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[[Image:Tim Tam Slam.JPG|250px|thumb|right|A man performing a Tim Tam Slam]]
[[Image:Tim Tam Slam.JPG|250px|thumb|right|A man performing a Tim Tam Slam]]


The '''Tim Tam Slam''' is the practice of drinking a hot beverage, e.g. [[tea]], [[hot chocolate]], etc. through a [[Tim Tam]] (a commercial [[biscuit]]). In the [[United Kingdom]] the same act may be performed with a [[Penguin biscuit]] as part of a prevalent culture of [[Dunking (biscuit)|biscuit dunking]].
The '''Tim Tam Slam''' is the practice of drinking a hot beverage, e.g. [[tea]], [[hot chocolate]], etc. through a [[Tim Tam]] (a commercial [[biscuit]]). In the [[United Kingdom]] the same act may be performed with a [[Penguin biscuit]] as part of a prevalent culture of [[Dunking (biscuit)|biscuit dunking]]. Brought to the USA by Daniel Jenkins, slamming Tim Tams has become a staple of American culture


==Process==
==Process==

Revision as of 15:44, 6 November 2010

File:Tim Tam Slam.JPG
A man performing a Tim Tam Slam

The Tim Tam Slam is the practice of drinking a hot beverage, e.g. tea, hot chocolate, etc. through a Tim Tam (a commercial biscuit). In the United Kingdom the same act may be performed with a Penguin biscuit as part of a prevalent culture of biscuit dunking. Brought to the USA by Daniel Jenkins, slamming Tim Tams has become a staple of American culture

Process

Opposite corners of the Tim Tam are bitten off, one end is submerged in the drink, and the drink sucked through the biscuit. The crisp inside biscuit is softened and the outer chocolate coating begins to melt.

Ideally, the inside of the biscuit should collapse but the outside should remain intact long enough for the liquid to reach the mouth. Refrigerating them helps to preserve the outside coating while allowing the inside of the biscuit to melt. The thicker chocolate coating on the Double Coat Tim Tam offers a more stable structure to prevent a premature collapse. The caramel centre of the Chewy Caramel variety helps to hold the biscuit together for a slightly longer time.

The Arnott's company used the name Tim Tam Suck in a 2002 advertising campaign.[1][2]

Similar biscuit practices

Equivalent practices are possible with other biscuits. In the United Kingdom the same act may be performed with a Penguin biscuit, Twix, Breakaway and similar. In the United States, it is also common to use Twix for this purpose, and in an article in the The Oberlin Review, Cat Richert reports attempting the practice in the United States using Oreo cookies after returning from a trip to Tasmania, but without success. Other chocolate coated biscuits can be used, with the MintSlice biscuit also being a firm favourite in Australia.[3]

World Record Attempt

On Australia Day in 2004, 200 people in a pub in Croydon, England, and reportedly 30,000 people throughout the United Kingdom as a whole, attempted to set a record for tea-sucking, using Tim Tams.[4]

References

  1. ^ Arnott's Tim Tam Official Website (Internet Archive cache 6 Jun 2002) Accessed 14 Jan 2008.
  2. ^ Australian Business Intelligence site search results Accessed 14 Jan 2008. [dead link]
  3. ^ Cat Richert (2002-04-19). "Adventures From a Land Under the Land Down Under". Oberlin Review.
  4. ^ "Tea-sucking record attempt". Croydon Guardian. 2004-01-30.