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Baileys Chocolate Twists - 107g

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Original price $8.99 - Original price $8.99
Original price
$8.99
$8.99 - $8.99
Current price $8.99
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Rated 4.9/5 from 436 reviews
 
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Authentic British Foods Imported from the UK
Rated 4.9/5 From 436 reviews
About Baileys Chocolate Twists

About Baileys Chocolate Twists

Baileys Chocolate Twists are one of those seasonal British confectionery items that show up every Christmas and somehow become the thing people are quietly most pleased about. Imported from the United Kingdom, they are the sort of thing you find tucked into a tin or passed around after dinner, and they disappear faster than anyone admits.

This is a 107g bag of individually wrapped chocolate twists made with Baileys, sitting squarely in the category of British chocolate confectionery that tends to cause mild but genuine excitement around the holidays. The format is familiar to anyone who has spent a Christmas in the UK, small enough to share, not so small that you feel virtuous about it.

For British expats in Canada, the Baileys Chocolate Twists are exactly the kind of thing that does not travel well in a suitcase and does not turn up reliably in a vague international aisle. The Great British Shop imports them directly from the UK, which means no waiting on a parcel from across the Atlantic and no convincing a relative to stuff them into their hand luggage.

These are a seasonal product, which means stock is limited and they tend to sell out before people who were "just thinking about it" get around to ordering. If you are building a Christmas hamper, stocking a holiday spread, or simply trying to recreate the particular feeling of a British Christmas in Canada, this is a reasonable place to start.

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

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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4.9 from 436 Google Reviews
Love the food takes me back to home I live in Alberta the food has been sent to me very fast
And the one thing I really like is the personal card that comes with my food
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The story of Baileys Chocolate Twists

A Baileys Name On A Chocolate Box

Baileys Chocolate Twists sit in that pleasingly specific corner of British and Irish-adjacent confectionery where a familiar drinks-cabinet name turns up in chocolate form. The 107g box is not really about solemn appreciation or proper tasting notes. It is about recognising the Baileys script, knowing roughly what sort of creamy cocoa mood is being suggested, and deciding that a twist-shaped chocolate is a perfectly respectable thing to have in the cupboard. For British shoppers in Canada, that sort of recognition matters more than it probably should, but then so does finding the right biscuit, the right crisp, and the chocolate you meant, not the one that is standing in for it.

Read the full story

The Brand Behind The Twist

Baileys bottles are reported to be made at the Encirc Glass Plant in Derrylin, County Fermanagh, while the brand’s flavour offshoots began appearing from 2005, starting with mint chocolate and crΓ¨me caramel, followed later by flavours such as coffee and hazelnut. The original Baileys Irish Cream itself is a liqueur made from cream, cocoa and Irish whiskey, held together in a stable emulsion with vegetable oil. That matters here because these Chocolate Twists are not a product with a long, separate, well-documented origin story of their own. Their appeal comes from the Baileys flavour world: cream, cocoa, whiskey associations, and the faint suggestion that someone has opened the grown-up cupboard, even if what you are actually holding is confectionery.

Not Quite As Ancient As It Looks

Baileys has the confidence of something that feels as if it must have been around forever, perhaps poured by great-aunts at Christmas beside a bowl of Quality Street. In truth, it is a modern invention. Development began in the early 1970s after Gilbeys of Ireland, part of International Distillers and Vintners, wanted a new product for international markets. Advertising executive Tom Jago led the work in London, with consultants David Gluckman, Hugh Seymour-Davies and Mac Macpherson involved in shaping the drink. The early version famously combined alcohol, cream and chocolate powder, which is exactly the sort of practical, slightly chaotic beginning that corporate storytelling tends to polish until it squeaks.

Irish Cream, London Brief

One of the odd little truths about Baileys is that its Irish identity is both meaningful and carefully constructed. The liqueur uses Irish whiskey and Irish cream, and Irish cream as a category has protected geographical status in the European Union, requiring production in Ireland. Modern Baileys liqueur is associated with production in Dublin and Mallusk, Northern Ireland. Yet the idea was developed in London from a commercial brief, not handed down from some misty farmhouse recipe. Even the name has a tidy bit of borrowed atmosphere: it came from a restaurant owned by John Chesterman, while the fictional R.A. Bailey signature was inspired by The Bailey’s Hotel in London. Grocery heritage is often like that. Less oak barrel, more meeting room, but somehow still memorable.

Why It Works In Chocolate

Baileys has always leaned into the meeting point between cream, cocoa and a gentle whiskey warmth, so chocolate is a natural place for the name to wander. The brand’s later flavour variants made that connection even clearer, especially once mint chocolate and crΓ¨me caramel joined the liqueur range. A product like Baileys Chocolate Twists belongs to that same family of ideas rather than to the old-fashioned sweetshop lineage of boiled sweets, chews and penny bars. It is more dinner-party sideboard than school lunchbox, though plenty of British households have never let those categories stay separate for long. If there is a box open at Christmas, someone will hover near it with entirely innocent intentions.

The Cupboard Memory

For expats, Baileys often carries a very particular memory: the bottle brought out in December, the small glasses that only appeared once a year, the relative who insisted they did not really drink but somehow knew exactly where it was kept. Baileys Chocolate Twists borrow that atmosphere in a smaller, easier-to-post form. They are the sort of thing that can sit in a parcel from home, arrive in a Canadian kitchen, and make the room feel briefly more like a British sitting room with the heating on too high. A quiet sign-off from The Great British Shop: some products are remembered because they are grand, and some because they were always there when the good biscuits came out.