logo
Ancient ingredients, modern plates: the Bush foods telling Uluṛu's story

Ancient ingredients, modern plates: the Bush foods telling Uluṛu's story

SBS Australia11-07-2025
Today, their knowledge of native foods remains essential as these Indigenous ingredients make appearances in high tea towers, fine dining menus – and hopefully, home kitchens too.
A taste of tradition Sharnaya Butterworth is a proud saltwater Butchella, Nunukul and Goenpul woman, and a bush food tour guide at Ayers Rock Resort in Uluṟu-Kata Tjuṯa National Park in the Northern Territory. Her tours highlight the deep connection between food, land, and survival, and reveal how ancient practices continue to influence the Red Centre's dining scene – while introducing visitors to some of the ingredients and traditions that have sustained communities here for generations.
Much of Sharnaya's knowledge has been passed down by talking to the aṉangu women around town, and she is keen to help preserve and share these stories.
One of Sharnaya's favourite examples of how the land has sustained communities? Old Man Saltbush. "The aṉangu hunters of this area actually knew how to utilise this bush not only for human consumption but also as a hunting tool," she explains.
Beneath the saltbush's silvery leaves, small reptiles and mammals take shelter – perfect for quick-thinking hunters. "You'd have the aṉangu hunters standing behind two fires on each end. Those lovely little critters… they're going to run out to this side." Aṉangu hunters would then dispatch these animals quickly, "Grab him by the tail and give him a nice boink over the head, there is your dinner," she laughs.
Reinventing Indigenous flavours Saltbush is still a valuable food source today – and these days, it's also popping up on some of Uluṟu's most exclusive menus. Across the sand dunes at Tali Wiru , a sunset dining experience at Uluṟu, chef Joseph Lui is putting native ingredients like saltbush and quandong on the plate in new ways.
Lui, a chef from the North Seas of the Torres Strait Islands, was drawn to Uluṟu for its unique flavours. "Here in [the town of] Yulara, we like to use one of our favourite native peaches called a quandong," he says. "It tastes just like a sour strawberry... Anything I could do with a strawberry, I'm excited to try with the quandong."
Credit: Voyages Indigenous Tourism Australia For Lui, cooking with native ingredients is about more than flavour. It's about learning from the land, respecting cultural knowledge, and sharing a deeper understanding of Country. "You have to come here, you have to try it, and it's going to change your life," he says.
At Ayers Rock Resort's Ilkari Restaurant, pastry chef Graciela Jonen adds a sweeter perspective to Uluṟu's native bounty. Her native Australian high tea features lemon myrtle scones with tangy quandong jam, rich wattle seed truffles, and her personal favourite – a native Tim Tam infused with saltbush. "We dehydrate the saltbush and crush it up and infuse it into the caramel to then create our native Tim Tam," she says.
Credit: Voyages Indigenous Tourism Australia, Mauro Risch photography While these modern menus showcase the versatility of native ingredients, their cultural roots run deep. "These fruits, they actually flourish only two months throughout the entire year," Sharnaya explains, as she introduces visitors to the vibrant quandong tree. Without modern calendars, aṉangu communities turned to the constellations for guidance. "When you see that beautiful Dark Emu up in the sky and you see his lovely head to the far west side of Uluṟu, on the horizon… that's when we gotta go start picking."
Credit: Peter J Ward 2011 The enduring relationship between food, culture, and Country is also reflected in new art initiatives like "Sunrise Journeys," an immersive light and sound show at Uluṟu and painting at the Gallery of Central Australia, co-created with aṉangu artists. "Bush foods depicted in the artwork, such as quandong, bush tomato, and native plums, are integral to aṉangu culture, representing not only sustenance but also ancestral knowledge of the land and its seasonal cycles," says Matt Cameron-Smith, CEO of Voyages Indigenous Tourism Australia.
Credit: Tourism NT/Helen Orr/Voyages "By incorporating these foods into the artwork, the artists highlight their significance in daily life but also cultural practices, offering viewers insight into the depth of aṉangu expertise in this harsh environment, and the enduring relationship between community and Country."
Storytelling through art and food Native ingredients once gathered for survival now feature in fine dining menus and large-scale artworks. But their significance remains the same - nourishing both people and culture. And a visit to sacred Uluṟu offers a chance to engage with these stories firsthand, whether it's tasting native ingredients on a bush food tour, learning from Indigenous guides, or experiencing how traditional knowledge shapes the flavours of the Red Centre today. For Sharnaya, the invitation is simple. "Let's go on adventure," she says - a reminder that every bite of native food carries stories of Country, connection, and culture. The writer travelled to Uluṟu as a guest of Voyages Indigenous Tourism.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rest Is History podcast hosts Dominic Sandbook and Tom Holland on success, prime ministers and Captain Cook
Rest Is History podcast hosts Dominic Sandbook and Tom Holland on success, prime ministers and Captain Cook

