‘We’ve always cooked kangaroo. We still cook kangaroo. Although sometimes we use cookbooks now’: Aboriginal Australians and cookbooks
Aboriginal Australians have a long history of eating native animals and plants. Food preparation techniques were handed down through the generations, without any need for cookbooks. But colonisation changed the diets of Aboriginal Australians, introducing us to a processed diet high in salt, sugar a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | TEXT 2013-10, Vol.17 (Special 24) |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Aboriginal Australians have a long history of eating native animals and plants. Food
preparation techniques were handed down through the generations, without any need
for cookbooks. But colonisation changed the diets of Aboriginal Australians,
introducing us to a processed diet high in salt, sugar and fat, and causing a wide range
of diet-related health problems. Over the years, many Aboriginal Australians lost their
connections to traditional food preparation practices. In this paper, the authors provide
a brief overview of Aboriginal food history and describe a newly-emerging focus on
reintroducing native foods. They describe the work of an Aboriginal chef, Dale
Chapman, who is actively promoting native foods and creating a native-Western food
fusion. Chapman has developed native food recipes and a cookbook, in an effort to
make native foods accessible to all Australians. She promotes a future when native
foods are part of the identity of all Australians – both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal. |
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ISSN: | 1327-9556 1327-9556 |
DOI: | 10.52086/001c.28261 |