http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jArG8aRebToAttrage wrote:As a kid, anything I could get my hands on, as often as I could get my hands on it. Once I became a grumpy adult and learned words like "cholesterol", and "waistline", my indulgence is now pretty limited to a chocolate biscuit here in Australia called a "Mint Slice". Not sure what your American equivalent is, but it's basically a cookie base, with a layer of soft mint, all coated in dark chocolate. *drool* come to think of it, it's sorta like a larger Junior Mint with a layer of crunchy cookie added.
It sounds like the Girl Scout Thin Mint. I wonder if the Girl Guides have the same cookies? I think the thin mints still have a mint flavored cookie and not any goo. I don't eat them but the box only shows a mint cookie covered in chocolate. This is from Wikipedia
Wikipedia wrote:# Thin Mints (green box): Thin, mint-flavored chocolate wafers dipped in a chocolate coating. Depending on the bakery used, Thin Mints may or may not contain high-fructose corn syrup. Thin mints produced by LBB contain less than 2% invert sugar syrup, while those produced by ABC contain less than 2% high-fructose corn syrup. Invert sugar syrup has roughly the same fructose content as high fructose corn syrup, however, so both varieties of Thin Mint have almost identical fructose content.[26]
If so at least the Girl Scouts of America are doing their job. This reminds me of the scene in Night Shift where Micheal Keaton is trying to explain to Herny Winkler that if they don't become pimps that Girl Scouts across the world will be mauled by dogs.
I found this link for you
http://cgi.ebay.com/2011-Girl-Scout-Cookies-Thin-Mints-6-Boxes-/190515188604?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item2c5b97137c If you don't buy them a 12 year old girl will be very sad. Don't make her come all the way to Australia to kick your butt.