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Angel Delight Chocolate - 600g

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Original price $15.99 - Original price $15.99
Original price
$15.99
$15.99 - $15.99
Current price $15.99
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Rated 4.9/5 from 436 reviews
 
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Authentic British Foods Imported from the UK
Rated 4.9/5 From 436 reviews
About Angel Delight Chocolate

About Angel Delight Chocolate

Angel Delight Chocolate is one of those British puddings that does not require much explanation to anyone who grew up in the UK, but does require a bit of hunting if you happen to live in Canada. This is the real Birds Angel Delight, imported from the United Kingdom, in the 600g catering-size bag.

The format is simple: a powdered dessert mix that you whisk with cold milk to produce a light, mousse-like chocolate pudding. It sets quickly, needs no oven, and has a texture that is entirely its own. Not quite a mousse, not quite a blancmange, but unmistakably Angel Delight. The 600g size makes it well suited to feeding a crowd or, more realistically, making it several times because the first bowl disappears faster than expected.

For British expats, this is the kind of thing that ends up on a mental list of foods to track down. The Great British Shop stocks it precisely because that list is longer than most people admit, and "where do I find Angel Delight in Canada" is a very reasonable question that deserves a straightforward answer.

This is the chocolate variety from Birds, the brand that has been synonymous with Angel Delight in British kitchens for decades. If you want to work through the rest of the range, other flavours are worth looking at too, though this one tends to be the one people mean when they say they miss it.

Shop more from Birds in Canada or browse the full range of British pantry favourites shipped from Halifax, Nova Scotia.

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 436 Google Reviews
Love the food takes me back to home I live in Alberta the food has been sent to me very fast
And the one thing I really like is the personal card that comes with my food
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The story of Angel Delight Chocolate

The pudding that only asks for milk and a whisk

Angel Delight Chocolate is not a pudding that arrives with much ceremony. It is powder in a packet, milk in a bowl, a few minutes of whisking, and then that familiar soft-set wobble that British households seem to remember with alarming accuracy. Chocolate is one of the flavours people tend to spot first, partly because it looks so plain and partly because it did exactly what it promised. No oven. No saucepan. No anxious custard skin forming when nobody asked for one. Just a light, chocolatey dessert that belonged to weeknights, children’s teas, and the sort of cupboard planning that made sense when pudding had to appear quickly.

Read the full story

Before the whip, there was the custard

Bird's Custard was first formulated by Alfred Bird in 1837 at his chemist shop in Birmingham, England. Alfred Bird was born in Nympsfield, Gloucestershire in 1811 and trained as a chemist and druggist in Birmingham. In that same year, 1837, he opened his shop at Bull Street, Birmingham, working as an experimental chemist. That is the proper starting point for the Bird's name on this packet, even if Angel Delight itself belongs to a later style of convenience dessert. The original Bird's story was not a grand corporate vision, thank goodness, but a practical domestic problem. Bird’s wife Elizabeth could not tolerate eggs or yeast, so he used cornflour to make an egg-free imitation of custard.

A very Birmingham sort of invention

There is something pleasingly unromantic about Bird’s beginnings. A chemist in industrial Birmingham solves a household problem, dinner guests approve, and suddenly Britain has a new way of thinking about custard. The company Alfred Bird and Sons Ltd grew from that success, and by the mid-1840s Bird’s custard powder was being promoted nationally. The business later moved into other powdered comforts too, including baking powder, blancmange powder, jelly powder, and egg substitute. That matters here because Angel Delight sits in the same broad British tradition: a dry mix in the pantry that becomes pudding with a bit of milk and faith in the instructions. It is not the same origin story as Bird’s Custard, but it clearly belongs to that same cupboard logic.

The packet name and the family behind it

Because there is no supplied product-level origin for Angel Delight Chocolate here, it is worth being honest: this is a Bird's brand-family story rather than a neatly pinned-down birth certificate for this particular chocolate dessert mix. Food companies have a habit of making their histories look tidier than the shelves ever were. Bird’s itself passed through larger ownership arrangements after the Second World War, including General Foods, later Kraft, and then Premier Foods in the 2000s. Those changes help explain why familiar British dessert names can sit under modern corporate umbrellas while still carrying older names on the front. The customer, quite reasonably, is usually less interested in boardroom paperwork than in whether the pudding sets properly.

Why British cupboards remember it

Angel Delight belongs to a particular sort of British memory: tea at a relative’s house, a mixing bowl on the counter, someone insisting it needed β€œjust a bit longer” in the fridge, and children scraping the bowl as though they had uncovered state secrets. It was not posh, and that was part of the point. It was dependable, cheerful, and slightly theatrical once whisked. Chocolate had the advantage of being easy to understand, which is useful when the audience is impatient and armed with spoons. For many British expats in Canada, seeing the packet again is less about novelty and more about recognition. It is the exact kind of small grocery item that can make a parcel from home feel absurdly important.

A small bowl of home, if you grew up with it

There are grander desserts, obviously. There are desserts with layers, blowtorches, and people using the word β€œmouthfeel” as if nobody can stop them. Angel Delight Chocolate is not trying to join that conversation. Its charm is that it knows what it is: a British pantry pudding with a long family connection to Bird’s powdered-dessert heritage, ready when the milk is cold and the whisk is to hand. In Canada, that can be enough. Sometimes the taste of home is not a roast dinner or a Christmas hamper, but a bowl of chocolate whip setting in the fridge while everyone pretends they are not checking it. A quiet nod from The Great British Shop.