Australia, as we all know, is full of amazing sights that you won&rsquot see anywhere else in the world. Even so, we came across a most unexpected one on our last day in Australia, when we visited Panny&rsquos, a famous chocolate fac­tory on Phillip Island, a couple of hours from Melbourne. Panny turned out to be an elderly gent named Kodandapani Lakshmanan, who looked and sounded as though he had just arrived from Mylapore. In fact, Panny, a mechanical engineer, had arrived on this wind­swept island via Malaysia and Papua New Guinea, where he had worked on cocoa and coconut plantations, before immigrating Down Under. He&rsquos now something of a legend in Australia. The morning we visit, his chocolate factory is overrun by Aussie families and their excited children fulfilling their Willy Wonka fantasies &mdash there&rsquos an entire village modelled from chocolate, a life-sized chocolate replica of Michelangelo&rsquos David, and a chocolate waterfall from which cascades 400 kg of the finest Belgian molten stuff every hour. And then there&rsquos the restaurant attached to his factory where, apart from a counter loaded with gooey confections, there&rsquos a curry lunch on offer, with totally au­thentic masala dosa-style potatoes and cabbage thoran. Fifteen years in Aus­tralia have turned Panny into a super-successful Australian entrepreneur, but they haven&rsquot taken the Tamil out of him.