There’s a warmth about Terri Waller that has nothing to do with the piping hot coffee she serves. She crackles with creativity and insight, bringing all within her orbit into her light.
“You’re from Country,” she immediately told me when I first met her at in 2017. As a city office worker for almost thirty years, this took me by surprise.
“I grew up in the Territory,” I answered. “But we left when I was eight.”
“I can still feel it in you,” she said, drawing me into a hug.
Terri Waller trained as a teacher before founding SevGen and the Deadly Espresso café. Source: Deadly Espresso / Facebook
Seven generations past and future
It’s this intuition and deep love for people that compelled education-trained Terri to start – a social enterprise that aims to create wellness through connection and relationships.
Our desire to celebrate, validate and reinvigorate Indigenous ways of being occurs every day at the café.
SevGen is short for “seven generations”, named for the Indigenous belief that today’s actions will affect seven generations into the future. This belief requires us to draw on the wisdom of seven generations of ancestors, while encouraging us to be more conscious of the way we are in the world today., a café in Eumundi, Queensland, and Deadly Espresso on Walkabout, a mobile food truck that visits festivals and events, were born out of this philosophy. One of , the café has been growing since 2014, when it started with a stall at Eumundi markets.
Korongs - pasties - are filled with emu, crocodile or kangaroo. Source: Deadly Espresso / Facebook
“Our business is about the social impact outcomes,” Terri tells SBS. “We are spoken of as a true social enterprise by PWC executives and social work academics.
“Our desire to celebrate, validate and reinvigorate Indigenous ways of being occurs every day at the café.”
Fresh bunya nuts are on the menu when in season. They make a delicious pesto or pudding. Source: Deadly Espresso / Facebook
Seasonal bushtucker
The café serves critically acclaimed coffee along with bushtucker and medicinal teas. The wattleseed and “Dirty Myrtle” bushtucker coffees are a favourite, as are dishes like Emu, Crocodile or Kangaroo korongs (pasties), Wild mulberry topped scones, Carrot cake with lemon myrtle and tumeric icing, Strawberry gum and berry pudding with lemon myrtle cream and Bushtucker spiced roast vegetable and quinoa salad.
“I love that we get to celebrate Country and Culture by showcasing native botanics and commercially available game meats,” says Terri.
“Our menu has a few staples but gets added to according to what’s available seasonally,” explains Terri. “We like to grow it, forage it or get donated as much as we can, but we also buy from local markets and game meat suppliers.“Everything is bushtucker-infused, from the lemon myrtle hollandaise to an emu pastie, a davidson plum probiotic bliss bite, or a dirty myrtle latte.
The Roo burger is a popular staple on chef Stevie's menu. Source: Deadly Espresso / Facebook
“I love that we get to celebrate Country and Culture by showcasing native botanics and commercially available game meats,” says Terri.
Smoked red gum and tea tree salted chips with a native violet and mint garnish. Source: Deadly Espresso / Facebook
Workshops and gatherings
The café also functions as a workshop space, bringing community together to share in traditional practices. Recent workshops have included Bushtucker cooking classes with Aunty Dale Chapman, Gumby Gumby traditional bush medicine and Emu feather weaving with Dale Chapman.
The café has long served as a hospitality training ground, giving people the support they need to prosper, connect and find purpose.
The café hosts regular ‘Black Coffee’ networking events, bringing Indigenous business owners, professionals, and community together. Black Coffee is an initiative started by the South East Queensland Chamber of Commerce in 2014 that is rolling out across Australia.Recently, Deadly Espresso was named as an approved community service project with Queensland Corrective Services. Repeat offenders with State Penalties Enforcement Registry debts will have the opportunity to work off their debts at Deadly Espresso.
Deadly Espresso on Walkabout is the mobile café attending festivals and events throughout Queensland. Source: Deadly Espresso / Facebook
Terri believes that there is a worldwide movement happening that compels people to “be more selfless”.
Prosper, connect and find purpose
The café has long served as a hospitality training ground, giving people the support they need to prosper, connect and find purpose. “They are usually people looking for a different approach to work and life,” says Terri. “Every person that comes to spend time with us is a success story.”Terri believes that there is a worldwide movement happening that compels people to “be more selfless” and “be the change”. This is a philosophy that is deeply entrenched in every part of Deadly Espresso. It starts with the highly-regarded bushtucker and critically-acclaimed coffee, and extends through to the artisan workshops and community initiatives. This place is more lifestyle choice than mere café.
Learning to weave native grasses at a recent workshop. The workshops bring community together to share and learn Indigenous practices. Source: Deadly Espresso / Facebook
“In the words of one of our volunteers,” Terri says. “You come for the coffee and stay for the love.”
79 Memorial Drive
Eumundi, Queensland
Tuesday - Sunday 9am-2pm
Eat native
Parsnip chips with bush pepper