Learn what our national cuisine could look like with chef Mark Olive

Learn all about how Indigenous foods and everyday foods can come together on the plate with chef Mark Olive at a one-of-a-kind food festival, Grazing Down the Lachlan.

Grazing Down the Lachlan

“It’s okay to eat this stuff. I call it our national cuisine,” says chef Mark Olive. Source: Grazing Down the Lachlan

What do chefs Mark Olive and Kylie Kwong and French President Emmanuel Macron have in common? They are fans of native ingredients, and ambassadors for learning about the bush foods we have in our own backyard.

President Macron on his recent visit to Australia marveled at the unique tastes and textures of our bush foods, such as finger limes, bower spinach, sea parsley and Warrigal greens, introduced to him by Kylie Kwong (who injects native ingredients into her classic Cantonese dishes).
Olive’s motto is bush foods can be for everyone: “It’s okay to eat this stuff. I call it our national cuisine.” He champions their versatility in front of the camera on NITV’s and SBS’s , and off camera through his catering business .

For Olive, gathering and learning to use bush foods was part and parcel of growing up in the Bundjalung region, on the northern east coast of NSW, under the tutelage of his Aunties.
Mark Olive
Source: On Country Kitchen
For most people, though, being adventurous and having the confidence to include bush foods in their usual cooking repertoire is the biggest challenge.

That’s one of the reasons why Olive has joined this year as the culinary director extraordinaire.

Grazing Down the Lachlan is a one-of-a-kind food festival taking place on September 22 in Forbes, Central West NSW, in Wiradjuri country, where Olive will be pairing native ingredients with more common foods, putting a spotlight on the best farmed produce in the region.
Grazing Down the Lachlan
Not a bad spot to pull up along the Galari (Lachlan River). Source: Belinda So
For the festival, hundreds of people (local and food enthusiasts alike) – they’re expecting 800 – will make their way to Forbes, where their journey walking along a drover’s stock route following the eucalypt-lined Lachlan River begins. Think of the walk, which stretches over about two-and-a-half meandering kilometres of the Galari – the local Wiradjuri name – as an epic moveable feast of seven courses. The trail along the Galari is believed to be part of an ancient songline (our First People’s ongoing connection to land and culture passed on for millennia orally through ).
It’s okay to eat this stuff. I call it our national cuisine.
Olive has been busy crafting the menu, which will feature native ingredients collected from the region only days before the festival. He's sourced cubungi reeds from a nearby pond (yep, that's Olive in the below video jumping out of the cubungi). The reeds will be used in a frittata, giving it a lovely nutty flavour.
He won’t give away too much more about the menu but he does admit, “you might catch me on the barbie flipping a few roo steaks, but I’ll be more talking to the people and engaging them on the trail.”

If you’re scratching your head over cubungi reeds, don’t worry ­– you can quiz Olive about them on the trail or at a Q&A session, hosted by Olive, on the Friday evening prior to the big day of feasting, where festival goers can tap into his vast knowledge of how to match native ingredients with everyday foods.
I can’t wait to meander along the ancient avenue of red river gums.
He will be joined by some of the growers and producers from the region, who are supplying the event’s produce (including pork from , chicken from , Kalamata olives from Rosnay Organics, olive oil from Gibson’s Grove Olives, milk and cream from , goat’s cheese from , and eggs from ), and the caterers, who will be on the trail keeping everyone well-fed.
Grazing Down the Lachlan
After seven courses, matched with drinks, you'll need an afternoon nap in the sun. Source: Belinda So
The festival is not only about fusing Indigenous and non-Indigenous foods on the one plate (well, seven plates to be exact), but also about bringing together the local Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities.

“I see this as a healing exercise for the region in a non-threatening environment,” says Olive. “I can’t wait to meander along the ancient avenue of red river gums.”

Come along and meander too, and you can say you have something in common with the French President – you’ve both tasted bush foods for the first time!

SBS Food is a proud media partner of Grazing Down the Lachlan, taking place on 22 September 2018 in Forbes, NSW. Unfortunately tickets are sold out. You can read about last year's event . If you missed out on a ticket, follow and  on Instagram and live vicariously.

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4 min read
Published 6 July 2018 10:45am
Updated 10 July 2018 2:29pm
By Belinda So


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