Vanilla slice recipe, Leila McKinnon (2024)

Recipe for vanilla slice by Leila McKinnon.

Oct 16, 2012 3:20am

By Leila McKinnon

  • Serves 8
  • Vanilla slice recipe, Leila McKinnon (1)

    Print

Searching for recipes to add to her kitchen repertoire, Leila McKinnon discovered a treasure trove - and published it.

Australia's restaurants, chefs and produce are acknowledged as among the best in the world. Our baristas have taken over Europe, flat white by long black. But it's what's going on in our suburban kitchens that deserves the wildest of nationalistic chest thumping.

I should know: I've stuck my nose into hundreds of handwritten recipe books in the past year, sniffing out old gems and modern classics like a Tasmanian truffle pig. And best of all, I've begged permission to publish them in the unlikeliest of places: a cookbook edited by me, a news journalist, and ordained by our greatest food revolutionary, Margaret Fulton.

Australia's Favourite Recipes started out as a way for me to get my unimaginative hands on some good, honest everyday recipes for home. I was never short of a dinner party recipe, but what I needed were dishes I could cook on a weeknight with ingredients I could buy from the corner shop, dishes that took less than 30 minutes to make, and treats that one day my kids would come home for and be transported back to their childhoods. I wanted the dishes families have made and enjoyed week after week, often for generations, and never tired of.

We did a shout-out on the Today show, we asked for recipes on radio and called for submissions on Facebook. In the end we received several hundred and had to whittle them down to just over 70. They came in spidery handwriting by mail, in shouty capitals on Facebook, and with photos of grandpas, nonnas, hungry kids, and proud home cooks. And with a few notable exceptions (ham cooked in instant coffee, anyone? Schnitzel with banana-avocado sauce?) they were fresh, inspired and nourishing.

There were plenty of lovingly perfected lasagnes and lamingtons, but also some outstanding exotics. Steve Wide's jewelled freekeh salad mixes pomegranate and hearty lentils with mint, almonds and currants; it's an absolute delight. There were Italian dishes from nonna, and noodles from the Philippines. There were stories of lunch-box treats (chocolate Weet-Bix slice from Margaret of Mollymook) and of a boyfriend brought home to meet mum over a zesty lime and chocolate green pudding. I threw in a few of my all-time best fallbacks including vanilla slice, my lasagne (yes, I do think my version is the best - doesn't everyone think that about their own?), and a lemon yoghurt cake that's one of the quickest, most fuss-free cake recipes around.

Armed with this plunder, I went about the dream task of putting together a recipe book. The team and I set up camp in a cottage in country Victoria in the depths of winter. Detouring around flooded roads, well prepared with wellies and beanies, we began a cooking, photographing and eating marathon.

The process was quite a revelation for this novice food editor. By day two I found myself sounding like a real pro with proclamations such as, "We're going to have to swap that hero mussel for a hero prawn, and move that white pepper pot more to the right of frame" or, "Ahem, we need fresher herbs on the salmon - those baked herbs look like they'd set the sniffer dogs barking at a music festival."

By day five we were running out of patience, vintage tea towels, and holes with which to loosen our belts. But we'd put together a snap­shot of 21st-century Australian home dining.

It's only fitting that a community-based true-blue charity should benefit from this treasure trove, so I approached Legacy with an offer of a large portion of the profits. Since World War I, Legacy's incredible volunteers have been helping the families of our deceased and incapacitated servicemen and women, and unfortunately their work has been needed by every successive generation.

The cover recipe - the icing on the cake, if you like - is a Margaret Fulton berry-meringue creation, a cross between a good old pavlova and a vacherin. It's as exciting as Fulton's forthright assertion that "this is a book to treasure and keep".

Goodness me, it will be a long time before I clamber down from cloud nine, and even then I'll still have a lifetime of reliable, delicious family recipes at my fingertips.

Ingredients

  • 2 sheets shop-bought puff pastry
  • 2 cups milk (500ml)
  • Scraped seeds of 1 vanilla bean
  • 100 gm cornflour
  • ½ cup caster sugar
  • 4 egg yolks, at room temperature
  • For dusting: sieved icing sugar

Method

Main

  • 1

    Preheat the oven to 210C and line two oven trays with baking paper.

