PRODUCT: Pepperidge Farm Tim Tam Cookies
[1] Chocolate cookies with chocolate crème or caramel filling, enrobed in chocolate. Dangerously addictive (photos by Hannah Kaminsky | © THE NIBBLE).
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We recently received an invitation to meet Gail Simmons, Special Projects Manager with Food & Wine Magazine who gained national (international? interplanetary?) visibility as a judge on our favorite TV food show, “Top Chef.” She was the celebrity guest at a debut party for Pepperidge Farm’s Tam Tam cookies—the top-selling cookie in Australia, now available in the U.S., and apparently a favorite of Gail’s. You can find them exclusively at Target stores from October through March (when they can be shipped in cool comfort without hot containers melting the chocolate). Editor’s Note: Since this article was published, Tim Tams have become available online, including on Amazon. If you like Kit Kat and Twix bars, these are bigger, plumper, more sumptuous versions. Crisp chocolate cookie layers are filled with chocolate crème or richer caramel, then enrobed in even richer chocolate. > February 16th is National Tim Tam Day. Tim Tam cookies were originally made by Arnott’s Biscuits Limited of Australia, introduced in 1964. They were named by Ross Arnott, who attended the 1958 Kentucky Derby and decided that the name of the winning horse, Tim Tam, was perfect for a planned new line of biscuits. The cookies are a huge favorite Down Under (the brand is now owned by Pepperidge Farm). The biscuit (the word for cookie in Australia and the U.K.) was created by Ian Norris, an employee who took a world trip in 1958, looking for inspiration for new products. While in Britain, he discovered the Penguin biscuit, and decided to try to “make a better one.” The result: two malted biscuits separated by a light hard chocolate cream filling and coated in a thin layer of textured chocolate. Since the 2000s Arnott’s has released many different varieties of the product, some as limited edition runs. Varieties include caramel, chocolate, chocolate orange, dark chocolate, dark chocolate mint, double coat, honeycomb, and white chocolate. and choc orange. In 2004, Arnott’s caused a controversy when they released limited edition varieties flavored with liqueurs: Tim Tam Tia Maria and Kahlua Mint Slice. The Australian Drug Foundation suggested that selling the biscuits in supermarkets was “potentially dangerous” by “normalizing” the taste of alcohol for children. Arnott’s responded that a customer “would need to consume your body weight of biscuits every hour to reach a blood-alcohol content of .05” [source]. Pepperidge Farm, a sister company of Arnott’s, began importing the Tim Tam to the United States in 2008. Tim Tams are still “Made in Australia” and packaging in the U.S. carries the slogan, “Australia’s Favorite Cookie.” The more voluptuous Caramel Tim Tams outshine their Chocolate Creme sisters, but if we had never met Caramel, we’d have been happy taking Chocolate Crème home. |
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The milk chocolate that enrobes the cookie is very sweet—eat more than two at a time and you’ll be in the “Why did I eat that last cookie?” mode. So in that way, the cookies have a beneficial, self-limiting feature. We didn’t have a chance to try the dark chocolate versions. Among other things, it requires those who endorse products in the media, including blogs and social media, to disclose if they have received the products for free, work for the company, are an MD, Ph.D., or other “Dr.” (if they call upon their expertise as a doctor), etc. At THE NIBBLE, we’re already anticipating using disclosures like, “We received these four flavors for free, and bought these 6 flavors at our local supermarket.” (THE NIBBLE gets some free samples, but we spend far more buying products plus the ancillary products needed to cook, bake, and otherwise prepare many of the free samples.) In the case of Tim Tam: We got them for free but enjoyed them so much, that we would gladly have paid for them and certainly will go out and pay for the dark chocolate versions. These are not artisan baked goods, but they are one heck of a comfort food fix. |