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Australian cuisine

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use Australian English Template:Infobox cuisine Template:Auculture Australian cuisine is the food and cooking practices of Australia and its inhabitants. Australia has absorbed culinary contributions and adaptations from various cultures around the world, including British, European, Asian Greek and Middle Eastern.

Indigenous Australians have occupied Australia for some 65,000 years, during which they developed a unique hunter-gatherer diet, known as bush tucker, drawn from regional Australian plants and animals. Australia became a collection of British colonies from 1788 to 1900, during which time culinary tastes were strongly influenced by British and Irish migrants, with agricultural products such as beef cattle, sheep and wheat becoming staples in the local diet. The Australian gold rushes introduced more varied immigrants and cuisines, mainly Chinese, whilst post-war immigration programs led to a large-scale diversification of local food, mainly due to the influence of migrants from the Mediterranean, East Asia and South Asia.<ref name="cultureandrecreation.gov.au">Template:Cite web</ref>

Australian cuisine in the 21st century reflects the influence of globalisation, with many fast-food restaurants and international trends becoming influential. Organic and biodynamic foods have also become widely available alongside a revival of interest in bush tucker.<ref>Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, Australia's food & nutrition 2012, 2012, p. 73</ref> Australia exports many agricultural products, including cattle, sheep, poultry, milk, vegetables, fruit, nuts, wheat, barley and canola.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Australia also produces wine, beer and soft drinks.

While fast food chains are abundant, Australia's metropolitan areas have restaurants that offer both local and international foods. Restaurants which include contemporary adaptations, interpretations or fusions of exotic influences are frequently termed Modern Australian.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

History

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Indigenous Australian bush food

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Indigenous Australians have lived off native flora and fauna of the Australian bush for over 60,000 years.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In modern times, this collection of foods and customs has become known as bush tucker.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

It is understood that up to 5,000 species of Australian flora and fauna were eaten by Indigenous Australians.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Hunting of kangaroo, wallaby and emu was common,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> with other foods widely consumed including bogong moths, witchetty grubs, lizards and snakes.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Bush berries, fruits, and nuts were also used, including the now widely cultivated macadamia nut, and wild honeys were also exploited.<ref name="cultureandrecreation.gov.au" /> Fish were caught using tools such as spears, hooks and traps; in some areas, the construction of complex weir systems allowed the development of forms of aquaculture.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Resource availability and dietary make-up varied from region to region and scientific theories of bush tucker plants being spread by hand have recently emerged.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Food preparation techniques also varied; however, a common cooking technique was for the carcass to be thrown directly on a campfire to be roasted.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Native food sources were used to supplement the colonists' diet following the arrival of the First Fleet in Botany Bay in 1788.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

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Development of Australian cuisine

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File:Tea and damper.jpg
Tea and damper – Alfred Martin Ebsworth (1883)

Following the pre-colonial period, European colonisers began arriving with the First Fleet at Sydney harbour in 1788.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The diet consisted of "bread, salted meat and tea with lashings of rum (initially from the West Indies but later made from the waste cane of the sugar industry in Queensland)."<ref>R. Haden, Food Culture in the Pacific Islands, 2009, p. 46</ref> The British found familiar game in Australia including swan, goose, pigeon and fish, but the new settlers often had difficulty adjusting to the prospect of native fauna as a staple diet.<ref name="cultureandrecreation.gov.au"/> Meat constituted a large proportion of the Australian diet during the colonial era and into the 20th century.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

After initial difficulties, Australian agriculture became a major global producer and supplied fresh produce for the local market. Stock grazing (mostly sheep and cattle) is prevalent throughout the continent. Queensland and New South Wales became Australia's main beef cattle producers, while dairy cattle farming is found in the southern states, predominantly in Victoria. Wheat and other grain crops are spread fairly evenly throughout the mainland states. Sugar cane is also a major crop in Queensland and New South Wales. Fruit and vegetables are grown throughout Australia<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and wheat is a main component of the Australian diet.<ref name="bulletin">Template:Cite journal</ref> Today there are over 85,681 farm businesses in Australia, 99 percent of which are locally owned and operated.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Barbecued meat is almost synonymous with Australian cuisine, though it is estimated that more than 10% of Australians are now vegetarian.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Modern Australian cuisine

