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Fry’s Peppermint Cream - 3 Pack

Original price $7.99 - Original price $7.99
Original price
$7.99
$7.99 - $7.99
Current price $7.99

About our best-before dates

We work hard to bring proper British groceries to Canada, but importing food across an ocean is not as tidy as stocking a supermarket shelf down the road.

Some products arrive with long dates. Some arrive with shorter ones. Different products come through the import process with different shelf lives, so the dates are not always as neat or predictable as they would be in a regular Canadian supermarket.

Most online grocery shops do not show best-before dates unless something is getting close. We do it differently.

If you were shopping in our Halifax store, you could pick up the product, turn it over, and check the date before buying. We think our online customers should get that same level of transparency.

That is why we show best-before dates clearly on our products.

What "best before" actually means

A best-before date is about quality — flavour, texture, freshness, and how the product is expected to be at its best.

It is not the same as a "use by" or expiry date, which only appears on certain regulated foods.

For everyday groceries like chocolate, biscuits, crisps, sweets, tea, sauces, jams, and pantry items, the best-before date is a quality marker, not a safety marker.

Why our dates vary so much

British imports are unpredictable. We do not get to choose every date that arrives in Canada, and different products naturally come with different shelf lives.

A jar of sauce may have months or years on it. A bag of crisps might arrive with a much shorter window and still be completely normal for that type of product.

We check dates, show them clearly, and give you the information before you buy — because that is how it should be.

What the colours mean

  • More than 30 days remaining
  • Within 30 days
  • Within 5 days, or past the best-before date

The product page will still show the actual date, so you can decide what works for you.

Why some customers like shorter dates

Many of our regular customers deliberately shop shorter-dated items when the price makes sense.

A chocolate bar with two weeks left is often every bit as good as one with six months left — and if we can pass on a saving instead of letting perfectly good food go to waste, everyone wins.

It is not about cutting corners. It is about being clear, fair, and sensible with stock that has travelled a long way to get here.

Questions about a specific product? Email help@thegreatbritishshop.ca — we read every message.

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Rated 4.9/5 from 429 reviews
About Fry’s Peppermint Cream

About Fry’s Peppermint Cream

Fry's Peppermint Cream is one of those British chocolate bars that needs very little introduction to anyone who grew up in the UK, but remains genuinely hard to track down in Canada without knowing where to look.

Each pack contains three individual 49g bars, coming to 147g in total, with the classic combination of smooth, cool peppermint fondant centre wrapped in dark chocolate. It is a format and a flavour that has not really changed, which is precisely the point.

For British expats, this is the kind of thing that turns up in care parcels or gets requested with a slightly embarrassed specificity. The Great British Shop imports it directly from the United Kingdom, so there is no waiting on a slow parcel or hoping a visiting relative remembered to pack it.

Fry's Peppermint Cream is suitable for vegetarians, and the three-pack format makes it easy to justify buying more than one. Not that justification is really required.

Shop more Fry's in Canada or browse the full range of British chocolate available to ship across Canada.

Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage

Ingredients

Sugar, cocoa mass, glucose syrup, humectant (glycerol), palm oil, cocoa butter, emulsifiers (soya lecithins, E476), flavouring, skimmed milk powder

Allergens

Contains: Milk, Soya.

Storage

Store in a dry place. Protect from heat.

Frequently asked questions about Fry’s Peppermint Cream

Q: What does Fry's Peppermint Cream taste like?

A: Fry's Peppermint Cream is a distinctively British chocolate bar with a soft, fondant peppermint centre coated in dark chocolate. The combination is cool, clean and instantly recognisable to anyone who grew up with it. It is the sort of thing that sits in a very specific corner of British confectionery memory, and the 3-pack format means you can either share generously or make three very private decisions.

Q: Are Fry's Peppermint Creams suitable for vegetarians?

A: Yes, Fry's Peppermint Creams are suitable for vegetarians. They contain milk and soya, so they are not suitable for vegans or anyone with a dairy or soya allergy. The product may also contain tree nuts including Brazil nuts, cashew nuts, macadamia nuts, pecan nuts, pistachio nuts and walnuts, as well as wheat, so those with relevant allergies should take note.

Q: Is this Fry's Peppermint Cream the UK version?

A: Yes, this is the UK version, imported directly from the United Kingdom. Fry's is one of the oldest names in British confectionery, and the peppermint cream bar is very much a product of that tradition. For British expats in Canada, it is the specific bar they remember rather than a loose approximation, which is usually the whole point of tracking it down.

