Vla

This article is about the food products. For uses of the acronym VLA, see VLA (disambiguation).
Vla

A bowl of chocolate vla topped with whipped cream.
Type Vla
Place of origin Netherlands
Main ingredients milk, vla (or eggs, cornstarch, vanilla, sugar)
Cookbook: Vla  Media: Vla

Vla ( pronunciation ) is a Dutch dairy product made from fresh milk.

The word 'vla' was first documented in the 13th century and originally referred to any custard-like substance covering cakes or other baked goods. The word vlaai is related and has since come to refer a type of pie.[1]

Traditionally vla is made with eggs, sugar and fresh milk, although some industrial producers use cornstarch rather than eggs today. Vla is available in many different flavors of which vanilla is most popular. Other flavors include chocolate, caramel, banana, orange, rum, blackcurrant, raspberry, strawberry, cinnamon, peach and apple.[2]

Vla was originally sold in glass bottles and the consistency made extracting the complete amount difficult, so a special bottle scraper (flessenschraper or flessenlikker) was specifically designed. Despite the fact that vla is now normally sold in cartons, these scrapers are still common in Dutch family kitchens.

Although vla is originally a typical Dutch product, it has also been introduced to Wallonia and Germany by Campina since 2010.

See also

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vla.


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.