News.com.au

time4 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Rest Is History podcast hosts Dominic Sandbook and Tom Holland on success, prime ministers and Captain Cook

When author and historian Dominic Sandbook started The Rest Is History with his long-time friend and colleague Tom Holland in 2020, he says they 'never anticipated that we'd have any listeners at all'. But in just five years, what started as a lockdown side project has turned into a podcasting powerhouse. Since their first episode speculating about what constitutes 'greatness' in history, the pair are just shy of their 800th episode, having covered topics as serious as the Holocaust and the slave trade and as silly as history's top monkeys and mad Victorian era sports. It's now the world's most popular history podcast – and is a regular in the top 10 Australian podcasts across all genres – with more than 12 million downloads and 1.2 million YouTube views per month across a broad demographic of people, more than half of whom are under 40. But Sandbrook says that it wasn't until they started to get listener questions and suggestions from Australia that they realised just what a global phenomenon the show had become. A sold out theatre tour here in 2023 – tickets were also snapped up quickly for their coming live shows in November and December – brought the point home in the most satisfying way. 'I thought it'll be great to have a jaunt to Australia,' recalls Sandbrook of his initial scepticism over Zoom from his UK home, with Holland on a separate screen from his. 'It'll be embarrassing, obviously, when we do the shows and there's nobody there but that's the price worth paying for the flights. 'And then to arrive and to find that actually there were people who wanted to come to the show and they were very enthusiastic and they knew loads about history, it was lovely. It was one of those moments that I will never forget because it really brought home that we had an international community.' Sandbrook admits that prior to starting the podcast his knowledge of Australian history was 'literally nothing'. And apart from an interest in our megafauna from a previous visit to these shores, Holland's knowledge was largely limited to cricket. A passionate fan and enthusiastic player of the game, the coming tour sits neatly between the first and second Ashes Tests, timing he jokes is 'entirely coincidental'. 'I would say that my knowledge of Australian history is largely mediated through defeats of the England cricket team,' Holland says. 'And of course, our one glorious victory under Douglas Jardine in the Bodyline series.' Their joint historical blind spot also made things challenging when they decided to reward their Aussie fans with a 2022 series on Australian Prime Ministers – Julia Gillard was also a guest on one of their bonus episodes later the same year – to coincide with that year's Federal Election. Sandbrook, whose area of expertise leans more to modern history, while Holland is more of an antiquity specialist, was worried whether there would be enough of interest for even one episode. The pair were surprised and delighted – thanks in part to Malcolm Fraser losing his pants in a Memphis hotel, Harold Holt drowning and then having a swimming pool named after him and Tony Abbot biting into a raw onion – that there was 'unfathomable riches' in their political shenanigans to blow the series out to three full episodes. 'That was our first real engagement with Australian listeners because obviously we got quite a lot of feedback from that,' recalls Holland, with a laugh. 'Including my misuse of 'g'day'. I used it as a farewell rather than a salutation and I bear the shame of that to this day.' Just prior to their last Australian tour, the podcast released a two-part series on Captain James Cook, titled History's Greatest Explorer. Having left Cook's remarkable exploits on something of a cliffhanger after his charting of the Australian east coast in 1770, they say the promised follow-up episodes are coming and express huge admiration for a man they say has been much maligned by those who hold him up as a symbol of British colonisation of the country and the subsequent dispossession of its Indigenous people. 'I think Tom and I both felt after we had done the Captain Cook two-parter that maybe Captain Cook has been a little bit traduced and that it's very harsh to see him as a symbol of rapacious colonialism, when actually he's a fantastic sailor and is motivated by a genuine spirit of curiosity,' says Sandbrook. Holland agrees, arguing that the captain of the Endeavour, 'can't be blamed' for the penal colony that was established after his visit and that 'he did not establish the British Empire in either New Zealand or Australia or anywhere'. 'Doing that episode and doing the two episodes that we have in the bank, I found him a pretty admirable figure,' he says. 'We did him in the wake of a series that we've done on Cortez and the Conquistadors. And honestly, if you think Cook is bad – have a look at Hernan Cortez.' In an era where statues like Cook's are being vandalised or torn down, controversial figures from the past are being reassessed or retrospectively cancelled and school curriculums endlessly debated for being too woke or revisionist, Sandbrook and Holland are at pains to ensure that their podcast doesn't look at historical events through 21st century standards. 'I think there's generally two ways people use history,' says Sandbrook. 'They use history as a window onto the past – they're looking out at something else. Or they want to use history as a mirror reflecting back their own concerns and their own preconceptions and preoccupations and political debates of their own day. 'There's always a slight element to the mirror about it of course because you're imprisoned a little bit by your own time. But I think as much as possible the best way to view the past is to try to see it as something different, where people had different assumptions, different values, the context was entirely different.' Above all, they try to keep a sense of fun and curiosity about the podcast rather than approaching the past in what Sandbrook describes as an all too common 'spirit of finger-wagging and a sense of moral disapproval'. Holland says that one of the most common comments they get from listeners is that they hated history at school or they thought they had no interest in it – but now 'the opportunities to learn about history throughout the course of one's entire life now are infinitely greater than they've ever been before'. 'We've always said we're not a woke podcast by any means,' says Sandbrook. 'But we're not an anti-woke one either. In other words, we started in 2020 at the height of all the breast-beating about history and we didn't really engage in those debates at all. 'We were just doing our own thing, talking about the past. We both have a massive and unquenchable enthusiasm for the stories of the past and I would hope that comes through. 'Some people, particularly academic historians look at the past through with slightly narrowed eyes and pursed lips. They disapprove of people in the past, and they're disappointed by what happened.'

