The Times Australia
Fisher and Paykel Appliances
The Times World News

.

what Australia's first food influencer had us cooking

  • Written by Lauren Samuelsson, Honorary Fellow, University of Wollongong
what Australia's first food influencer had us cooking

Our food choices are being influenced every day. On social media platforms such as YouTube, Instagram and TikTok, food and eating consistently appear on lists of trending topics.

Food has eye-catching appeal and is a universal experience. Everyone has to eat. In recent years, viral recipes like feta pasta[1], dalgona coffee[2] and butter boards[3] have taken the world by storm.

Yet food influencing is not a new trend.

Australia’s first food influencer appeared in the pages of Australia’s most popular women’s magazine nearly 70 years ago. Just like today’s creators on Instagram and TikTok, this teenage cook advised her audience what was good to eat and how to make it.

Read more: How the Australian Women's Weekly spoke to '50s housewives about the Cold War[4]

Meet Debbie, our teenage chef

Debbie commenced her decade-long tenure at the Australian Women’s Weekly in July 1954[5]. We don’t know exactly who played the role of Debbie, which was a pseudonym. Readers were never shown her full face or body – just a set of disembodied hands making various recipes and, eventually, a cartoon portrait.

A short blurb on Debbie, and two photos of hands cooking.
Debbie’s first appearance in 1954. Trove

Like many food influencers today, Debbie was not an “expert” – she was a teenager herself. She taught teenage girls simple yet fashionable recipes they could cook to impress their family and friends, especially boys.

She shared recipes for tangy apricot Bavarian whip[6], fried rice medley[7] and bombe Alaska[8]. Debbie also often taught her readers the basics, like how to boil an egg[9].

Just like today, many of her recipes showed the readers step-by-step instructions through images.

An unappetising bowl of rice. Debbie’s fried rice medley from 1958. Trove

Teaching girls to cook (and be ‘good’ women)

Debbie’s recipes first appeared in the For Teenagers section, which would go on to become the Teenagers Weekly lift-out in 1959.

These lift-outs reflected a major change taking place in wider society: the idea of “teenagers” being their own group with specific interests and behaviours had entered the popular imagination.

Debbie was speaking directly to teenage girls. Adolescents are still forming both their culinary and cultural tastes. They are forming their identities.

Some tips from Debbie in 1960. Trove

For the Women’s Weekly, and for Debbie, cooking was deemed an essential attribute for women. Girls were seen to be “failures[10]” if they couldn’t at least “cook a baked dinner”, “make real coffee”, “grill a steak to perfection”, “scramble and fry eggs” and “make a salad (with dressing)”.

In addition to teaching girls how to cook, Debbie also taught girls how to catch a husband and become a good wife, a reflection of cultural expectations for women at the time.

Her macaroon trifle[11], the Women’s Weekly said, was sure to place girls at the top of their male friends’ “matrimony prospect” list!

Read more: More than just MasterChef: a brief history of Australian cookery competitions[12]

Food fads and fashions

Food fads usually reflect something important about the world around us. During global COVID lockdowns, we saw a rise in sourdough bread-making[13] as people embraced carbohydrate-driven nostalgia in the face of anxiety.

A peek at Debbie’s culinary repertoire can reveal some of the cultural phenomena that impacted Australian teenagers in the 1950s and ‘60s.

Debbie embraced teenage interest in rock'n'roll culture from the early 1960s, the pinnacle of which came at the height of Beatlemania.

The Beatles toured Australia in June 1964. To help her teenage readers celebrate their visit, Debbie wrote an editorial on how to host a Beatles party[14].

She suggested the party host impress their friends by making “Beatle lollipops”, “Ringo Starrs” (decorated biscuits) and terrifying-looking “Beatle mop-heads” (cakes with chocolate hair).

The terrifying mop-heads. Trove

A few months later[15], she also shared recipes for “jam butties” (or sandwiches, apparently a “Mersey[16] food with a Mersey name”) and a “Beatle burger”.

We can also see the introduction of one of Australia’s most beloved dishes[17] in Debbie’s recipes.

In 1957, she showed her teen readers how to make a new dish – spaghetti bolognaise[18] – which had first appeared in the magazine five years prior[19].

Debbie was influencing the youth of Australia to enthusiastically adopt (and adapt) Italian-style cuisine. It stuck. While the recipe may have evolved, in 2012, Meat and Livestock Australia reported[20] that 38% of Australian homes ate “spag bol” at least once a week.

