Myanmar’s national dish has a cult following in Perth

Is this Perth’s best-kept food secret? Once a month, people flock to the Burmese Food Fete for mohinga and other traditional staples.

People head here for mohinga, a fish-based noodle soup.

People head here for mohinga, a fish-based noodle soup. Source: Sofia Levin

Walk down any street in and you’re never far from a steaming bowl of , a fish-based noodle soup recognised as the national dish. Rice noodles are scooped into the bowl first, then aromatic catfish soup with sliced banana trunk, and finally a selection of toppings that might include lemon juice, coriander, fish sauce, dried chilli flakes and fried shallots. It’s usually eaten for breakfast everywhere from street corners to hotels.

In Perth, the most authentic version pops up at the monthly Burmese Food Fete, put on by the (BAWA) on the second Saturday of each month. Set up in 1965 to assist migrants and refugees arriving from Burma, nowadays it focuses on fundraising for charitable programs, including orphanages and schools in Myanmar. The food fete has been running for the past 25 years and contributes thousands of dollars every month, thanks to the support of the community and volunteer cooks.
BAWA president Michael D’Souza with falooda at the fete.
BAWA president Michael D’Souza with falooda at the fete. (Sofia Levin) Source: Sofia Levin
BAWA president Michael D’Souza [note: couldn't verify] has three words of advice for food fete first-timers: “don’t come late”. Located in the community hall at The Australian Asian Association of Western Australia, it starts at 10am and finishes at 1pm – but by noon most dishes have sold out. Visitors exchange money for plastic tokens at the entrance and then hit up their favourite stalls, set up on trestle tables with colourful plastic tablecloths. It’s incredibly affordable, which is one of the reasons locals buy enough to stock their freezers until the following month.

Fried snacks like spring rolls and samosas are $1, while mains like chicken biriyani, (Burmese laksa) and nangyi thoke (a noodle dish referred to as a salad) are between $6 and $8. There are also desserts like burfi (a condensed-milk slice similar to fudge), semolina cake called sanwei makin and , a dessert-drink hybrid with a coconut milk base, ice-cream and jellies. But the mohinga station is the most popular.
Mohinga is a popular dish at the fete.
Mohinga is a popular dish at the fete. (Sofia Levin) Source: Sofia Levin
For the last 10 years, Sharon Webber has helped her mother run the mohinga stall. They’ve gained a sparkling reputation among Burmese and non-Burmese locals who return each month for a fix. “The recipe for mohinga always has the same ingredients,” says Webber, “but everyone has a different touch, so it comes up different. Some just have more love and passion, you know?”

Her father’s side of the family moved to Perth nearly 50 years ago, but he stayed behind to marry her mother, who was known for her food despite not having a professional cooking background.
BAWA president Michael D’Souza has three words of advice for food fete first-timers: “don’t come late”.
Sharon Webber moved to Perth in 2005. Back in Myanmar, the family would cook a big pot of mohinga and donate it to those who needed it most. At the Burmese Food Fete, Webber estimates they sell around 160 bowls of mohinga in a couple of hours.

“People love mum’s cooking because she’s more authentic. Some people move here and then they change recipes to make them a more Australian way, but she’s keeping it the traditional way,” she says. “There are a lot of non-Burmese people, too. They taste it for the first time, and then they keep coming back.”
A big pot of mohinga getting stirred at the fete.
A big pot of mohinga gets prepped at the fete. (Sofia Levin) Source: Sofia Levin
D'Souza confirms that most of the 300 to 400 people who visit the food fete each month aren’t Burmese.

“It’s a chance to see a different type of food. Even though we have a lot of influence and are surrounded by many countries, it’s a very unique flavour,” he says. Thailand, Laos, China, India and Bangladesh border Myanmar, and their influence can be tasted at the different stalls. In the motherland, even mohinga varies not just between regions, but with them – Myanmar has eight main ethnic groups, each with regional clusters that vary in language, beliefs and cuisine. “Burmese culture is unique and I don’t know how to describe it. As with every culture, you have to experience it, live it, to fully understand and appreciate it,” says D'Souza. “What is Burmese food? It’s fusion but of typical Southeast Asian food, and if you enjoy Malay or Thai or Indian Chinese food, you will enjoy Burmese food.”


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275 Stirling Street, Perth, WA, (08) 9328 8988

10 am – 1 pm on the second Saturday of the month



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4 min read
Published 28 January 2020 1:38pm
By Sofia Levin


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