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Pavlova wars and Maori heritage: New Zealand’s food scene is full …

I knew little about the island country but its wineries, farms and restaurants reveal a rich culinary culture – and spark a fierce debate

What did New Zealand mean to me? Having never quite made it that far, I had only the vaguest notions about the country, its people, culture and food. I was aware that it was a sparsely populated land of extraordinary scenery (that PR job coming courtesy of Lord of the Rings). I knew, of course, of its indigenous people, the Maori, the related All Blacks haka, Jacinda the lockdown queen and a very large quantity of cheap sauvignon blanc.

Then there was that distinctly colonial pudding, the pavlova – or was that Australia’s dessert? Oh, and their lamb. Their dastardly lamb, outrageously nudging our own home-grown meat out of the chillers at Waitrose.

So when an invitation popped up to speak at the Auckland Writers Festival, I felt it was time to check my rather scant knowledge against the reality on the ground. And get an answer to the big pavlova question.

I was barely off the third plane of my long haul when, at 1.30pm, a man called Hayden Johnston was pouring me a glass of pinot noir in a tasting room at his Kuru Kuru winery in the Bendigo region of Central Otago.

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