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Cadbury White Creme Egg- 40g

Original price $3.99 - Original price $3.99
Original price
$3.99
$3.99 - $3.99
Current price $3.99
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Rated 4.9/5 from 429 reviews
About Cadbury White Creme Egg- 40g

About Cadbury White Creme Egg- 40g

Cadbury White Creme Egg is one of those Easter products that British expats in Canada either track down obsessively or quietly mourn every spring. It is not always easy to find the UK version here, and the white chocolate shell is specifically what people mean when they say they miss it.

This is the 40g Cadbury White Creme Egg, made in the United Kingdom, with a white chocolate shell surrounding the familiar fondant filling. It is a seasonal product, which is part of why people feel the urgency when it appears. The format is exactly what you remember: one egg, that slightly waxy white chocolate, the gooey centre, the whole ritual.

The Great British Shop carries it as part of a proper British Easter range, so there is no waiting on a parcel from the UK or hoping a relative remembers to pack one. It is the same product, imported from Britain, available to order across Canada. Suitable for vegetarians, if that matters to your household.

Worth noting: Easter eggs are fragile by nature, and a chocolate shell travelling across Canada in spring temperatures is not always going to have an easy journey. The egg may arrive with some cracking or breakage, and while every care is taken in packing, this is one of those products where you order knowing the risk. The taste is unaffected, even if the presentation is not pristine.

Shop more Cadbury in Canada for the full range of UK Cadbury products available to order.

Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
Nutrition Facts
Valeur nutritive
Per 100g
Energy / Énergie kcal
Fat / Lipides g
Saturated / saturés g
Carbohydrate / Glucides g
Sugars / Sucres g
Fibre / Fibres g
Protein / Protéines g
Salt / Sel g

Ingredients

Sugar, Cocoa Butter, Skimmed Milk Powder, Whey Powder (from Milk), Milk Fat, Glucose Syrup, Invert Sugar Syrup, Emulsifier (Soya Lecithins), Dried Egg Whites, Flavourings, Colour (Paprika Extract)

Allergens

Contains: Eggs, Milk, Soya.

Storage

Store in a dry place. Protect from heat.

More about Cadbury White Creme Egg- 40g

The Cadbury White Creme Egg sits in a small and specific corner of British Easter confectionery: a limited-run variation on the original Creme Egg, using a white chocolate shell rather than milk chocolate. It is the kind of product that appears on shelves in the UK for a few weeks each spring and then vanishes, which is precisely why people remember it so sharply.

For British expats in Canada, the white chocolate version is often harder to find than the standard Creme Egg, and that scarcity is part of what drives the search. People in Hamilton, Toronto and Edmonton looking for UK Easter chocolate tend to want the specific thing they grew up with, not a seasonal substitute.

Each egg weighs 40g, which is the single-egg format. It stores well at room temperature as long as it is kept away from heat, making it straightforward to post as part of an Easter parcel or tuck into a gift box without much fuss. It is suitable for vegetarians.

The White Creme Egg is part of a wider seasonal Cadbury range that includes the classic Creme Egg and various Easter novelties. If you are building out a British Easter haul, the Cadbury in Canada collection covers the broader range worth browsing alongside it.

Because it is imported and shipped from within Canada rather than overseas, there is no parcel lottery involved. It arrives in reasonable condition and on a timeline that actually lines up with Easter, which matters more than it sounds for a product this seasonal.

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 White Creme Egg- 40g

The white egg in the Easter pile

Cadbury White Creme Egg is a small seasonal thing with a large ability to start opinions. It takes the familiar Creme Egg idea, that fondant centre pretending to be an egg yolk with complete confidence, and wraps it in white chocolate rather than the usual milk chocolate shell. At 40g, it is not trying to be sensible. Easter confectionery rarely is. For many British shoppers, the important bit is the ritual: foil twisted at the ends, first bite causing a minor structural emergency, and someone nearby saying they could only manage one while clearly considering a second.

Read the full story

A Creme Egg story, with a Fry’s beginning

There is no need to pretend the white version is where the whole story began. The better-known Creme Egg lineage starts with J. S. Fry’s, the Bristol chocolate maker, which launched Fry’s Creme Egg in 1963. Cadbury and Fry’s had already been joined under the same wider business after their 1919 merger, so the later packet name can tidy up a slightly messier family tree. In 1971 the egg was renamed under the Cadbury brand, and that is the name most people now remember from shop counters, Easter displays and the annual question of whether they used to be bigger. Memory is a bold measuring instrument.

Bournville, no pubs, and a great deal of chocolate

The Cadbury name brings its own geography with it. Bournville, the village associated with Cadbury, took its name from the nearby river and the French word for town. As the Cadbury family were Quakers, the Bournville estate famously had no pubs, which is either admirable social planning or a serious oversight depending on your feelings after a factory shift. Cadbury Dairy Milk arrived in 1905 under George Cadbury Jr, using a higher proportion of milk than earlier bars, and became the company’s best-selling product by 1914. That milk chocolate history does not create the White Creme Egg, but it does explain why Cadbury became the name British shoppers instinctively associate with chocolate at Easter.

From Bull Street to the purple wrapper habit

Cadbury’s older story begins in Birmingham in 1824, when John Cadbury, a Quaker, opened a shop at 93 Bull Street selling tea, coffee and drinking chocolate. Drinking chocolate suited his temperance beliefs, offering a respectable alternative to alcohol. By 1831 the business had moved into cocoa and drinking chocolate production in Bridge Street, and later generations pushed it into the kind of large-scale chocolate making that made Cadbury a household name. Corporate history can make this all sound very neat, but British confectionery is really a set of overlaps: Cadbury of Birmingham, Fry’s of Bristol, shared ownership, renamed products, and eventually the packets people actually recognise.

Why Creme Eggs feel so British

The Creme Egg has long belonged to the British Easter calendar in that slightly chaotic way seasonal sweets do. It appears before spring has properly committed itself, sits near the tills in newsagents and supermarkets, and encourages adults to behave as though foil-wrapped sugar is a matter of national importance. The white chocolate version sits within that same tradition rather than replacing it. It is for people who know exactly what the fondant centre is like and still want the different shell, because apparently Easter requires both predictability and argument.

A small parcel of home

For British expats in Canada, a Cadbury White Creme Egg can carry more than its size suggests. It is not just an Easter sweet, but a reminder of corner shops, school holidays, grandparents buying “just one each”, and the particular British talent for turning seasonal confectionery into a family debate. The modern packet may carry Cadbury’s name, while the Creme Egg’s older story runs through Fry’s, and the white version adds its own twist to the familiar format. That is often how British groceries work: slightly tangled, instantly recognisable, and somehow more emotional than they ought to be. A quiet Easter nod from The Great British Shop.