TY - JOUR
T1 - Earth oven cookery and cuisines in Aboriginal Australia
T2 - Ethnographic and ethnohistoric insights from Western Cape York Peninsula and the Southern Murray Darling Basin
AU - Morrison, Michael
AU - Roberts, Amy
AU - McNaughton, Darlene
AU - Westell, Craig
AU - Jones, Robert
AU - Napranum Aboriginal Shire Council,
AU - River Murray and Mallee Aboriginal Corporation,
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Earth oven cookery involves cooking food in pits using hot heating elements, typically over extended periods of time. This technique has been reported in Holocene and Late Pleistocene contexts in Australia, and is of ongoing importance to many Indigenous peoples today. Despite considerable previous work on earth ovens and related sites, few have explored earth oven cookery as a distinctive cultural phenomenon. Here, we investigate the foodways associated with earth ovens drawing on ethnohistoric and ethnographic sources from the southern Murray-Darling Basin and central Western Cape York Peninsula, Australia. While there are many commonalities in earth oven cookery, it was also a highly adaptable practice in terms of the range of foods cooked, oven construction practices, and cooking techniques. People widely used herbs and wrappings to flavour foods, added water to aid the cooking process, and made extensive use of other plant materials to impart flavour, prevent food from burning, while also keeping food free of debris. We show that earth ovens are strongly associated with culturally distinctive cuisines and foodways and an investigation of these cookery practices can enhance our understanding of past social organisation, identity, commensality and the scale of food production.
AB - Earth oven cookery involves cooking food in pits using hot heating elements, typically over extended periods of time. This technique has been reported in Holocene and Late Pleistocene contexts in Australia, and is of ongoing importance to many Indigenous peoples today. Despite considerable previous work on earth ovens and related sites, few have explored earth oven cookery as a distinctive cultural phenomenon. Here, we investigate the foodways associated with earth ovens drawing on ethnohistoric and ethnographic sources from the southern Murray-Darling Basin and central Western Cape York Peninsula, Australia. While there are many commonalities in earth oven cookery, it was also a highly adaptable practice in terms of the range of foods cooked, oven construction practices, and cooking techniques. People widely used herbs and wrappings to flavour foods, added water to aid the cooking process, and made extensive use of other plant materials to impart flavour, prevent food from burning, while also keeping food free of debris. We show that earth ovens are strongly associated with culturally distinctive cuisines and foodways and an investigation of these cookery practices can enhance our understanding of past social organisation, identity, commensality and the scale of food production.
KW - Foodways
KW - Cuisines
KW - Earth ovens
KW - Ethnohistory
KW - Murray-Darling Basin
KW - Cape York Peninsula
KW - Ethnography
UR - http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/LP170100479
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85134498417&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/03122417.2022.2089395
DO - 10.1080/03122417.2022.2089395
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85134498417
SN - 0312-2417
VL - 88
SP - 245
EP - 267
JO - Australian Archaeology
JF - Australian Archaeology
IS - 3
ER -