Modern Australian
Men's Weekly

.

How Australians talk about tucker is a story that'll make you want to eat the bum out of an elephant

  • Written by Howard Manns, Lecturer in Linguistics, Monash University
How Australians talk about tucker is a story that'll make you want to eat the bum out of an elephant

Not to put a damper on things, but Australian food hasn’t always made us happy little Vegemites.

One needn’t look further than the humble meat pie to see how our love/hate relationship with Aussie tucker has evolved. In the early 20th century, the dog’s eye was just a cheap staple on our menus and was peddled by roaming pie-carts.

So low was the lowly meat pie that it became a pejorative term for second-rate boxers, racehorses and bookies. The Australian meat pie western took its place alongside the spaghetti western as a low-quality US cowboy flick not actually filmed in the US (the latter were filmed in Italy).

Read more: Why would anyone shiver their timbers? Here’s how pirate words arrr preserving old language

But Australians love an underdog, and things began to look up for the meatie from the second world war. When American soldiers arrived, their “Pocket Guide to Australia” noted that meat pies were

the Australian version of the hot dog.

And since at least the 1970s, we’ve had the high mark of patriotism being as Australian as a meat pie.

Of course, modern Australian (mod Oz) cuisine is much more than meat pies and steak and cake (in the words of author Patrick White). So, we thought we’d play babbler (babbling brook “cook”) and cook up a tale of Aussie tucker and its words — a kind of degustation with gobbets of linguistic and culinary history. .

Classy eating, bush tucker and the wallaby trail

From the time of settlement, Australian eating was a story of haves and have nots.

The first Australian cookbook was released in 1864 under the title An Australian Aristologist. The aristologist was the foodie of the 19th century, but the word never took off, pushed out by others like gourmet — French has always given the dining experience a certain je ne sais quoi.

The Australian Aristologist (prominent Tasmanian, Edward Abbott) extolled the virtues of herb gardens, yeast and 30 or so types of bread, but his privilege led him to largely ignore the core staple of many everyday Australians —damper.

This simple, unleavened bread baked in ashes comprised (along with tea and mutton) the bushman’s dinner. It was the linguistic offspring of the original British damper “anything that took the edge off an appetite” with a verbal twist (to damp down “cover a fire with coal or ashes to keep it burning slowly”).

Life could be rough for the bushman and the itinerant worker. Those lucky enough to make tucker (“earn enough to eat”) might tuck in to (“eat”) some banjo (“a shoulder of mutton”), the Old thing (“damper and mutton”) or the bushman’s hot dinner (“damper and mustard”). Those less lucky might be reduced to their billy, a duck’s breakfast (“water”) and the wallaby trail (“the search for food or work”).

The bush diet could be quite muttonous (“sheep-based”), but meat-eating was fraught with gastronomic red herrings (John Ayto’s term). Underground mutton wasn’t mutton, but rather “rabbit”. Colonial goose actually was mutton (“boned leg stuffed with sage & onions”) and so was colonial duck (“boned shoulder with sage and onions”). But Burdekin duck was neither duck nor mutton, but rather “sliced meat fried in batter”. And we reckon seafood fans best steer clear of bush oysters (“testicles”).

Sausage wars and snake’s bum on a biscuit

The Australian food lexicon is often driven by our relationships with one another and the world.

German migration, especially to South Australia, led to the German sausage or the Fritz. However, first world war anti-German sentiment led to attempts to relabel this sausage the Austral. Such renaming efforts were to no avail in South Australia, where Fritz remains Fritz, but were more successful elsewhere.

When the British Royal family changed their surname from Saxe-Coburg-Gotha to Windsor in 1917, Queenslanders followed suit and the German sausage became the Windsor.

Perhaps our most honest assessment of sausages (but also snags, snaggles, snorks, snorkers, starvers, Hitler’s toe in its many varieties) comes from Australian homes and housewives: mystery bags.

Nancy Keesing’s “Lily on the Dustbin” is a treasure trove of such food slang and metaphor among Australian women and families. Keesing highlights heaps of fun ways of expressing hunger:

I could eat a hollow log full of green ants.

I could eat a horse and chase the rider.

I could eat the bum out of an elephant.

I could eat a baby’s bottom through a can chair.

And there are equally fun and cheeky answers for that perennial question, “what’s for dinner?”:

Snake’s bum on a biscuit.

Wait and see pudding.

Standby pudding.

Open the dish and discover the riddle.

Though humorous, Keesing notes that many of these sayings have sombre origins in the Depression era, when dinner really might have been an unfolding mystery from day to day.

Multiculturalism beyond the “culinary cringe”

South Australian Premier Don Dunstan’s 1970s cookbook begins with the following:

For the most part, before the Second World War, our cuisine reflected the decline into which the average English cook of the nineteenth century had sunk. After the war, the influence of migrant groups […] influenced Australian food habits for the better.