SBS Gujarati Australian update: 21 August 2025
SBS Gujarati Australian update: 21 August 2025

SBS Australia

time5 hours ago

  • SBS Australia

SBS Gujarati Australian update: 21 August 2025

SBS Gujarati is a part of SBS South Asian, the destination channel for all South Asians living in Australia. Tune in to SBS Gujarati live on Wednesdays and Fridays at 2pm on SBS South Asian on digital radio, on channel 305 on your television, via the SBS Audio app or stream from our website . You can also enjoy programs in 10 South Asian languages, plus SBS Spice content in English. It is also available on SBS On Demand.

Luxury Healesville retreat hits the market
Luxury Healesville retreat hits the market

News.com.au

time5 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Luxury Healesville retreat hits the market

A Melbourne couple who bought a forest escape in Healesville have spent nearly a decade quietly building one of the Yarra Valley's most successful short-stay retreats, with no ads, no social media, and barely a weekend spare. Now, they're putting the entire 6.45ha property at 269 Myers Creek Rd on the market with a $2.35m-$2.55m price guide. Bruce and Mandy Pollard purchased the property for $1.6m in 2015 and have run it as Myers Creek Cascades Luxury Cottages, a boutique couples-only retreat that's become a cult favourite with guests. 'We've had 100 per cent weekend occupancy for years,' Mr Pollard said. 'Only one Saturday night in 10 years hasn't been completely booked.' Each of the three architect-designed cottages features a king bed, spa bath with rainforest views, a double rain shower, wood fire and private deck. A fourth guest lodge includes a lounge, billiards table, firepit and kitchenette. 'It's consistent and reliable,' Mrs Pollard said. 'We've built it around peace, privacy and connection. 'It's not just a stay, it's a retreat.' A standard two-night stay starts from $890 and includes a breakfast hamper. Guests can also book extras like massages, hot air ballooning, wine and cheese platters, or champagne, all through a self-managed online system. The Pollards say they've never paid for advertising or used social media to promote the business, instead relying on loyal guests, strong reviews, and word of mouth. 'We've had guests return every year, some of them for seven, eight years running,' Bruce said. The couple live on site in a three-bedroom main residence with timber floors, a Bosch kitchen, multiple living zones and rainforest-view decks. Mr Pollard said the property's water is sourced from a spring-fed creek that begins in the Toolangi State Forest. 'You don't hear a car out here,' he said. 'It's just birds and trees.' Mrs Pollard said wombats, wallabies, echidnas and three resident lyrebirds are regular visitors. So are the same couples who've been escaping the city grind, often for a decade or more. 'It really resets your perspective on what matters,' she said. They're now relocating up north to be closer to family, and for more sunshine, travel, and golf. Jellis Craig Mooroolbark & Lilydale's Lindsay Ryan said the property offered a rare two-in-one lifestyle and business model. 'You've got a fully equipped family home and a profitable boutique accommodation business on one title,' Mr Ryan said. 'That kind of combination is incredibly rare in the Yarra Valley.' Mr Ryan said most interest so far had come from semi-retired couples or buyers chasing a flexible tree-change income stream. 'It's the kind of place people dream about when they say they want to escape the city,' he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store