About Cadbury Mini Eggs
About Cadbury Mini Eggs
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrédients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: MILK.
Contient : Lait.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Cadbury Mini Eggs
More about Cadbury Mini Eggs
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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The story of Cadbury Mini Eggs
The Little Easter Bag With Far Too Much Authority
Cadbury Mini Eggs are one of those Easter things that do not need much explaining to British shoppers. A small bag, a handful of pastel shells, that familiar crisp crack before the milk chocolate gives way, and suddenly everyone in the room has an opinion about whether the yellow ones taste different. They probably do not, but Easter confectionery has never been a calm subject. This 74g bag sits firmly in the seasonal corner of British grocery memory, the kind of thing that appears near tills, in school-holiday cupboards, and in parcels from relatives who understand that proper Easter supplies are not optional.
Read the full story
A Cadbury Story, Rather Than a Mini Egg Origin Tale
There is no supplied product-level origin story here for Mini Eggs, so the honest heritage is the Cadbury story behind the packet rather than a neat little invention about the sweets themselves. Cadbury adopted purple as a company colour in 1905, reportedly to honour Queen Victoria, and that shade has since become one of the most recognisable sights in British confectionery, even if lawyers have occasionally had a lively time arguing about it. Cadbury also stood alongside Rowntree’s and Fry’s as one of the big three names in British confectionery through much of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Today, Cadbury is owned by Mondelez International, following Kraft’s acquisition of Cadbury in 2010 and the later Mondelez spin-off in 2012. That is the corporate bit, tidied up as much as such things can be.
From Bull Street To Bournville
The older Cadbury story begins in Birmingham in 1824, when John Cadbury, a Quaker, opened a shop at 93 Bull Street selling tea, coffee and drinking chocolate. His Quaker beliefs mattered, not as decoration but as part of the business’s early character. Drinking chocolate was promoted as an alternative to alcohol, which sounds very earnest until you remember that many British food empires began with somebody trying to improve public behaviour and accidentally creating national habits instead. By 1831 Cadbury had moved into making cocoa and drinking chocolates in a Bridge Street factory, and the family business gradually became more than a grocer’s counter with good ideas.
Why Bournville Still Hangs Around The Wrapper
Cadbury’s move to Bournville is one of the reasons the name carries more weight than an ordinary chocolate brand. Richard and George Cadbury moved the business out of central Birmingham to a new factory site south-west of the city in the late 1870s, and George Cadbury later developed Bournville as a model village for workers. It was planned with decent housing and, in keeping with the family’s Quaker principles, no pubs on the estate. That detail tends to raise eyebrows, especially among people who feel chocolate and a pint are not natural enemies, but it does explain why Cadbury’s heritage has always been tangled up with reform, welfare and a very particular sort of British moral seriousness.
Easter, British Style
Cadbury’s place in Easter is not accidental. The company launched its first Easter egg in 1875, according to Cadbury’s own history, with early versions quite different from the bright seasonal shelves people remember now. Mini Eggs belong to the modern Easter cupboard rather than the Victorian drawing room, but they sit in that same British habit of marking spring with chocolate shaped, wrapped or coloured in ways that make adults behave suspiciously like children. They are not just sweets. They are part of the annual domestic negotiation over whether Easter chocolate is for guests, children, baking, hiding, or standing in the kitchen eating quietly before anyone notices.
The Packet People Remember
For British expats in Canada, Cadbury Mini Eggs often land with more emotional force than their size suggests. They recall newsagent shelves near the school run, supermarket seasonal aisles that appeared far too early, and grandparents who kept Easter chocolate somewhere obvious while pretending it was well hidden. The 74g bag is modest enough to look sensible and familiar enough to undermine that impression immediately. Stocking it at The Great British Shop is a quiet nod to the fact that some groceries are not really about need at all, but about recognising the packet and thinking, yes, that is the Easter I meant.