The delightfully named (and delightful) Australian food writer Cherry Ripe announced in the 1990s that we were saying goodbye to the culinary cringe – and ours was among the best food in the world.

Our acceptance of multicultural delights have played no small role in this.

For many years, Chinese and Greek pub cooks were relegated to cooking standard Australian fare (such as steak and eggs). But the dim sim/dim sin has long been a bellwether for the culinary delight to come. In fact, American servicemen in Australia during the second world war were informed in their “Pocket Guide to Australia” that the “dim sin” was the Australian replacement for the hamburger.

Read more: Oi! We're not lazy yarners, so let’s kill the cringe and love our Aussie accent(s)

But since then, we’ve seen a proliferation of multicultural food items — our cook’s tour has barely scratched the surface. Lots of words are like the cocky on the biscuit tin (“left out”).

We’d love to tell you more about how the chiko roll evolved from observations that chop suey rolls kept falling out of footy fans’ hands. And we’d love to tell you how the lives of the bushmen might have been easier — if they had only taken to the delicacies offered by Australian Indigenous people.

But alas, dear reader, we can but invite you to contribute your favourite food words and stories below!

Authors: Howard Manns, Lecturer in Linguistics, Monash University

Read more http://theconversation.com/how-australians-talk-about-tucker-is-a-story-thatll-make-you-want-to-eat-the-bum-out-of-an-elephant-121492

BMW Used Cars and the Appeal of Driving German Engineering

For drivers who value performance, comfort, and refined design, BMW used cars Melbourne offer an attractive way to experience premium motoring without...

Why Automatic Gates Melbourne are A Smarter Property Access

Security and convenience have become defining features of modern properties, and automatic gates Melbourne are increasingly seen as a practical sol...

The Importance Of Structured Commercial Office Cleaning In Busy Office Environments

Office spaces are dynamic environments where people collaborate, meet clients, and spend a significant portion of their day. Maintaining cleanliness...

Single Tooth Dental Implant for Natural Tooth Replacement and Lasting Stability

Losing a single tooth can have a noticeable impact on comfort, appearance, and confidence, which is why a Single Tooth Dental Implant is considered...

When Grief Doesn’t Follow a Timeline

Grief rarely moves in a straight line. It doesn’t follow stages neatly, and it doesn’t respond well to pressure — especially the quiet pressure ...

Steel Plate And Its Role In Modern Construction And Manufacturing

A steel plate is one of those materials that quietly holds the modern world together. It does not demand attention, yet it supports bridges, buildin...

Understanding Fat Transfer to the Breast: What to Know Before Considering the Procedure

Surgical options for breast enhancement have evolved over time, offering different approaches depending on a person’s goals and body type. One opt...

What to Do When Your Car’s Side Window Is Broken

A shattered side window is more than an inconvenience. Whether caused by a break-in, road debris, or accidental impact, it leaves your vehicle exposed...

Shopify Web Development and Shopify Website Development for Scalable Online Stores

Choosing the right platform is a crucial decision for any online business, and Shopify web development has become a popular choice for brands that ...

How a Burleigh Heads Plumber Tests for Pipe Leaks

Pipe leaks can be deceptively difficult to spot. Some announce themselves with a steady drip under the sink, but many develop quietly behind walls, ...

What Local Businesses Should Expect from IT Services in Melbourne?

If you run a Melbourne business with roughly 7–100 staff, you have probably noticed something over the last couple of years. The IT problems got m...

How Professional Cleaning Improves Indoor Air Quality

Indoor air quality (IAQ) plays a crucial role in our health, comfort, and overall wellbeing. Australians spend nearly 90% of their time indoors-at hom...

Solar and Solar Battery Systems: Powering Smarter Homes in Victoria

As energy prices continue to rise and sustainability becomes a priority for Australian homeowners, more families are investing in Solar and Solar Ba...

Plumbing Emergency Melbourne: What to Do When Every Minute Counts

A sudden plumbing issue can quickly turn into a major disaster if not handled promptly. From burst pipes and overflowing toilets to leaking gas line...

Why Older Melbourne Homes Require Detailed Building & Pest Inspections

Older homes make up a large part of Melbourne’s housing stock. Victorian terraces, Edwardian houses, Californian bungalows, and post-war brick hom...

7 Essential Tips for Choosing Reliable Moving Services in Perth

Moving to a new home or office can be exciting, but it also comes with stress, planning, and plenty of decisions. One of the most important choices yo...

How to Find the Best Real Estate Agent Near You on the Central Coast

Choosing the right real estate agent can make a major difference to your final sale price, days on market, and overall experience. The Central Coast...

Unlock Durability And Beauty With Burnt Timber Cladding Solutions

Imagine a home or commercial space that not only stands the test of time but also tells a story through its very facade. In the world of architectur...