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Cadbury Flake - 32g

Sold out
Original price $7.99 - Original price $7.99
Original price
$7.99
$7.99 - $7.99
Current price $7.99

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 β€” 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 β€” 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 β€” 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 β€” we read every message.

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About Cadbury Flake

About Cadbury Flake

A Cadbury Flake is not the chocolate bar you eat neatly. It is the one you unwrap with a degree of optimism, lose half of down your front, and enjoy enormously anyway. The 32g bar is the classic single-serve size, and if you grew up in the UK, the yellow wrapper alone does most of the work.

What makes a Flake a Flake is the texture: thin layers of milk chocolate folded into a loose, crumbly stick that behaves nothing like a conventional chocolate bar. It does not snap. It does not cooperate. It simply collapses into ribbons of chocolate, which is either its greatest quality or its most inconvenient one, depending on whether you are wearing something you care about.

For British expats in Canada, it is one of those products that sits in a very specific part of the memory. Corner shop. Ice cream on a hot day with a Flake pushed into the top at a slight angle. A bag of them appearing at someone's house like a small act of diplomacy. The Great British Shop stocks the genuine UK-made Cadbury Flake, imported from the United Kingdom, so there is no need to wait on a parcel from home or hope someone remembers to pack one.

This is the 32g bar, the standard individual size, made in the United Kingdom to the recipe British chocolate fans will recognise. It also happens to be the version that fits perfectly into a soft-serve, should the occasion arise, which in Canada it absolutely can.

Shop more Cadbury in Canada or browse the full range of British chocolate available at The Great British Shop.

Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
Nutrition Facts
Valeur nutritive
Per 100g
Energy / Γ‰nergie kcal
Fat / Lipides g
Saturated / saturΓ©s g
Carbohydrate / Glucides g
Sugars / Sucres g
Fibre / Fibres g
Protein / ProtΓ©ines g
Salt / Sel g

Ingredients

MILK, sugar, cocoa mass, cocoa butter, whey powder (from MILK), vegetable fats (palm, shea), emulsifiers (E442, E476), flavourings

Allergens

Contains: milk.

Storage

Store in a dry place. Protect from heat.

Frequently asked questions about Cadbury Flake

Q: What is the texture of a Cadbury Flake bar like?

A: A Cadbury Flake is made from thin, folded layers of milk chocolate that collapse rather than snap, producing a crumbly, almost ribbon-like texture that is unlike any other chocolate bar. It is light and delicate, which is part of its appeal and entirely the reason it sheds crumbs the moment you look at it. That distinctive flaky quality is what Flake fans recognise immediately and what makes it genuinely hard to replicate.

Q: Is Cadbury Flake suitable for vegetarians?

A: Yes, Cadbury Flake is suitable for vegetarians. The 32g bar contains milk, sugar, cocoa mass, cocoa butter, whey powder, vegetable fats, emulsifiers, and flavourings, with no gelatine or other animal-derived ingredients beyond dairy. The allergen to note is milk, so it is not suitable for anyone avoiding dairy.

Q: Is the Cadbury Flake sold in Canada the same as the UK version?

A: Yes, this is the genuine UK-made Cadbury Flake, imported from the United Kingdom. For British expats in Canada, that matters because the Flake they remember from corner shops and ice cream vans is this one specifically, crumbly texture, Cadbury milk chocolate, and the quiet understanding that it will not survive the journey to your mouth entirely intact. It is the sort of thing that ends up in a British shop order because nothing else is quite the same.

More about Cadbury Flake

The Cadbury Flake sits in a category of its own within British chocolate. It is not a filled bar, not a wafer bar, not a nut-and-caramel construction. It is simply milk chocolate, folded into a structure so loose and layered that it barely holds together, which is precisely the point. In British confectionery, that combination of simplicity and peculiarity has kept it on shelves for decades.

