Vanilla slice
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Vanilla slice is an Australian pastry comprising a thick layer of vanilla custard sandwiched between puff pastry and topped with icing sugar or thinly iced. Similar varieties of the dessert exist in Europe and North America, and it is believed to have evolved from one of the similar European desserts.<ref name="AussieVS">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="AroundWorld">Template:Cite news</ref>
HistoryEdit
Vanilla slice is an Australian variation of many similar desserts comprising vanilla custard and flaky pastry.<ref name="AussieVS"/> Most notably this includes the Mille-feuille, which is believed to have originated in France.<ref name="AroundWorld"/> Other similar pastries include the Dutch Tompouce, Polish Napoleonka, German Cremeschnitte, Balkan and Middle Eastern Galaktoboureko, among others. It is believed that the Australian vanilla slice emerged as a variety of one of these similar desserts, but it is unknown which variety or varieties evolved into the modern vanilla slice.<ref name="AussieVS"/><ref name="AroundWorld"/>
CultureEdit
Vanilla slice is strongly ingrained within Australian "bakery culture", commonly featuring in bakeries across the nation.<ref name="AroundWorld"/> In keeping with the informality and disdain for pretence in Australian vernacular, it is common to refer to the dessert using colloquial names based on bodily fluids such as pus, phlegm, or nasal mucus which are similar in appearance to the custard filling. This includes names such as snot block, snot brick, phlegm cake, or pus pie.<ref name="AussieVS"/>
To celebrate its cultural significance, an annual competition known as The Great Australian Vanilla Slice Triumph has been held since 1998.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The event began after Victorian Premier Jeff Kennett visited the Victorian town of Ouyen, and considered the local bakery to make the best vanilla slice in Australia.<ref name="AussieVS"/> The event was hosted annually in Ouyen until 2001, when it moved to the nearby town of Merbein.