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File:Tetsuyas-Ocean-Trout.jpg
An iconic Modern Australian dish: confit of Tasmanian ocean trout at Tetsuya's, Sydney

After World War II, subsequent waves of multicultural immigration, with a majority drawn from Asia and the Mediterranean region, and the strong, sophisticated food cultures these ethnic communities have brought with them influenced the development of Australian cuisine. This blending of "European techniques and Asian flavours" came to be known as Modern Australian cuisine.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Arguably the first Modern Australian restaurant was Sydney's Bayswater Brasserie (est. 1982), which offered Mediterranean dishes with Asian and Middle Eastern influences and "showed Sydney [...] that food can be adventurous without being expensive".<ref name="smh"/> The term itself was first used in print in the 1993 edition of the Sydney Morning Herald Good Food Guide,<ref name="smh">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> which placed 34 restaurants under this heading, and was quickly adopted to describe the burgeoning food scene in Sydney in the 1990s.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Leading exponents of the style include Tetsuya Wakuda, Neil Perry and Peter Gilmore.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

As of 2014, the term is considered somewhat dated, with many restaurants preferring to call their style "contemporary Australian cuisine" instead.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

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Fruit and vegetables

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Fruit

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File:Granny smith and cross section.jpg
A Granny Smith apple

There are many species of Australian native fruits, such as quandong (native peach), wattleseed, muntries/munthari berry, Illawarra plums, riberry, native raspberries, and lilli pillies, as well as a range of native citrus species including the desert lime and finger lime.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> These usually fall under the category of bush tucker, which is used in some restaurants and in commercial preserves and pickles but not generally well known among Australians due to its low availability.Template:Citation needed

Australia also has large fruit-growing regions in most states for tropical fruits in the north, and stone fruits and temperate fruits in the south which has a mediterranean or temperate climate. The Granny Smith variety of apples originated in Sydney in 1868.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Another well-known Western Australian apple variety is the Cripps Pink, known locally and internationally as "Pink Lady" apples, which was first cultivated in 1973.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Fruits cultivated and consumed in Australia include apples, banana, kiwifruit, oranges and other citrus, mangoes (seasonally), mandarin, stonefruit, avocado, watermelons, rockmelons, lychees, pears, nectarines, plums, apricots, grapes, melons, papaya (also called pawpaw), pineapple, passionfruit and berries (strawberries, raspberries, etc.).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Vegetables

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In the temperate regions of Australia vegetables are traditionally eaten seasonally, especially in regional areas, although in urban areas there is large-scale importation of fresh produce sourced from around the world by supermarkets and wholesalers for grocery stores, to meet demands for year-round availability. Spring vegetables include artichoke, asparagus, bean shoots, beetroot, broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, cucumber, leek, lettuce, mushrooms, peas, rhubarb, and spinach; summer vegetables include capsicum, cucumber, eggplant, squash, tomato, and zucchini.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":0">Template:Cite news</ref>

Meat and poultry

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File:Chicken parmigiana.jpg
Chicken parmigiana, colloquially known as a chicken "parmi" or "parma", is a popular pub food

Chicken is the most commonly consumed of all meats or poultry by weight, with approximately 47 kilograms of chicken consumed by the average Australian per year.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

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Sheep grazing in rural Australia. Early British settlers introduced Western stock and crops

Template:As of Australians ate around 25 kilograms of beef per person with beef having a 35% share of fresh meat sales by value, the highest of any fresh meat in 2018–19.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Lamb is very popular in Australia, with roasting cuts (legs and shoulders), chops, and shanks being the most common cuts. Lamb will often form part of either a Sunday roast or a barbecue. It is also commonly found as an ingredient in gyros and doner kebabs, brought by Greek and Turkish immigrants in the 1960s and 1970s. Australia consumes more lamb and mutton than any other country listed by the OECD-FAO (with Kazakhstan in second place). In 2017, Australians consumed an average of Template:Convert per person. By way of comparison, New Zealanders average Template:Convert and Americans just Template:Convert.<ref>Meat consumption, OECD Data. Retrieved 6 December 2016.</ref>

Lunch at an Australian pub is called a counter lunch, while the term counter meal is used for either lunch or dinner.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Common dishes served at counter lunches and counter meals are steak and chips, chicken parmigiana and chips, a mixed grill (an assortment of grilled meats), and roast lamb or beef with roast vegetables.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Game

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Kangaroo meat is available as game in Australia, although it is not among the most commonly eaten meats. In colonial-era recipes, kangaroo was treated much like ox tail, and braised until tender forming a rich gravy. It is available today in various cuts and sausages.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Kangaroo is, however, a common commercial dog food in Australia.