  • 2

    Place the sheets of puff pastry on the prepared trays and bake until crisp and golden. Remove from the oven and set aside to cool.

  • 3

    Heat the milk and vanilla seeds in a small saucepan over medium heat and bring to the boil, then remove from the heat.

  • 4

    Place the cornflour and sugar in a heatproof bowl. Add the egg yolks and whisk until pale and creamy. Add one-third of the hot milk and stir to combine, then add the remaining hot milk and stir to combine.

  • 5

    Return the mixture to the pan over low heat and bring to a gentle boil, then transfer to a bowl and leave to cool completely.

  • 6

    Line a 25cm x 12cm straight-sided cake tin with enough plastic wrap so that it hangs over the sides. Trim the pastry sheets to fit the tin. Place one pastry sheet in the base of the tin, add the custard and evenly spread. Top with the remaining pastry sheet and refrigerate until the custard is set, ideally overnight.

  • 7

    Remove from the tin using the plastic wrap as handles, generously dust with icing sugar and cut into 6-8 slices.

Notes

Note "Vanilla slice takes me straight back in time to the school tuckshop. Back then, I didn't appreciate the time and skill that went into making these delicious treats. The trickiest part of this recipe is making sure the custard sets perfectly. My first couple of batches turned out a bit sloppy but I didn't let them go to waste - they were still delicious and I just ate them with a spoon. If your first attempt doesn't set right, don't be disheartened - it will still taste good. Keep trying until you get the ideal set."Australia's Favourite Recipes, edited by Leila McKinnon, is published by Plum Pan Macmillan ($29.99, pbk). The recipe here has been reproduced with minor GT style changes.

The Latest from Gourmet Traveller

  • Restaurant NewsThe best new restaurants and bars in Melbourne

    Today 12:00am

  • Recipe CollectionsRecipes for the ultimate Easter lunch feast

    Yesterday 9:18pm

  • Destinations16 best Maldives resorts for an island getaway in 2024

    Yesterday 7:00am

  • Restaurant News10 impressive Brisbane restaurants to book when visitors are in town

    Mar 19, 2024

  • Restaurant NewsThe best new restaurants and bars in Sydney

    Mar 19, 2024

  • Supersize Me: The future of dining out in Australia

    Mar 19, 2024

  • DestinationsBalearic beauty: Where to eat, drink and stay on Menorca Island, Spain

    Mar 19, 2024

  • Travel NewsFour domestic and international flight sales worth checking out tonight

    Mar 19, 2024

  • Chefs' RecipesMassimo Mele's lemon-scented goat meatballs

    Mar 18, 2024

  • Recipe Collections40 best fish recipes for Good Friday, Easter and beyond

    Mar 18, 2024

  • DestinationsThings to do in Newcastle NSW: Where to eat, drink and stay

    Mar 17, 2024

  • Restaurant NewsWhat's open this Easter long weekend

    Mar 15, 2024

  • Travel NewsOur top picks of hotels with the best views of Vivid Sydney 2024

    Mar 14, 2024

  • CruisesItaly by Sea: On board the revamped luxury ship Crystal Serenity

    Mar 14, 2024

  • EntertainingBest whisky glasses to buy for sophisticated dram sipping

    Mar 14, 2024

  • Recipe CollectionsFlour and Stone's cake recipes for Easter

    Mar 13, 2024

  • Restaurant NewsComing soon: Ormeggio team to open new restaurant Postino Osteria in Sydney’s Summer Hill

    Mar 13, 2024

  • Recipe CollectionsRabbit recipes for Easter

    Mar 11, 2024

  • Recipe CollectionsEaster desserts that aren't hot cross buns

    Mar 11, 2024

Vanilla slice recipe, Leila McKinnon (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Jerrold Considine

Last Updated:

Views: 5856

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (58 voted)

Reviews: 81% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Jerrold Considine

Birthday: 1993-11-03

Address: Suite 447 3463 Marybelle Circles, New Marlin, AL 20765

Phone: +5816749283868

Job: Sales Executive

Hobby: Air sports, Sand art, Electronics, LARPing, Baseball, Book restoration, Puzzles

Introduction: My name is Jerrold Considine, I am a combative, cheerful, encouraging, happy, enthusiastic, funny, kind person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.