For British expats in Canada, the Flake tends to appear on shopping lists alongside the things that are genuinely hard to substitute: the specific chocolate, the specific crumb, the specific memory of it balanced on top of a soft-serve cone. That association is not something a different bar fills, which is why people go looking for it by name.

At 32g, this is the standard single bar format, light enough to post in a card, easy to keep in a desk drawer, and best stored somewhere cool and dry away from direct heat. The wrapper is foil-lined inside the familiar yellow outer, which does help protect those fragile layers in transit.

The Flake sits naturally alongside the broader Cadbury in Canada range, which includes everything from Dairy Milk through to Roses and Crunchie. If you are building a proper British chocolate selection, the British chocolate collection is a reasonable place to wander.

Orders ship from within Canada, so whether the bar is heading to someone in Edmonton, Oshawa or London, it arrives without the delays and customs uncertainty of an overseas parcel.

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 Cadbury Flake

The bar that refuses to behave

Cadbury Flake is one of those British chocolate bars that seems designed to test your dignity. It looks simple enough: a slim 32g bar of folded, crumbly milk chocolate. Then you bite it, and suddenly there are flakes on your jumper, in the car seat, possibly in another room. That is not a design flaw so much as part of the ritual. A Flake is not a bar you snap neatly into squares. It is a small, chocolatey collapse, and British people have been oddly loyal to that sort of thing for generations.

Read the full story

A Cadbury story, rather than a Flake origin tale

There is not enough product-level heritage supplied here to tell a properly sourced origin story for Flake itself, so we will not pretend there is. The safer story is the Cadbury one behind the name on the wrapper. John Cadbury, an English Quaker and businessman, founded the Cadbury chocolate company in Birmingham. Before opening his Birmingham 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 alcoholic drinks. From 1831, Cadbury moved into producing cocoa and drinking chocolates at a factory in Bridge Street, at a time when such products were still costly enough to be aimed mainly at wealthier customers.

Birmingham, Bournville and the serious business of chocolate

Cadbury’s early story is rooted in Birmingham, but the part many people remember is Bournville. Richard and George Cadbury later moved the business from the city centre to a rural site south-west of Birmingham, opening the Bournville factory in 1879. George Cadbury also developed the Bournville estate as a model village for workers, with the rather telling Quaker detail that there were no pubs on the estate. For a company now associated with purple wrappers and corner-shop sweets, it began with a surprisingly earnest mixture of cocoa, conscience and municipal planning. Very British, in other words.

Where Flake fits in the Cadbury cupboard

Flake belongs to the modern Cadbury world customers recognise: the script logo, the purple, the familiar milk chocolate family that sits beside Dairy Milk, Twirl, Crunchie, Wispa and the rest of the usual suspects. Cadbury Dairy Milk was introduced in 1905 and became central to the company’s milk chocolate reputation, while the β€œglass and a half” line arrived later as part of its advertising language. Flake should not be confused with Dairy Milk’s own origin story, but it does sit comfortably in that broader Cadbury tradition of British milk chocolate bars with very particular personalities. Some bars are tidy. Flake has chosen another path.

The wrapper, the memory and the mess

For many British shoppers, Flake is not just remembered as a bar from the newsagent. It is tied to ice cream vans, holiday parks, seaside kiosks, grandparents who kept chocolate in a tin, and the suspiciously optimistic phrase β€œjust one bite”. It has a texture that feels unlike most other bars: light, layered, fragile and entirely unconcerned with your furniture. That makes it memorable in a way smoother chocolate sometimes is not. You do not simply eat a Flake. You manage it. Sometimes badly.

A small taste of home in Canada

In Canada, Cadbury Flake tends to matter because it is specific. Not just β€œa chocolate bar”, but that chocolate bar, the one with the crumbly folds and the faint risk of needing a hoover. For British expats, it can bring back the small geography of home: the sweet shelf by the till, the paper bag from the corner shop, the ice cream with a Flake stuck in it at a jaunty angle. The Great British Shop keeps that kind of memory within reach, which is handy when home is far away and the chocolate drawer is looking a bit too sensible.