What if you were able to obtain rich, superior antioxidants, simply by seasoning your food?
This is a privilege many Australians can enjoy, but don’t take advantage of nearly enough.
or Tasmanian native pepper (Tasmannia Lanceolata) is a shrub that grows in the alpine regions of Tasmania and southeast mainland Australia. the type of cool, wet habitats that can be found in mountain gullies. The native plant produces aromatic leaves, and during the autumn months, the female species develops small fleshy blackberries on its distinctive . Both the leaves and berries can be dried and used as a cooking spice, and when milled, the hardened berries make for a terrific substitute for conventional pepper.Compared to our everyday pepper, however, mountain pepper has more of a herbal dimension, and packs more of a spicer, sharper, hotter punch.
Dried and crushed mountain pepper leaves can be used to flavour sauces, chutneys, pastas and even sweets like ice-cream. Source: CSIRO/Science Image
It’s why Indigenous people use whole peppercorns or crush the spice into a paste, and apply the pepper to toothaches or sore gums, says , the managing director of , an Aboriginal cultural education program.“I guess when you’re on fire, you’re not going the think about anything else."
Mountain pepper has not only served Indigenous people as a flavouring agent for food over generations, but by and large, as a traditional medicine. Due to its , mountain pepper has been documented as a treatment for a variety of illnesses from . The tonic, made from ground berries, leaves and bark is also recorded as being used by early European settlers .
Hodge, who is also a woman, says her father continues to use the plant daily for its medicinal properties.
“He makes a big pot of tea, about two litres worth, every morning,” she says. “And just using leaf tea, he then puts a handful of mountain pepper leaves and sassafras leaves in his tea. Because he’s got muscular atrophy and a few other painful diseases, he’s on morphine daily, but he’s actually cut back on a third of his pain medication because he uses the bush medicine.”
With potent antioxidants, than the beloved blueberry, mountain pepper’s health benefits are just as useful today as they have been over centuries. Antioxidants are linked to helping with and , and s, but highlights mountain pepper’s unique antiviral properties.
, senior lecturer in Biomolecular and Physical Sciences at told SBS Food, “The berry inhibits the growth of many pathogenic bacteria, protozoa and also has some limited antiviral activity. It also has good anti-cancer activity against multiple cancer cell lines.”
Also striking: the plant’s antibacterial properties. With , mountain pepper has been found to inhibit the growth of food poisoning bacteria and prevent food spoilage, which Dr Cock's research demonstrates.
“I talked to a group of bush food enthusiasts – not scientists – about several Aussie plants as both flavourings and preservatives, a person who was a butcher approached me and asked for ways to extend the shelf life of his sausages,” Dr Cock says. “I suggested trying the pepperberry and lemon myrtle in combination. He later reported to me that it doubled the refrigerated shelf life of his sausages. That, of course, is anecdotal rather than empirical, but still, it is impressive. We have tried it as a fish preservative and see similar trends.”
The berry inhibits the growth of many pathogenic bacteria, protozoa and also has some limited antiviral activity. It also has good anti-cancer activity against multiple cancer cell lines.
Despite being an ‘Aussie superfood’, mountain pepper is a rather small agricultural industry. for the trees to begin to fruit and only half the plants bear fruit anyway, so pepperberries are a prized crop (luckily, the leaves are more commercially viable).
Russell Langfield, a whose interest and passion in bush foods came from working with Aboriginal communities in the Northern Territory for a few years, tells SBS Food that the mountain pepper industry is growing, but the annual harvest is very weather dependant.
“The trees grow very slowly and are very susceptible to heat and dryness. It took nine years before I broke even in a given year,” he says.
were the hottest ever in Tasmania and that caused most of the pepperberry trees to either not flower or drop fruit, so there was little to no harvest those years. Even the currawongs (known for eating the pepperberries) came down from the mountains months earlier this year, because there were no berries for them up there, either.
“Climate change is real. Everyone in the farming sector all over the world that I talk with knows and experiences it."
Within Australia's small industry, large quantities of mountain pepper end up in to be used as a flavouring and fragrance for wasabi paste. Langfield says that his product doesn’t get sent to Japanese markets, instead, it's used to and spirits in Australia and abroad.
Growers like Langfield are necessary for helping make the spice accessible. Because, unlike other bush foods that are easily foraged, Trish Hodge points out that mountain pepper can be trickier to source.
“Mountain pepper is alpine and you can damage a lot of the rest of the environment by going to get [it],” she says.
“A lot of the stuff is in national parks or heritage or protected areas, so to actually go and gather it is quite difficult." She warns that there are penalties if you do the wrong thing, too.
Hodge advocates for using traditional foods, as long as it's done "sustainably, ethically and in consultation with Aboriginal people”.