Other less commonly eaten forms of game are emu and crocodile.

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Fish and seafood

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Seafood consumption is increasing, but it is less common in the Australian diet than poultry and beef.<ref name="bulletin"/> Australian cuisine features Australian seafood such as southern bluefin tuna, King George whiting, Moreton Bay bugs, mud crab, jewfish, dhufish (Western Australia) and yabby. Australia is one of the largest producers of abalone and rock lobster.

File:Fish and Chips Ocean Foods Drummoyne.jpg
Typical serving of fish and chips

Fish and chips is a take-away food that originated in the United Kingdom and remains popular in Australia.<ref name="everwon3">Template:Cite web</ref> It generally consists of battered deep-fried fish with deep-fried chipped (slab-cut) potatoes. Rather than cod which is more common in the UK, the most popular fish at Australian fish and chips shops, at least in southern Australian states, is flake, a fillet of gummy shark (Mustelus antarcticus).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Flathead is also a popular sport and table fish found in all parts of Australia. Barramundi is a fish found in northern Australian river systems. Bay lobsters, better known in Australia as Moreton Bay bugs, are common in seafood restaurants, or may be served with steak as "surf and turf".Template:Citation needed

The most common species of the aquaculture industry are salmon, tuna, oysters, and prawns. Other food species include abalone, freshwater finfish (such as barramundi, Murray cod, silver perch), brackish water or marine finfish (such as barramundi, snapper, yellowtail kingfish, mulloway, groupers), mussels, mud crabs and sea cucumbers.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

While inland river and lake systems are relatively sparse, they nevertheless provide freshwater game fish and crustacea suitable for dining. Fishing and aquaculture constitute Australia's fifth most valuable agricultural industry after wool, beef, wheat and dairy.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Approximately 600 varieties of marine and freshwater seafood species are caught and sold in Australia for both local and overseas consumption. European carp, common in the Murray River as an invasive species, is not considered edible by most Australians despite being common in cuisines across Europe.

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Dairy

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Template:See also Ever since the first British settlement of 1788, Australia has had a dairy industry.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Today, the Australian dairy industry produces a wide variety of milk, cream, butter, cheese and yoghurt products.

Australians are high consumers of dairy products, consuming on average some Template:Convert of milk per person a year, Template:Convert of cheese, Template:Convert of butter (a small reduction from previous year, largely for dietary purposes) and Template:Convert of yoghurt products.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Beverages

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Tea

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For most of Australia's history following the arrival of British settlers, black tea was the most commonly consumed hot beverage; however, in the 1980s, coffee overtook tea in popularity.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In the 19th century, billy tea was a staple drink for those out in the Australian bush, such as those working on the land or travelling overland. Boiling water for tea in a billy over a camp fire and adding a gum leaf for flavouring remains an iconic traditional Australian method for preparing tea.<ref name="cultureandrecreation.gov.au"/> Famously, it was prepared by the ill-fated swagman in the Australian folksong "Waltzing Matilda".

Tea and biscuits or freshly home-baked scones are common for afternoon tea between friends and family.

Coffee

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File:Pellegrini's at night.jpg
Pellegrini's Espresso Bar in central Melbourne opened in 1954

Today's Australia has a distinct coffee culture. The coffee industry has grown from independent cafes since the early 20th century.Template:Citation needed The flat white became popular in Australia some time after 1985, and its invention is claimed by a Sydneysider (although this claim is disputed by a New Zealand-based barista).<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref><ref>Template:Cite newsTemplate:Cbignore</ref> The iconic Greek cafés of Sydney and Melbourne were the first to introduce locally roasted coffees in 1910.Template:Citation needed US military personnel stationed in Australia during the Second World War helped to spread the habit of coffee drinking, initially in the form of instant coffee.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

In 1952, the first espresso machines began to appear in Australia and a plethora of fine Italian coffee houses were emerging in Melbourne and Sydney. Pellegrini's Espresso Bar and Legend Café often lay claim to being Melbourne's first 'real' espresso bars, opening their doors in 1954 and 1956 respectively. This decade also saw the establishment of one of Australia's most iconic coffee brands, Vittoria, which remains the country's largest coffee maker and distributor. The brand has existed in Australia since 1958, well before it moved to the US.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

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The ubiquitous Australian coffee drink, the flat white.

