Classroom lesson 路 Food馃嚘馃嚭 Australia

Vegemite on toast

Australia's salty, sticky breakfast favourite

What is it?

Vegemite is a dark brown, salty spread that Australians love. It is made from yeast - the same stuff that makes bread rise. Aussies usually spread a tiny amount on hot, buttered toast for breakfast or after school. People from other countries try it for the first time and pull funny faces.

Tell me more

Vegemite was invented in 1922 in Melbourne. A man called Cyril Callister was asked to make something useful out of the leftover yeast from breweries. He turned it into a thick, salty paste packed with vitamins. Soon almost every Australian home had a black jar with a red lid in the cupboard.

The trick with Vegemite is the amount. Spread a tiny scrape on warm, buttered toast and it tastes savoury and rich, a bit like a roasted broth. Spread it like jam - which most non-Australians try the first time - and your face will tell the story. Aussie parents teach their kids the 'thin layer rule' early.

Vegemite is so much part of Australian life that it shows up in pop songs, school lunchboxes, and care packages sent to Aussies living overseas. The 'Vegemite kid' - a child grinning with a piece of toast - has been on TV adverts for decades.

Other countries have their own salty yeast spreads too. In the UK, it's Marmite. In Switzerland, it's Cenovis. In each country, kids grow up tasting their own version and being a bit puzzled by everyone else's. Yeast spreads are one of those things almost every country has, in their own flavour.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01What is a food in your country that visitors find strange?
  2. 02Why do you think the same idea (yeast spread) tastes different in different countries?
  3. 03What's a food you didn't like the first time but learned to enjoy?
Try this

Classroom activity

Hold a 'food letters' session: each pupil writes a short letter to a class on the other side of the world describing one food they eat that they think the other class might find weird. Swap letters with your partner class and find out what they sent back.