About Cadburys Time Out 6 Pack
About Cadburys Time Out 6 Pack
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrédients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: milk, soya, wheat.
May contain: almonds, brazil nuts, cashew nuts, macadamia nuts, pecan nuts, pistachio nuts, walnuts.
Contient : Lait, Soya, Blé.
Peut contenir : almonds, brazil nuts, cashew nuts, macadamia nuts, pecan nuts, pistachio nuts, walnuts.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Cadburys Time Out 6 Pack
Additional Information
Packaging Accuracy. We keep product information as accurate and up to date as possible. Manufacturers sometimes change packaging, ingredients, nutritional information, allergen advice, pack sizes or branding without notice, so the product you receive may look slightly different from the images shown. If you have a question about ingredients or allergens before ordering, please get in touch and we will gladly check for you.
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Values are typical and may vary. Always check the pack on delivery for the most accurate information.
The story of Cadburys Time Out 6 Pack
The small bar with a very literal name
Cadburys Time Out 6 Pack - 108g is one of those British chocolate multipacks that seems to belong in a school lunchbox, an office drawer, or the cupboard where everyone claims they are “just having one”. The name does most of the work. It is not trying to be grand. It is a pause, a small bit of Cadbury chocolate business, and then back to whatever nonsense the day was already doing.
Read the full story
What we can honestly say about its heritage
There is no supplied product-level origin story here for Time Out, so the sensible route is not to invent one in a purple haze of nostalgia. This is best told as a Cadbury family story: the modern packet belongs to one of Britain’s most recognisable chocolate names, even if this particular bar’s early development is not being pinned down from the data in front of us. Grocery history is like that. Some products arrive with a tidy birth certificate. Others just appear in the national memory, usually somewhere between a newsagent shelf and a packed lunch.
The purple, the big three, and the modern owner
Cadbury adopted purple as the company colour in 1905, reportedly to honour Queen Victoria, and that purple has done a lot of heavy lifting on British shelves ever since. Cadbury, Rowntree’s and Fry’s were widely regarded as the big three British confectionery manufacturers through much of the 19th and 20th centuries, which explains why so many British chocolate memories come from a fairly small club of names. Today Cadbury is owned by Mondelez International, following Kraft’s acquisition of Cadbury in 2010 and the later Mondelez spin-off in 2012. That corporate trail is not exactly cosy, but it does explain why the familiar Cadbury name now sits inside a much larger international confectionery world.
From Bull Street to Bournville
The Cadbury story began in Birmingham in 1824, when John Cadbury, a Quaker, started selling tea, coffee and drinking chocolate at 93 Bull Street. His Quaker beliefs mattered, because drinking chocolate was promoted partly as a temperance alternative to alcohol. By 1831, Cadbury had moved into factory production of cocoa and drinking chocolates in Bridge Street. Later, Richard and George Cadbury helped revive the business, including through improved cocoa processing in the 1860s. In 1879 the company opened its Bournville works outside the city centre, a move that became central to Cadbury’s public identity.
Why Bournville still clings to the wrapper
Bournville was more than a factory address. George Cadbury developed the surrounding estate as a model village for workers, shaped by the family’s Quaker outlook. Famously, there were no pubs on the estate, which is either noble social planning or a fairly strong hint that the Cadburys were serious people. The name itself came from the nearby river and the French word for town. That mixture of chocolate, welfare reform, industrial confidence and mild moral instruction is very Cadbury: sweet on the shelf, earnest in the background.
Dairy Milk and the Cadbury memory bank
Cadbury Dairy Milk was introduced in 1905 and became the company’s best-known milk chocolate line, helped later by the “glass and a half” advertising idea from 1928. Time Out belongs to the later, busier world of Cadbury bars and multipacks, where chocolate is not just a block but something portioned, wrapped and carried about in bags, desks and glove compartments. For British shoppers, that matters. The memory is often less about ceremony and more about the ordinary places: corner shops, garage counters, lunch breaks, and the cupboard at home where the multipack was mysteriously down to one.
A pause that travels well
For British expats in Canada, Cadburys Time Out is not really about needing chocolate in the abstract. Canada has chocolate. This is about wanting the recognisable purple-and-Cadbury rhythm of home, the sort of thing someone might add to a parcel because it feels specific rather than sensible. A six pack has the added danger of looking organised, which fools nobody. Still, there is comfort in a familiar wrapper turning up far from the old corner shop, and The Great British Shop is a quiet sign that the cupboard can still have a bit of Britain in it.