To this day, international coffee chains such as Starbucks have very little market share in Australia, with Australia's long established independent cafés existing along with homegrown franchises such as The Coffee Club, Michel's Patisserie, Dôme in WA, and Zarraffas Coffee in Queensland. One reason for this is that unlike with the United States and Asia, Australia for many decades had already had an established culture of independent cafés before coffee chains tried to enter the market.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Other hot beverages

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The chocolate and malt powder Milo, which was developed by Thomas Mayne in Sydney in 1934 in response to the Great Depression, is mixed with cold or hot milk to produce a popular beverage. In recent years, Milo has been exported and is also commonly consumed in Southeast Asia even becoming a major ingredient in some desserts produced in the region.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

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Alcohol

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Beer in Australia has been popular since colonial times. James Squire is considered to have founded Australia's first commercial brewery in 1798 and the Cascade Brewery in Hobart, Tasmania, has been operating since the early 19th century. Since the 1970s, Australian beers have become increasingly popular globally – with Foster's Lager being an iconic export brand. However, Fosters is not a large seller on the local market, with alternatives such as Victoria Bitter and Carlton Draught outselling the popular export. Craft beer is popular, as well as distinctive products from smaller breweries such as Coopers and Little Creatures.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The Australian wine industry is the fifth largest exporter of wine around the world, with 760 million litres a year to a large international export market and contributes $5.5 billion per annum to the nation's economy. Australians consume over 530 million litres annually with a per capita consumption of about 30 litres – 50% white table wine, 35% red table wine.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Wine is produced in every state, with more than 60 designated wine regions totalling approximately 160,000 hectares. Australia's wine regions are mainly in the southern, cooler parts of the country, in New South Wales, South Australia, Victoria and Western Australia. Amongst the most famous wine districts are the Barossa Valley, Hunter Valley, Margaret River and Yarra Valley, and among the best known wine producers are Lindeman's, Penfolds, Rosemount Estate, Wynns Coonawarra Estate.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In Australia's tropical regions, wine is produced from exotic fruits such as mango, passion fruit and lychees.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In modern times, South Australia has also become known for its growing number of premium spirits producers, with the South Australian Spirits industry quickly emerging as a world leader with producers being recognised globally such as Seppeltsfield Road Distillers, Never Never Distilling, Adelaide Hills Distilling and many more.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Rum served as a currency during the late 18th and early 19th centuries in Australia when metallic currency was in short supply.<ref>L. Allen, The Encyclopedia of Money, 2009, p. 268</ref>

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Take-away and convenience foods

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File:Milk Bar, Miller Street.jpg
A traditional milk bar in the Melbourne suburb of North Fitzroy
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A fish and chip shop, Finley, New South Wales

The traditional places to buy take-away food in Australia has long been at a local milk bar, fish and chip shop, or bakery, though these have met with stiff competition from fast food chains and convenience stores in recent decades.

Iconic Australian take-away food (i.e. fast food) includes meat pies, sausage rolls, pasties, Chiko Rolls, and dim sims. Meat pies, sausage rolls, and pasties are often found at milk bars, bakeries, and petrol stations, often kept hot in a pie warmer or needing to be microwaved; meat pies are also a staple at Australian Rules football matches.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Chiko Rolls, dim sims and other foods needing to be deep-fried are to be found at fish and chip shops, which have the necessary deep fryers in which to cook them.

Bread rolls, with a variety of fillings, are a common alternative to sandwiches, with double-cut rolls (effectively two sandwiches) a South Australian specialty.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

The Australian hamburgers and steak sandwiches are also found at fish and chip shops. Australian hamburgers consist of a fried beef patty, served with shredded lettuce and sliced tomato in a (usually toasted) round bread roll or bun. Tomato sauce or barbecue sauce are almost always included. Bacon, cheese and fried onions are also common additions, as is a slice of beetroot and/or a fried egg, with other options including sliced pineapple. Pickles are rarely included, except in burgers from American chains.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Steak sandwiches come with the same options, but instead of a beef patty they consist of a thin steak and are served in two slices of toast, not buns.