More about Fry’s Peppermint Cream

Fry's Peppermint Cream sits in a corner of British chocolate that is genuinely its own category: dark chocolate wrapped around a soft peppermint fondant centre, with a flavour profile that is cool and clean rather than sweet and heavy. It belongs to a long tradition of British chocolate confectionery that leans on contrast, the slight bitterness of dark chocolate against the brightness of mint, rather than straightforward sweetness.

For Canadians with a British background, Fry's Peppermint Cream is the sort of thing that is emotionally specific in a way that no local substitute quite covers. It is not that peppermint chocolate does not exist here; it is that this particular bar is tied to a very particular memory, and that memory has a specific shape and wrapper.

The three-pack format gives you 147g across three individually wrapped 49g bars, which makes it sensible for sharing, rationing, or quietly working through over a week. Each bar stores well at room temperature, away from heat, so it travels reliably and keeps without fuss in a cupboard or desk drawer.

Fry's in Canada extends well beyond peppermint: the range includes Turkish Delight and Chocolate Cream, so if one format suits you, the others are worth knowing about.

The three-pack ships from within Canada, which means no overseas delays and no customs guesswork. Whether you are in Burlington or Dartmouth, it arrives as part of a straightforward Canadian order rather than a cross-Atlantic parcel gamble.

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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4.9 from 429 Google Reviews
Amazing place to get your British fix. They have so many unique products. Love it every time I visit.
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The story of Fry’s Peppermint Cream

The bar people remember before they remember why

Fry’s Peppermint Cream is one of those British chocolate bars that does not need much explaining to the people who know it. Dark chocolate on the outside, a cool peppermint fondant centre inside, and a neat little snap that somehow feels more grown up than most of the sweets by the till. This 3 pack is the practical version, which is to say it gives everyone in the house a fair chance before someone starts pretending the last one was “probably already gone”.

Read the full story

A Fry’s story, rather than a neat product birth certificate

There is not enough supplied product-level evidence here to claim a precise origin date for Fry’s Peppermint Cream itself, so the honest story is the wider Fry’s one. And that is hardly a poor substitute. J. S. Fry and Sons created the first filled chocolate sweet, Cream Sticks, in 1853, and produced the UK’s first chocolate Easter egg in 1873. Fry’s Turkish Delight, the rose-flavoured bar in milk chocolate, followed in 1914. Alongside Cadbury and Rowntree’s, Fry’s was one of the big three British confectionery makers for much of the 19th and 20th centuries, with all three rooted in Quaker business culture. So while Peppermint Cream’s exact paper trail is not set out here, it clearly belongs to a family that knew its way around filled chocolate.

Bristol, cocoa and the useful mess of history

The Fry’s business began in Bristol in 1761, when Joseph Fry and John Vaughan bought a small shop from the apothecary Walter Churchman, along with a patent for a chocolate refining process. Joseph Fry had already begun making chocolate a little earlier, and the firm passed through several names before becoming J. S. Fry and Sons in 1822, when Joseph Storrs Fry brought his sons into the partnership. That sounds tidy when written down, which is always suspicious, but the main point is solid enough: Fry’s was part of the early machinery of British chocolate making, not a later name stuck on a wrapper for effect.

From experiments to familiar bars

Fry’s place in chocolate history rests on more than old shopfront romance. Joseph Storrs Fry patented a method of grinding cocoa beans using a Watt steam engine, helping bring factory methods into the cocoa trade. In 1847, Fry’s produced what is often considered the first solid chocolate bar, and in 1866 Fry’s Chocolate Cream became a landmark filled bar. That matters for Peppermint Cream because it helps explain why the format feels so recognisably Fry’s: a firm chocolate shell, a sweet centre, and a bar that does not rely on fuss. It is confectionery with its elbows tucked in.

Cadbury, Somerdale and the modern wrapper

The Fry’s name later became tangled with Cadbury, as many British chocolate names eventually do if you follow the paperwork long enough. J. S. Fry and Sons merged with Cadbury in 1919 to form the British Cocoa and Chocolate Company, and from the 1920s Fry’s operations began moving from Bristol to Somerdale at Keynsham, just outside the city. Cadbury later took direct control of the Fry division in 1935. Those ownership changes help explain why Fry’s today can feel both separate and familiar: an old Bristol name living inside a wider British chocolate family, still turning up on bars that people ask for by name.

Why it travels well in the memory

For British shoppers in Canada, Fry’s Peppermint Cream is not just “mint chocolate”. It is the bar from newsagents, petrol stations, grandparents’ cupboards and the corner shop shelf where everything was somehow at child height. It is also the sort of thing people remember with suspicious accuracy, right down to the dark chocolate and the pale mint middle. In Halifax, a bar like this can do a small amount of time travel, which is more than can be said for most groceries. The Great British Shop will leave it at that, before anyone gets emotional over fondant.