Australian Aborigines had many ways to source sweet foods. The four main types of sweet foods gathered – apart from ripe fruit – were[1]:
In some parts of Australia, these customs are still used today, particularly in Central Australia. Foods collected can be eaten directly as a sweet or made into a sweet drink.
The Arrernte of Central Australia divide their food up into a number of groups. Many other groups also do this or did this traditionally. The Arrernte word for sweet foods is Ngkwarle — honey-like foods.
Some Aborigines who still have their language often refer to alcohol by this sweet food group term.
Arrernte Name
| English name
| Details
|
Ngkwarle athenge arlperle
| Ironwood (Acacia estrophiolata) tree gum
| Ironwood gum is broken off tree branches. It can be red or clear. It runs down the tree to the ground in long beads. It is snapped off and mixed in some water and left to set. It is then scooped up with a little stick and eaten.
|
Ngkwarle alkerampwe
| Mulga (Acacia aneura) tree gum
| Gum can be found sitting in small blobs in a row on branches. Some bits are clear and some red. They are snapped off with a wooden skewer. Once quite a few are collected, they are given to the children as a treat.
|
Ngkwarle arlperrampwe
| Whitewood (Atalaya hemiglauca) tree gum
| Arlperrampwe is found on the trunk and branches of the whitewood in big globs. Some of it runs down the tree as its hanging there. It is collected and made into a lump and kneaded until soft, and is then eaten.
|
Ngkwarle atnyerampwe
| Supplejack (Ventilago viminalis) tree gum
| Gum is scraped off after it comes through the bark. It is twisted onto a stick. It is chewy like chewing gum. Only small amounts can be eaten without water or it induces headache.
|
Ngkwarle akikarre
| Witchetty bush (Acacia kempeana) gum
| When the flowers start to fall from the Witchetty bush, the gum comes through the bark and forms lumps, usually on the trunk. Some is red and some is clear. It is kneaded into a lump, sprinkling a bit of water on it. It can be placed on a little stick to make a lollypop.
|
Ngkwarle aperarnte
| River red gum (Eucalyptus camaldulensis) honeydew
| Aperarnte is the sweet stuff that drips down or is got from the bark of the river red gum. It is retrieved from the bark or from the ground after it's dripped down.
|
Ngkwarle aperaltye
| River red gum (Eucalyptus camaldulensis, Psylla eucalypti) leaf scale
| Small, waxy white flakes of aperaltye are found on the leaves of the river red gum. Branches can be shaken so that it falls onto a sheet or bowl below, then swept up and packed into a ball for eating.
|
Ngkwarle alhelpe-arenye
| Mallee (Eucalyptus) leaf scale
| Scale is scraped off to be eaten.
|
Ngkwarle yerrampe
| Honeyant (Melophorus camponotus)
| The honeyant is found in the ground in mulga country. Its nest is slightly different to other ants' nests. The holes on the surface are smaller. Women dig down from the openings, following the shaft, scooping out the dirt. Honeyants are harvested from the side in the main part of the nest. They are dragged out with a little stick. They are not swallowed, but placed on the tongue and the abdomen is bitten and honey sucked from it.
|
Ngkwarle arwengalkere; Ngkwarle urltampe
| Native bee honey, sugarbag
| Sugarbag is found in tree hollows. A small 'nose' is found made of wax, protruding from the tree. This is chopped into to split it open. The head part is retrieved first, where the larvae are, then the honey. Honey is gathered in a coolamon or billycan to be eaten later.
|
Ngkwarle untyeyampe
| Corkwood (Hakea suberea) flower nectar
| When the yellow flowers hang down, corkwood flower nectar is ready to harvest. The nectar is shaken onto a hand and then the dark bits that fall there are licked off. Sometimes it can be placed in water and drunk. It can be used for this purpose when a person is sick. Everyone likes to collect this food.
|
Ngkwarle ntewale
| Bloodwood (Eucalyptus opaca) flower nectar
| Ntewale is the flower of the bloodwood tree. It has a pale nectar. Native bees make honey from these flowers. The flower is broken off and sucked, or nectar shaken onto the hand and the hand licked. When the flowers die off, the bush coconuts come.
|
The practices of the Arrernte were widely practised by many other groups across Australia. But customs varied depending on where people lived. Some notable other sweet foods include:
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