s to appeal to the American market, however, the word ‘shrimp’ is not commonly used in Australia. Instead, Aussies like to cook ‘prawns’ on the BBQ or ‘Surf & Turf’ which is a fish and meat combination dish.

  • The sausage or ‘snag’ – is a nod to our British heritage and a constant BBQ favourite. Snags are often put into a piece of bread with onions and tomato sauce. The ‘sausage sizzle’ stall is a typical fixture at markets, hardware stores, sporting events, or any other public events on weekends.

  • Barramundi – is a popular Australian fish variety. Australia’s clean waters produce an abundance of seafood. Seafood restaurants are common and popular as the vast majority of Australia’s population lives near the coast.

Australian Eating Habits

Australians tend to eat three meals a day:

  • Breakfast – eaten in the morning is either light and cold (cereal, toast, coffee) or heavy and hot (bacon, eggs, sausages, fried tomato)

  • Lunch – eaten around 12 – 2 pm is usually a light meal such as a sandwich, or salad. However, with the vast array of choices available now Australians are just as likely to have curry, noodles, sushi or pizza for lunch

  • Dinner – the main meal of the day is eaten in the evening

Australia also excels at brunch. Bigger than breakfast, smaller thanlunch, you'll find a weekend brunch menu at any cafe worth its salt.

Australians love to eat outdoors.

A BBQ or picnic is a typical ‘Aussie’ way to enjoy a weekend meal. Most homes have a BBQ and BBQs are readily available in parks and beaches.

While meat is a core part of the Australian diet due to Australia’s strong agricultural economy, more and more vegetarian eating habits are becoming common in Australia. You will almost always find a vegetarian option on any restaurant or café menu in Australia.

Increasingly specific dietary requirements such as Kosher, Halal, Gluten-free, and Vegan are being catered for in supermarkets, restaurants, and cafes.

Australian Food / Cuisine (2024)

FAQs

What is a traditional Australian food? ›

In a nationwide survey launched by Continental to find out which dish was considered by most residents as “Australia's National Dish”, roast lamb was number one. Other runners-up to the title of “National Dish of Australia”? Meat pies, barbecue prawns, and steak and veggies.

What is the most popular cuisine in Australia? ›

What are Australians' most favourite cuisines – across different diet types? Overall across diet types, Australian, Italian and Thai stand out as Aussies' top most favoured cuisines, followed by Chinese and Indian.

What is a unique food in Australia? ›

Non-Aussies rank our nation's weirdest foods (and they aren't holding back)
  • Fairy bread. ...
  • Chiko roll. ...
  • Stickjaw toffees. ...
  • Frog in a pond. ...
  • Spider. ...
  • Musk sticks. ...
  • Golden Gaytimes. ...
  • Sausage sizzle.
Jun 5, 2024

What is modern Australia cuisine? ›

One of the defining characteristics of modern Australian cuisine is its use of local, seasonal ingredients. Chefs source their produce from farmers and artisans who use sustainable and organic practices and often incorporate native ingredients like bush tomatoes, quandongs, and wattle seeds into their dishes.

What is Australia's national dish? ›

Roast lamb has been declared Australia's national dish in a major poll that shows we're still a country of meat eaters at heart. The poll, held on News Ltd websites across all mainland capitals, attracted more than 24,000 votes.

What do Australians eat for breakfast? ›

The traditional Australian breakfast is very similar, unsurprisingly, to a typical British or American breakfast, with a whole fry-up made up of smokey bacon, eggs in various ways, grilled mushrooms, and tomatoes, with the optional addition of hash browns, beans, pork or beef sausages.

What do Australians eat for lunch? ›

Lunch – eaten around 12 – 2 pm is usually a light meal such as a sandwich, or salad. However, with the vast array of choices available now Australians are just as likely to have curry, noodles, sushi or pizza for lunch. Dinner – the main meal of the day is eaten in the evening.

What do Australians call shrimp? ›

Australians, however, invariably use the word prawn rather than shrimp.

What do Australians call chips? ›

Australian and New Zealand English uses "chips" both for what North Americans call fries and for what Britons call crisps. When confusion would occur between the two meanings, "hot chips" is used to refer to 'french fries' and just "chips" is used to refer to 'crisps'.

What is Australian culture food? ›

Bush tucker and native ingredients

The taste of Australia is inherent in our traditional wild foods from the bush and rainforest – plants such as lemon myrtle, Kakadu plum, wattleseed and warrigal greens.

What is the dish in Australia? ›

If you're a fan of astronomy, the movie 'The Dish', or both, Murriyang, our Parkes radio telescope, in the central-west region of New South Wales is a must-see destination.

What is the most popular tradition in Australia? ›

1. What are the most famous traditions in Australia?
  • Boxing Day Test Cricket.
  • Small Talk with Cabbies.
  • Meat Pies at the Footy.
  • Muck Up Day.
  • Schoolies.
  • Triple J Hottest 100.
  • Bunnings Sausage Sizzle.
  • Bare Feet at the Melbourne Cup.

What is Australia's national dessert? ›

What is the national dessert of Australia? Pavlova, is the national dessert of Australia.

What are some native foods in Australia? ›

Australia's native ingredients and where to try them
  • Macadamia nuts. Medowie Macadamias, Port Stephens, New South Wales © Destination Port Stephens. ...
  • Mud crab. Walkabout Cultural Adventures, Daintree National Park, Queensland © Walkabout Cultural Adventures. ...
  • Saltbush. ...
  • Quandong. ...
  • Kangaroo. ...
  • Wattleseed.

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