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Migration and Experimentation: What Led to Australia’s Coffee Culture

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A couple of years ago, when I was planning a trip to the United States, a few friends joked that I had to beware of their terrible coffee.

As someone who’d grown used to the standards set by Melbourne cafes, I remember thinking: It can’t that bad, right? I mean sure, it might be a little substandard, but you can’t mess up a flat white too much.

Then I got there, had a sip of the brewed brown swill they like to drink and realized that it was really that bad.

Australian coffee has become something of a global phenomenon, most recently evidenced by the flat whites our delegation gave out at the COP26 meeting and which reportedly were a resounding success. (Unlike the rest of Australia’s performance at the climate summit).

Over the last decade or two, Aussie-run cafes have popped up around the world. Our coffee is slowly being embraced by Americans. In 2015, Starbucks started selling “Australian style” flat whites, reigniting a fierce debate about whether it originated in Australia or New Zealand.

Our coffee culture, particularly in places like Melbourne, is world-class. The story of how it developed speaks to both our immigrant past and our willingness to go at things our own way instead of following tradition.

According to historians, it started after World War II, when Italian migrants brought with them espresso machines and the European cafe culture.

“The introduction of espresso coffee in the 1950s is nostalgically remembered by many as a key watershed between a drab past and a cosmopolitan present,” Andrew May, a historian at the University of Melbourne, said via email.

But it wasn’t quick to take off, he added. “There was also still a lot of racism toward Italian migrants. So it was a slow burn really, and the next wave of inner-city rejuvenation and gentrification from the early 1980s — a new wave of Bohemian cafes — gave coffee another significant boost.”

Our love for velvety, milky coffee came from the marriage of Italian espresso and the existing British tradition of drinking tea and instant coffee with milk. “We’ve perfected the milk side of coffee because we’re a milk drinking nation,” said Bruno Maiolo, the president of the Australian Specialty Coffee Association.

And how did Australian coffee go to the next level? It’s because baristas and roasters have been willing to push the boundaries, always experimenting and refining, he said. “We’re new and young and hip and always asking questions about every piece of the puzzle.”

This willingness to mix-and-match and experiment is a running theme in Australian food culture, said Emma Felton, a sociologist from the Queensland University of Technology.

You look at countries like France or any European country and they’re much more hidebound. Their culture is much more rigid, so they don’t have as much experimentation, with their food in particular.”

“We don’t have to conform so much because we’re a nation of immigrants,” she said. “We really pick-and-grab from all over the world.”

At home, Australians don’t think of ourselves as a nation of coffee connoisseurs, she added, but we usually are by default, because of the high standard we are accustomed to.

Do you have anything you took for granted in Australia until you saw how other countries did it? Write to us at [email protected].

Now for our stories of the week:


Australia and New Zealand

President Emmanuel Macron of France greeting Vice President Kamala Harris at the Élysée Palace in Paris.Credit…Sarahbeth Maney/The New York Times
  • Harris Meets Macron, Signaling a ‘New Era’ After Sub Snub, Both Say. In her vague assignment abroad, the vice president seems to be emphasizing that the U.S.-France relationship is about looking forward, in the wake of an embarrassing diplomatic spat.

  • Thousands Protest New Zealand’s Covid-19 Mandates. About 3,000 people gathered in New Zealand’s capital to protest against coronavirus vaccination requirements and restrictions, forcing a lockdown of Parliament.

  • New Zealand’s Sea Lions Are Back, and Crashing Golf Courses and Soccer Matches. After their populations were decimated by hunters, New Zealand’s sea lions are returning to the coasts — sometimes surprising locals by turning up in unexpected places.

  • How I Found Comfort in Volunteer Firefighting. Facing a world on fire turns out to be a great way not to contemplate one’s own misfortunes.

  • New Zealand’s biggest city will ease lockdown restrictions.The lifting of rules comes as the country records some of its highest daily case numbers since the pandemic began.


Around the Times

Repairs to a home damaged by Cyclone Amphan in Satkhira, Bangladesh, in 2020.Credit…Munir Uz Zaman/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  • Calls for Climate Reparations Reach Boiling Point in Glasgow Talks. For decades, vulnerable countries and activist groups have demanded that rich polluter countries pay for irreparable damage from climate change. This year, there may be a breakthrough.

  • Know How the Beatles Ended? Peter Jackson May Change Your Mind.The director’s three-part documentary “Get Back” explores the most contested period in the band’s history and reveals there’s still plenty to debate.

  • On Delhi’s Toxic River, Prayers to a Sun Struggling to Shine Through Smog.Every year, a four-day festival to the sun god Surya highlights the Indian city’s extreme air and water pollution, with a river so filled with foam it resembles a blizzard’s aftermath.

  • Germany’s Fourth Covid Wave: ‘A Pandemic of the Unvaccinated.’Germany once set an example for how to manage the coronavirus. Now, deep pockets of vaccine resistance are helping drive daily infections to new heights.


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