Our food influences today may come from social media, but we shouldn’t forget the impact early influencers such as Debbie had on young people in the past.

Debbie’s take on the now Aussie favourite, spag bol, in 1957. Trove

Read more: Getting creative with less. Recipe lessons from the Australian Women's Weekly during wartime[21]

References

  1. ^ feta pasta (www.washingtonpost.com)
  2. ^ dalgona coffee (theconversation.com)
  3. ^ butter boards (theconversation.com)
  4. ^ How the Australian Women's Weekly spoke to '50s housewives about the Cold War (theconversation.com)
  5. ^ July 1954 (nla.gov.au)
  6. ^ tangy apricot Bavarian whip (nla.gov.au)
  7. ^ fried rice medley (nla.gov.au)
  8. ^ bombe Alaska (nla.gov.au)
  9. ^ how to boil an egg (nla.gov.au)
  10. ^ failures (nla.gov.au)
  11. ^ macaroon trifle (nla.gov.au)
  12. ^ More than just MasterChef: a brief history of Australian cookery competitions (theconversation.com)
  13. ^ sourdough bread-making (theconversation.com)
  14. ^ Beatles party (nla.gov.au)
  15. ^ A few months later (nla.gov.au)
  16. ^ Mersey (slate.com)
  17. ^ Australia’s most beloved dishes (www.sbs.com.au)
  18. ^ spaghetti bolognaise (nla.gov.au)
  19. ^ five years prior (nla.gov.au)
  20. ^ reported (www.mla.com.au)
  21. ^ Getting creative with less. Recipe lessons from the Australian Women's Weekly during wartime (theconversation.com)

Read more https://theconversation.com/tangy-apricot-bavarian-whip-fried-rice-medley-and-bombe-alaska-what-australias-first-food-influencer-had-us-cooking-199987

Times Magazine

Australia’s electric vehicle surge — EVs and hybrids hit record levels

Australians are increasingly embracing electric and hybrid cars, with 2025 shaping up as the str...

Tim Ayres on the AI rollout’s looming ‘bumps and glitches’

The federal government released its National AI Strategy[1] this week, confirming it has dropped...

Seven in Ten Australian Workers Say Employers Are Failing to Prepare Them for AI Future

As artificial intelligence (AI) accelerates across industries, a growing number of Australian work...

Mapping for Trucks: More Than Directions, It’s Optimisation

Daniel Antonello, General Manager Oceania, HERE Technologies At the end of June this year, Hampden ...

Can bigger-is-better ‘scaling laws’ keep AI improving forever? History says we can’t be too sure

OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman – perhaps the most prominent face of the artificial intellig...

A backlash against AI imagery in ads may have begun as brands promote ‘human-made’

In a wave of new ads, brands like Heineken, Polaroid and Cadbury have started hating on artifici...

The Times Features

98 Lygon St Melbourne’s New Mediterranean Hideaway

Brunswick East has just picked up a serious summer upgrade. Neighbourhood favourite 98 Lygon St B...

How Australians can stay healthier for longer

Australians face a decade of poor health unless they close the gap between living longer and sta...

The Origin of Human Life — Is Intelligent Design Worth Taking Seriously?

For more than a century, the debate about how human life began has been framed as a binary: evol...

The way Australia produces food is unique. Our updated dietary guidelines have to recognise this

You might know Australia’s dietary guidelines[1] from the famous infographics[2] showing the typ...

Why a Holiday or Short Break in the Noosa Region Is an Ideal Getaway

Few Australian destinations capture the imagination quite like Noosa. With its calm turquoise ba...

How Dynamic Pricing in Accommodation — From Caravan Parks to Hotels — Affects Holiday Affordability

Dynamic pricing has quietly become one of the most influential forces shaping the cost of an Aus...

The rise of chatbot therapists: Why AI cannot replace human care

Some are dubbing AI as the fourth industrial revolution, with the sweeping changes it is propellin...

Australians Can Now Experience The World of Wicked Across Universal Studios Singapore and Resorts World Sentosa

This holiday season, Resorts World Sentosa (RWS), in partnership with Universal Pictures, Sentosa ...

Mineral vs chemical sunscreens? Science shows the difference is smaller than you think

“Mineral-only” sunscreens are making huge inroads[1] into the sunscreen market, driven by fears of “...