The Australian Food Bloggers' Conference 2010

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Somewhere in the evening I agreed to officiate on the eating of semi-fertilised duck eggs.
The duck eggs complete with embryo are popular around Southeast Asia – known as balut in the Philippines, trung vit lon in Vietnam and poeung tea koun in Cambodia. They are boiled then served with a squeeze of lime, Vietnamese mint, salt and pepper, generally by a vendor with a simple aluminium steamer. Most of Southeast Asia considers them a nourishing roadside snack.
The eggs are however the most viscerally confronting food on earth and there is no hiding the sensation of biting into a gelatinous, semi-formed beak.
How I ascended to officialdom in such matters is beyond me as are the rules by which one should preside over such an event – I’m hardly the biggest balut aficionado – but this is the sort of outcome that you might expect when you get fifty Australian food bloggers in the same room. Last Sunday was the first Australian Food Blogger’s Conference and until we hit dinner, there was surprisingly little talk of food itself, fertilised or otherwise.
Bloggers had gathered in Melbourne to talk through the technology, craft, ethics and reason behind blogging about food. Like the eggs, food blogging in Australia is at once embryonic and confronting; popular and nourishing to some, misunderstood by others.
Over the past five years, the number of food blogs has grown into the hundreds. The Age Newspaper quoted the number as 659 without attributing a source. Few are older than five years and the proliferation of channels other than blogs like Twitter or Facebook continue to blur the boundaries of where blogging and food writing lie.
Very early on in the conference, it was apparent that there is no single reason to start a food blog.
Some started one to keep convenient, personal and searchable cook’s journal; to have one’s edible predilections reaffirmed by friends, family and random strangers from the internet; to be part of a food-obsessed community that, as blogger Zoe from Progressive Dinner Party put it was “a decent and civil thing to do” so as not to continually bug their partner with food talk. Some use it to fill a gap left behind by the traditional media in Australia and cover food with a depth not delivered elsewhere.
Very few start them with a commercial imperative in mind, a point that seems to bewilder otherwise sensible magazine editors.
It is impossible to encapsulate all of the reasons in a simple narrative which is what makes food blogging confronting: how can mainstream media compete with sources that don’t play the game predictably or have no interest in playing at all?
For more coverage of the conference from attendees see:
Confessions of a food nazi
Jeroxie (addictive and consuming)
My Aching Head
Progressive Dinner Party
Ravenous
Travelling in Mary Janes (part 1)(part 2)
The Age
Twitter coverage at #eatdrinkblog
Comments (5)
We blog because we can
for me it just doesn't seem right eating semi-fertilised duck eggs but i guess it's a cultural thing. i think we blog because we can. before blogging we used to enjoy eating our meals without taking photos of the dishes. we enjoyed dimly lit fancy restaurants and we talked to other table guests without having the need to twitter what we just ate. life was simple. we survived before blogging and will survive after blogging :-)
31 Mar 2010 9:49 AEST
From:
Great summary
I think I said now that I have eaten a fish eye ball, I can eat a balut because it's on the same scale of grossness for me. They are called 'kai kao' in Thailand and eaten with a dash of seasoning sauce.
24 Mar 2010 9:47 AEST
From:
eat drink blog
I think the conversation started with fish eyeballs and not sure why it ended with balut? There are so many reasons why people blog. In summary, it is a freedom of speech and we should respect it.
24 Mar 2010 8:58 AEST
From:
Eatdrinkblog
Great summary of the day, thanks for the link to my blog :)
24 Mar 2010 8:27 AEST
From:
thanks
There are times I am grateful for being a piscetarian/not-quite-vegan and the moment balut came up in the conversation is one of them. Thanks for the link, will have more of the session up on "how and why we blog" tomorrow.
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A blog about what the world eats, when and where it eats it, and why it matters to us all. Only much less ambitious than that sounds and with more excruciating puns.
Phil Lees grew up in rural Victoria, the first generation in his family to not have lived on the farm and thereby not slaughter their own meat.
In 2005 he moved to Cambodia and started the nation’s first food blog, Phnomenon.com, named after the best pun that he has ever made. It turns out that Cambodian food is delicious and unlike the warnings in most guidebooks, is not likely to kill you with any immediacy. Gridskipper called him a “national treasure”. Lonely Planet’s Greater Mekong guide called him “the unofficial pimp of Cambodian cuisine”. The New York Times laughed at a funny hotdog he saw.
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