About Cadbury Crunchie
About Cadbury Crunchie
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 |
IngredientsIngrédients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: Milk.
May contain: Nuts, Peanuts.
Contient : Lait.
Peut contenir : Noix, Arachides.
StorageConservation
More about Cadbury Crunchie
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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| Nutrition Facts Valeur nutritive | |
|---|---|
| Per 100g pour 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 |
Values are typical and may vary. Always check the pack on delivery for the most accurate information.
The story of Cadbury Crunchie
The bar with the noisy middle
Cadbury Crunchie is one of those British chocolate bars that announces itself twice: once in the bright gold wrapper, and again when the honeycomb centre shatters in your mouth. This 4 pack is the practical version, at least in theory. Four bars suggest planning, restraint and perhaps sharing. In real cupboards, these ideas often remain purely decorative. The appeal is not complicated: a crisp, airy honeycomb centre covered in Cadbury milk chocolate. It is sweet, loud, slightly sticky if you take too long, and very much the sort of thing people remember from corner shops, swimming bags and the after-school negotiations of childhood.
Read the full story
A Cadbury story, rather than a neat Crunchie origin tale
There is no fully sourced product-level origin supplied here for Crunchie, so the honest heritage trail begins with the Cadbury name on the modern wrapper. John Cadbury had been apprenticed to a tea dealer in Leeds in 1818 before opening his Birmingham shop, and his Quaker faith helped shape his early promotion of drinking chocolate as an alternative to alcohol. From 1831, Cadbury moved into producing cocoa and drinking chocolates at a factory in Bridge Street, Birmingham, at a time when cocoa was still costly enough to be sold mainly to wealthier customers. By 1842, John Cadbury was selling sixteen varieties of drinking chocolate and eleven varieties of cocoa, and had also begun selling chocolate for eating, possibly among the first in Britain to do so. Not a bad start for something now found in multipacks.
Birmingham, Bournville and the serious business of chocolate
Cadbury’s early history is tied closely to Birmingham, but not just in the usual “factory grew bigger” sort of way. John Cadbury’s sons, Richard and George, later developed the business and adopted improved cocoa processing in the 1860s, helping Cadbury build a stronger reputation for cocoa and chocolate. In 1878 they acquired land south-west of Birmingham, and the Bournville factory opened the following year. Bournville became more than a works: George Cadbury developed a model village there, reflecting the family’s Quaker ideas about housing and welfare. There were no pubs on the estate, which tells you quite a lot about the Cadburys. They gave Britain chocolate, but they were not about to give the workforce a rowdy Friday night.
The purple wrapper world
The Cadbury most shoppers recognise today is built from layers of chocolate history, branding and a fair bit of corporate tidying. Dairy Milk arrived in 1905 and became central to the company’s reputation for milk chocolate. The familiar “glass and a half” slogan followed in 1928, and the Cadbury script logo traces back to William Cadbury’s signature, later becoming the worldwide logo. Cadbury also merged with J. S. Fry and Sons in 1919, bringing important British confectionery names into the same family. Later still came Cadbury Schweppes in 1969, then modern ownership under Mondelez International after Kraft’s acquisition of Cadbury in 2010. None of that makes the honeycomb any quieter, but it does explain why British chocolate shelves can feel like a family tree drawn by someone eating sweets.
Why Crunchie sticks in the memory
Crunchie is not a subtle bar, and that is part of its charm. It has a very particular texture: crisp at first, then slightly chewy if you let the honeycomb linger, which many people do despite knowing better. For British shoppers in Canada, it belongs to a category of foods that do more than fill a snack drawer. It recalls newsagents with dusty windows, petrol station chocolate racks, packed lunches with one good surprise in them, and grandparents who kept a small stash of bars somewhere “for visitors” that no visitor ever saw. A Crunchie is easy to recognise, easy to miss, and difficult to replace with something nearly the same.
A small gold packet of home
In Canada, British chocolate often becomes oddly specific. People do not just want “a chocolate bar”; they want the one with the snap, the one from the multipack, the one that tastes like being ten years old and having 40p that felt like wealth. Cadbury Crunchie sits firmly in that memory cupboard. It carries the Cadbury name, a long Birmingham chocolate heritage behind it, and a honeycomb centre that behaves with absolutely no dignity once bitten. Quietly, that is why The Great British Shop keeps it close for people who know exactly what they are looking for.