About Terry's Chocolate Orange Cream Filled Egg
About Terry's Chocolate Orange Cream Filled Egg
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: Milk, Soya.
May contain: Wheat, Tree Nuts.
Contient : Lait, Soya.
Peut contenir : BlΓ©, Noix.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Terry's Chocolate Orange Cream Filled Egg
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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 Terry's Chocolate Orange Cream Filled Egg
A Small Easter Egg With A Very Familiar Argument Inside
Terry's Chocolate Orange Cream Filled Egg is a seasonal little thing, but it carries a much larger British memory than its 34g size suggests. The shape says Easter, the flavour says Chocolate Orange, and the cream filling gives it that modern sweet-shop twist that would have caused serious negotiation at the corner shop counter. This is not the original segmented orange, of course. It is part of the wider Terry's Chocolate Orange family, borrowing the famous chocolate and orange pairing and putting it into an Easter egg format. Sensible? Not especially. Recognisable? Immediately.
Read the full story
The Chocolate Orange Family Behind It
Global sales of Terry's Chocolate Orange were reported to have doubled from 2019 to 2022, reaching around 44 million units annually across markets including the UK, Ireland, the US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Japan. That is a lot of people pretending they bought one for sharing. The business behind the name goes much further back, to 1767 in York, where the firm that became Terry's began as a shop close to Bootham Bar selling cough lozenges, lemon and orange candied fruit, and other sweets. The early confectionery business was run by Robert Berry in partnership with William Bayldon as Bayldon and Berry, and by 1818 had moved to 3 St Helen's Square in York.
York, Chemists, And The Useful Mess Of Confectionery History
The Terry name arrived through Joseph Terry, a trained apothecary and chemist from Pocklington, who joined the Berry family confectionery business in the 1820s. By the late 1820s the firm was renamed Joseph Terry and Company, and soon after Terry became sole owner. That chemist's background matters, not because every sweet needs a man in a waistcoat measuring things, but because early confectionery sat close to pharmacy, lozenges, flavourings and sugar work. By 1840, Terry's products were being sold in more than 75 towns and cities, a reminder that the firm was not simply a local curiosity with good handwriting on the jars.
From York Chocolate Works To The Orange Everyone Knows
Terry's became closely tied to York's confectionery identity, sitting alongside Rowntree's and Cravens as one of the city's major sweet-making names. In the 19th century, Joseph Terry Jnr helped move the company towards larger-scale production, including the Clementhorpe factory beside the River Ouse. By the late 1880s the firm had shifted firmly into chocolate manufacturing. Later, Frank and Noel Terry commissioned the Art Deco Chocolate Works on Bishopthorpe Road, opened in 1926. It was there, in 1932, that Terry's created the Chocolate Orange, an orange-shaped ball of orange-flavoured chocolate divided into segments. The cream filled egg is a later seasonal cousin, but the family resemblance is not subtle.
The Modern Packet Name Has Travelled A Bit
Like many British grocery names, Terry's has not stayed neatly in one family ledger. The Terry family sold the business in 1963, and ownership later passed through several hands, including Colgate-Palmolive, United Biscuits, Kraft Foods and Mondelez. The York Chocolate Works closed in 2005, with production moved to mainland European sites. After further changes, Terry's became part of Carambar and Co, with a UK subsidiary later set up to market the range. None of that makes the orange-chocolate memory any less British, though it does explain why old loyalties and modern wrappers can have a slightly complicated relationship. British confectionery history often comes with a paper trail and a faint headache.
Why It Still Works In A Canadian Easter Parcel
For British shoppers in Canada, this egg is less about grand history and more about the little recognition jolt. Chocolate Orange belongs to Christmas stockings, birthday bags, supermarket end displays and that one relative who insists on tapping it just so before unwrapping. Put the flavour into an Easter egg and it becomes the kind of thing that makes sense immediately to someone who grew up with British seasonal sweets. It is small enough to disappear quickly, familiar enough to matter, and just different enough from the standard Easter shelf to earn a second glance. The Great British Shop keeps these sorts of memories within reach, which is handy when nostalgia arrives shaped like an egg.