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Cadbury Caramel Egg 3 Pack - 120g

Original price $11.99 - Original price $11.99
Original price $11.99
$11.99
$11.99 - $11.99
Current price $11.99

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 Cadbury Caramel Egg 3 Pack

About Cadbury Caramel Egg 3 Pack

If the Cadbury Caramel Egg is your Easter benchmark, the UK version is a different proposition to what you find on Canadian shelves, and this is that version, imported from Britain and available without waiting on a favour from someone flying over.

This is a three-pack of Cadbury Caramel Eggs, each one 40g, giving you 120g in total. The format is the same as it has always been: a milk chocolate shell in the shape of an egg, filled with that very specific runny caramel that has a habit of going everywhere the moment you bite in. Neatly, this is considered a feature rather than a flaw.

For British expats in Canada, the Caramel Egg sits alongside the Creme Egg as one of those Easter staples that feels genuinely wrong to skip. The Great British Shop carries the UK-made version, which means the chocolate tastes the way it is supposed to, and the caramel has the right consistency rather than a close approximation of it.

A three-pack is a sensible format for Easter, whether you are building a basket, rationing them across a long weekend, or simply buying one for yourself and calling two of them spares. Cadbury Caramel Eggs are a seasonal product, so availability follows the calendar rather than convenience.

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

Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage

Ingredients

Milk, Sugar, Glucose Syrup, Palm Oil, Cocoa Butter, Cocoa Mass, Glucose-Fructose Syrup, Whey Powder (from Milk), Skimmed Milk Powder, Emulsifiers (E442, Soya Lecithins), Salt, Flavourings, Sodium Carbonate

Allergens

Contains: Milk, Soya.

May contain: Eggs.

Storage

Store in a dry place. Protect from heat.

More about Cadbury Caramel Egg 3 Pack

The Cadbury Caramel Egg sits within the British Easter chocolate category alongside the Creme Egg, the Mini Eggs bag, and the various foil-wrapped hollow eggs that appear on UK shelves each spring. Where the Creme Egg has its fondant centre, the Caramel Egg goes in a different direction: the filling is a smooth, runny caramel rather than a sugar paste, which gives it a distinct character within the same seasonal lineup.

For British expats and Anglophile households in Canada, Easter is one of those moments where the imported version matters. The UK formulation uses a different chocolate recipe to most North American Easter confectionery, and for people whose Easter memory is built around that specific taste, the difference is the whole point.

This pack contains three individual 40g eggs, 120g in total, which makes it a reasonable amount for sharing or for spacing out across the Easter weekend. The packaging is compact and the eggs store well at room temperature, kept away from heat, so they travel sensibly within a parcel or a gift bag.

Cadbury produces a wide range of British Easter lines, and if the Caramel Egg is your starting point, the broader Cadbury in Canada range covers other seasonal and year-round favourites worth exploring alongside it.

This three-pack ships from within Canada, so whether you are putting together an Easter parcel in Halifax or picking up a few extras in Toronto, there is no overseas delivery gamble involved. It arrives as British Easter chocolate should: intact, and in time.

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 Cadbury Caramel Egg 3 Pack

The egg with the runny middle

Cadbury Caramel Egg 3 Pack sits in that very British Easter category where nobody is pretending this is sensible food. It is a hollow-ish chocolate egg shape, filled with soft caramel, wrapped for the season, and somehow able to make grown adults behave like they have just spotted the good stuff at the corner shop. The three pack is practical in theory. In real life, it mostly gives everyone a chance to insist they were only going to have one.

Read the full story

A Cadbury story, not a neat product origin tale

There is not a clear, well-sourced product-origin story for the Cadbury Caramel Egg in the way there is for some older confectionery lines, so it is better not to dress it up in borrowed history. What can be said is that it belongs to a long Cadbury habit of turning chocolate into seasonal objects with a bit of theatre. The caramel-filled egg is part of the modern Easter shelf rather than a Victorian invention, and that matters. Some groceries carry centuries of record; others carry the memory of tearing foil at the kitchen table before breakfast and hoping nobody notices.

John Cadbury and the serious beginnings of unserious chocolate

Cadbury itself began in Birmingham with John Cadbury, an English Quaker and businessman who founded the chocolate company. Before opening his own shop, he had been apprenticed to a tea dealer in Leeds in 1818, and his Quaker faith helped shape his view of drinking chocolate as an alternative to alcohol. In 1824 he began selling tea, coffee and drinking chocolate at 93 Bull Street in Birmingham. From 1831, Cadbury moved into making cocoa and drinking chocolates in a Bridge Street factory, at a time when such things were still costly enough to be aimed largely at wealthier customers. Which is a long road from a caramel egg in a multipack, but British food history is rarely tidy.

Bournville, purple wrappers, and the Easter habit

The Cadbury name became tied to Bournville after Richard and George Cadbury moved the business out of central Birmingham, opening the new factory there in 1879. Bournville later became known not just for chocolate, but for the Cadbury family’s model village and its Quaker-influenced character, including the famous absence of pubs on the estate. Cadbury’s Easter connection also has proper roots: George and Richard Cadbury launched the first Cadbury Easter egg in 1875, a dark chocolate egg filled with sugar-coated chocolate drops. That does not make the Caramel Egg that old, but it does place it in a family tradition of chocolate eggs that British shoppers recognise almost without thinking.

The tangled family of British chocolate

Cadbury history has a few joins in it, as all long-running British confectionery stories seem to. Cadbury merged with J. S. Fry and Sons in 1919, bringing together two of the great names of British chocolate. Later, Cadbury merged with Schweppes in 1969, and in more recent years became part of Mondelez International after Kraft’s acquisition of Cadbury in 2010 and the later corporate split. None of that is the romantic bit, obviously. It does, however, explain why the modern packet carries a familiar Cadbury identity that has survived several rounds of business reshuffling, legal departments, and people in meetings using the word “portfolio” with a straight face.

Why it still finds its way into Canadian cupboards

For British expats in Canada, a Cadbury Caramel Egg is not just chocolate and caramel. It is Easter displays in supermarkets, newsagent shelves by the till, foil wrappers in school bags, and the faintly competitive household politics of who got the last one. It is also one of those seasonal things that feels oddly specific, hard to replace with something merely similar. A three pack does not solve homesickness, but it can make a grey afternoon feel a bit more like home. Quietly, and with the correct amount of sticky caramel, that is the sort of thing The Great British Shop likes being able to pass across the counter.