There to share
“My mission is to steer people away from the notion that bush tucker is exotic or for fine dining only and get them using Indigenous ingredients every day,” says Nornie Bero, the woman behind one of Melbourne’s most exciting Indigenous-owned food businesses, Mabu Mabu.
The Torres Strait Islander chef honed her skills in Italian and Japanese restaurants for 20 years, before starting Mabu Mabu as a market stall, selling sauces and condiments made from native ingredients. Bero expanded the business into a café, online shop and catering before opening a restaurant, Mabu Mabu Big Esso, in Federation Square in mid-2021. Her first cookbook, Mabu Mabu, was released in March 2022.
Mabu Mabu Big Esso is thriving on a difference of using native Australian ingredients in generous dishes made to share “the way Torres Strait and Aboriginal cultures have always done”.
Every item, from the wattleseed in the damper to the kangaroo in the bourguignon and the bunya nut in the bush basil pesto, is designed to seed a curiosity that is taking root with diners once they leave.
“Once people taste what is possible, they start asking how they can do it for themselves,” says Bero, who delights in her customers’ surprise when they learn that if Mabu Mabu’s ingredients aren’t growing under their feet, they are available locally.
“There is so much stuff growing wild around Melbourne like karkalla, samphire, river mint, warrigal greens and pippies that, with a little bit of knowledge, you can pick them yourself. It’s the same for every other city across the country.”
Equally important is knowing that almost every ingredient Bero uses at Mabu Mabu is commercially available – if you ask for it.
“If you don’t see native produce at your local grocer or butcher, it isn’t because it doesn’t exist, it’s because people aren’t asking for it,” she explains. “Everything from high-quality pepperberry to prime-cut emu is available from growers, harvesters and producers… but you have to ask for it.”
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