It's OK millennials, Australian cafes have stepped up to help you save for that ridiculously expensive house you'll probably never be able to afford.

After The Australian columnist and voice of the baby boomer generation Bernard Salt complained that millennials could buy houses if only they stopped eating $22 smashed avocados at hipster cafes, the debate has basically melted the internet like a cheese toasty under the hot grill of generational scorn.

Not only are a bunch of Melbourne and Sydney cafes now offering cheeky discounts on overpriced smashed avocados and christening them with names like "Home Savers," but the internet's also taking pre-orders on Trump-inspired smashed avocado merch.

Think the conversation on housing affordability and the unsteady national job market has taken a turn for the stupid? It totally has.

Ironically, the photographer who took all the stock images of smashed avocado on toast can now afford a house. pic.twitter.com/hI0KEwaKoD — Sophie Braham (@sophiebrahams) October 18, 2016

But if young Australians have little assurance of a job or a nest egg to call their own, the very least they can have is a moment to celebrate green, mushy deliciousness.

As The Guardian's Bridget Delany put it, "Brunch is the opiate of the masses. We are not going out for brunch instead of buying houses: we are brunching because we cannot afford to buy houses," she wrote. "What do you do when you can't afford to buy somewhere to live? Well, you decide to live."

Hey baby boomers, don't mess w/ our smashed avocado. @_chriskohler weighs in on the housing debate dividing the generations | @theprojecttv pic.twitter.com/GD6NmbfIvq — The Australian (@australian) October 18, 2016

And live we shall! With the help from some sardonically named dishes. For example, "The Retirement Plan" at Melbourne's Little Big Sugar Salt forgoes expensive food items and simply offers a meal of avocado, Vegemite and tomato on toast for 10 bucks.

@BernardSalt is right of course, just give up $22 a week and you'll have a deposit on a median priced house in Sydney in... 175 years. — Kyle Sheldrick (@K_Sheldrick) October 15, 2016

Other cafes are offering dishes with names like "The Baby Boomer," "Avonomics," "The Millennial" and "Corn-tract of Sale."

Hmmm, crippling property prices. Image: michelle jami/flickr creative commons

You can always count on those financially irresponsible young folk to bring the irony.