Pizza has also become a popular take-away food item in Australia.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Commonly found at community and fundraising events are sausage sizzle stalls – a stall with a barbecue hot plate on which sausages are cooked. At a sausage sizzle the sausage is served in a slice of white bread, with or without tomato sauce and with the option of adding fried onions, and eaten as a snack or as a light lunch. A sausage sizzle at a polling station on any Australian state or Federal election day has humorously become known as a Democracy sausage.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Similar stalls are held in the car parks of most Bunnings hardware stores on weekends, by volunteers fund-raising for service clubs, charities, societies or sporting groups. The company supplies the infrastructure and enforces standards, including prices.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The halal snack pack ("HSP", also known in South Australia as an AB<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>) originated in Australia as a fusion of Middle Eastern and European flavours, common at kebab shops around Australia. It consists of doner kebab meat served over hot chips and covered in sauces (such as chilli, garlic, or barbecue sauce).<ref name="MTV 2016">Template:Cite web</ref>

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Baked goods and desserts

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Damper is a traditional Australian bread prepared by swagmen, drovers and other travellers. It is a wheat-flour-based bread, traditionally baked in the coals of a campfire. Toast is commonly eaten at breakfast. An iconic commercial spread is Vegemite, a salty, B vitamin-rich savoury spread made from brewers yeast eaten on buttered toast, commonly at breakfast, or in sandwiches.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> A common children's treat dating back to the 1920s is fairy bread,<ref name=anu2>"Meanings and origins of Australian words and idioms", Australian National University. Retrieved 12 August 2016.</ref> appearing around the same time as the Boston bun.

A classic Australian biscuit is the ANZAC biscuit, which are often homemade and so-called as they were sent by families and friends to Australian soldiers fighting in Europe and the Dardanelles in the First World War. A popular commercial brand of biscuit are Arnott's Tim Tams.

A classic Australian cake is the lamington, made from two squares of butter cake or sponge cake coated in an outer layer of chocolate sauce and rolled in desiccated coconut. Another popular cake and dessert dish is the pavlova, a meringue-based dessert; however, the origins of this are contested as New Zealand also lays claim to its invention.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The mango pancake, a stable of Yum Cha restaurants in Sydney and elsewhere in Australia, is believed to have originated in Sydney in the late 1980s and early 1990s.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

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Regional foods

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File:Pie floater in Adelaide SA.jpg
The famous pie floater of Adelaide

As well as national icons there are many regional iconic foods.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

South Australia has FruChocs, King George whiting, and a range of foods of German origin including mettwurst, Bienenstich (beesting), streuselkuchen (German cake)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and fritz. The state has its own iconic brands such as Farmers Union Iced Coffee, YoYo biscuits and Balfours frog cakes. Jubilee cake is a specialty of South Australia.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In Adelaide, a variant on the meat pie is the pie floater, which is a meat pie served in a bowl of pea soup.

Victoria is famous for its home-grown Melbourne invention, the dim sim.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Melbourne is also the home of the hot jam donut.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Tasmania has leatherwood honey, abalone,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and savoury toast.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Queensland has Weis Fruit Bar and claims the lamington.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Cities

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Brisbane

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The cuisine of Brisbane derives from mainstream Australian cuisine, as well as many cuisines of international origin. Major native foods of the Brisbane region and commonly used in local cuisine include the macadamia, lemon-scented myrtle, Australian finger lime, bunya nut, and Moreton Bay bug. The city's cuisine culture is often described as casual with an emphasis on outdoor dining.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Roof-top dining has become an iconic part of the culinary landscape, as well as a large street food scene with food trucks and pop-up bars common.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Brisbane also lays claim to several foods including "smashed avo";<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> although popularised in Sydney in the 1990s, smashed avocado was a common dish in Brisbane and Queensland dating back to the 1920s.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Brisbane also claims the lamington and the Conut.

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See also

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References

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Further reading

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  • Newling, J., 2015. Eat Your History: Stories and Recipes from the Australian Kitchen. Sydney Living Museums.
  • O'Brien, C., 2016. The Colonial Kitchen: Australia 1788–1901. Rowman & Littlefield.
  • O'Connell, J., 2017. A Timeline of Australian Food: From Mutton to Masterchef. NewSouth Publishing.
  • Santich, B., 2006. "The high and the low: Australian cuisine in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries". Journal of Australian studies, 30 (87), pp. 37–49.

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