 I love eating international food. We would just be eating fish and chips probably, if we didn't have multiculturalism in this country. If I see your culture, if you see my culture, we enjoy the life together. So to me, we have a lot to provide to the country. When I look around today, I see a lot of stalls with a lot of food, a lot of different foods, a lot of diverse foods. Behind every food, other than just the taste, there's actually meaning behind it. Whether you eat nation or Indian, all the different flavours. There's a story behind it and it's about humanity. It's more than you're from here and I'm from there. We're all in it together and it's priceless. I'm cooking the chicken, the lamb and the cow stomach. This stomach is from the butcher and he washed it. It's a cow meat stomach, meat and intestine. This one is a tomato sauce. So this tomato sauce, I have the onions and tomato sauce and the oil and garlic. We are cooking the Northeast Africa. Cook which is basically Eritrean cook and the Eritrean cook is spicy, very tasty, very unique from a lot of cultural food. All our dishes are very rich in red onion, chili, tomato, garlic and ginger. Mussel is Liberian and Guinean from West Africa in Sierra Leone. We all came together here and united here together because we all speak the same language. So we try to bring our cultural food and sell it to Australian people. We do have jello fries with mixed vegetables and we have brusette. Brusette is in French, that is cow meat. We mix it with capsicum and onion, we put salt and pepper on it. We basically eat curry, it's not exactly the same as Indian food. Our curry is spicier and we tend to eat more seafood as well because we are surrounded by sea from all sides. I came back in 1991 and if I compare Australia in 1991 to now, now it's definitely way more colorful than back then and you feel at home. Multiculturalism to Australia I would say is the backbone. It's what this country is built on, all the way back from the Irish, English. Then you can say Indians, Asians, Africans, everyone. It's a multicultural country and it's the backbone, it's how it's held together.