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Nestle Quality Street Matchmakers Cool Mint - 120g

Original price $5.99 - Original price $5.99
Original price
$5.99
$5.99 - $5.99
Current price $5.99

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.

Availability:
In stock — ships from Canada
Rated 4.9/5 from 427 reviews
 
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Rated 4.9/5 from 427 reviews
About Nestle Quality Street Matchmakers Cool Mint

About Nestle Quality Street Matchmakers Cool Mint

If you grew up in the UK, Matchmakers have a very specific place in the Christmas calendar, usually appearing on a side table at some point in December and disappearing faster than anyone intended. Nestlé Quality Street Matchmakers Cool Mint are the long, thin chocolate sticks with a crisp mint flavour that somehow feel both festive and completely reasonable to eat at any hour.

This is the 120g box of the Cool Mint variety, imported from the United Kingdom. The format is the same one people remember: slender dark chocolate sticks with a cool mint centre, snappable, shareable, and gone before the evening is over. They sit somewhere between a proper chocolate and something you can justify having with a cup of tea, which is part of the appeal.

For British expats in Canada, Matchmakers are one of those seasonal things that are genuinely hard to find outside of a specialist importer. The Great British Shop brings them in from the UK so you are not relying on a relative to pack them in their luggage or hoping the international aisle comes through for once.

The Cool Mint flavour is the classic, and the one most people mean when they say Matchmakers. The 120g box is a solid size for sharing, or not sharing, depending on how your evening goes.

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

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 Mass, Glucose Syrup, Cocoa Butter, Skimmed Milk Powder, Whey Powder Product (Milk), Vegetable Fats (Palm, Shea), Emulsifier (Lecithins), Natural Peppermint Flavourings, Dark Chocolate Contains Cocoa Solids 51% Minimum and Vegetable Fats in addition to Cocoa Butter

Allergens

Contains: Milk.

Storage

Store cool and dry.

More about Nestle Quality Street Matchmakers Cool Mint

Matchmakers sit in a specific corner of the British chocolate world: long, thin sticks of dark chocolate with a flavoured centre, sold in a slim box and designed to be snapped apart and shared, or not shared, depending on the evening. The Cool Mint variety pairs dark chocolate with a clean, cool mint note, which puts it closer to an after-dinner chocolate than a casual sweet, though most people ignore that distinction entirely.

For British expats in Oshawa or Edmonton, Matchmakers are the kind of thing that rarely turns up in a mainstream Canadian supermarket, and certainly not in the Cool Mint variety. The search for them tends to spike around the winter holidays, when the memory of a particular side table in a particular living room becomes oddly specific and hard to shake.

The 120g box is a single-variety format, which means the whole thing is Cool Mint rather than an assortment. It stores well in a cool, dry spot, which makes it sensible for shipping across Canada without much drama. The slender sticks are individually snappable, so the box goes further than it looks like it should.

Matchmakers are part of the broader Nestlé in Canada range stocked here, alongside other Quality Street products and familiar British chocolate lines. If you are rebuilding a proper British chocolate selection, the British chocolate category is worth a look.

Made in the UK and shipped from within Canada, the Cool Mint Matchmakers arrive without the overseas parcel uncertainty that tends to complicate imported food orders. A useful thing to have in the cupboard, or to put on a side table and pretend you are rationing.

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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What our customers say

4.9 from 427 Google Reviews
I work close-by in Bayer’s Lake and love to pop in for a healthy and delicious lunch when I don’t bring one from home! I’ve had over 10 flavours of the pies, and tried almost every sweet they make. I adore this place, from the amazing food, to the nostalgic candies and British goods they carry, and especially the wonderful staff who always greet me by name and ask how Im doing every time I come in. My Papa was born and raised in England and loved to share tastes of home with his whole family, I wish he was able to see this place, he would’ve been delighted ❤️❤️❤️
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The story of Nestle Quality Street Matchmakers Cool Mint

The minty sticks people remember without needing a lecture

Nestle Quality Street Matchmakers Cool Mint is one of those British chocolate formats that looks simple until you remember how specific it is. Thin chocolate sticks, a cool mint flavour, and that little snap that makes people take “just one more” with the false confidence of someone who has never met an open box of Matchmakers. This 120g box sits in the broader Quality Street family, but it has its own place in the cupboard: less like a handful of wrapped sweets, more like the thing that appears after dinner when someone has decided the evening needs mint chocolate and a small amount of ceremony.

Read the full story

A Quality Street relation, not the whole tin

There is no supplied product-level origin story here for Matchmakers Cool Mint, so it would be cheeky to pretend we can pin it to a neat first day, first maker or heroic factory anecdote. What can be said honestly is that the modern packet belongs to the Nestlé Quality Street world, a brand family British shoppers know from Christmas tins, grandparents’ sideboards, office kitchens and the annual domestic argument over which sweet gets left until last. Matchmakers are not the same thing as the classic mixed tin, of course. They are the slimmer, after-dinner cousin: still recognisably part of that British confectionery landscape, but with a different job to do.

The Nestlé name, by way of coffee, milk and a lot of British cupboards

Nestlé introduced instant coffee to the UK in 1939 under the Nescafé brand, which had first launched in Switzerland on 1 April 1938. The name Nescafé itself is a blend of “Nestlé” and “café”, which is exactly the sort of tidy naming corporate history likes to preserve. By the 1970s, Nestlé held around half of UK coffee production, and by 2000 it was reported to have a 56% share of the UK’s £650m coffee market. That may sound a long way from mint chocolate sticks, but it helps explain why the Nestlé name became so familiar in British kitchens. It was not just on chocolate. It was on jars, tins, cupboards and shopping lists, doing the slow work of becoming ordinary.

Before the modern packet, a rather tangled family tree

Nestlé as a company was formed in 1905 through the merger of Henri Nestlé’s Swiss milk-food business and the Anglo-Swiss Condensed Milk Company. Henri Nestlé’s earlier work in Vevey centred on a powdered milk-based infant food sold as Farine Lactée Henri Nestlé, while Anglo-Swiss had roots in condensed milk and opened a British operation at Chippenham in Wiltshire in 1873. None of that means Henri Nestlé invented Matchmakers, and we should all resist that sort of nonsense. It does, however, show why milk, chocolate and British food manufacturing have long been woven into the company’s story, even before later confectionery acquisitions made the packet names more familiar to shoppers.

Where Rowntree and Mackintosh enter the picture

The Quality Street name comes through the British confectionery line that later became part of Nestlé. Rowntree’s was founded in York in 1862 by Henry Isaac Rowntree and became one of Britain’s major confectionery makers. Rowntree developed names such as Kit Kat, Aero, Fruit Pastilles and Smarties, while Quality Street and Rolo came into the Rowntree story through the 1969 merger with Mackintosh’s. Nestlé acquired Rowntree Mackintosh in 1988, bringing a set of very British sweet-shop names into its portfolio. That is the useful bit of corporate history here: it explains why a product sold today under Nestlé can still carry the emotional furniture of British confectionery rather than feeling purely Swiss on the shelf.

Why it still matters in Canada

For British expats in Canada, Matchmakers Cool Mint is not usually about grand heritage. It is about recognition. It is the box that feels right after Sunday dinner, the one that turns up in family parcels, the one people remember from Christmas visits when the grown-ups said “only a couple” and then mysteriously had several. In Halifax, Dartmouth, Toronto or Calgary, that matters more than any polished brand timeline. Some groceries travel because they are essential. Others travel because they remind you of a room, a relative, a cupboard, or the particular British habit of pretending mint chocolate is practically a palate cleanser. Quietly, that is why The Great British Shop keeps this sort of thing within reach.