@@SciFi2525252000 yes you're right , however cadburys in the US is still very different than cadburys in the UK ...the UK still manufacture cadburys in the same way and Hershey's still manufacture cadburys under licence, however cadburys is still a British company , just owned by an American parent company , but it's chocolate remains the same in the UK
@@FoodTastertv modern Cadbury's is nothing like the original thing,, it's now the Kraft cheese of the chocolate world, when once it inspired the author Roald Dahl 🕊️🤍
I have a cousin in Alabama and every year I send her 3 parcels of Cadbury chocolate from the UK and prawn cocktail crisps. She always says it’s the highlight of her year.
@@schrodingerscat1863 Crunchy is Honeycomb, Maltesers are Malty, different flavours altogether. Cadburys have deteriorated since being bought out by another company. They have altered the ingredients Etc.
@@iriscollins7583 Maltesers are cinder toffee too same as Crunchy but has a malty flavour added when making it, Crunchy is the natural cinder toffee flavour. I think they altered the Cadbury recipe when they got bought out to make it cheaper and also to make it melt at a higher temperature so they could market it in hot countries. It isn't even close to the chocolate I remember from my childhood.
We are so lucky in Canada: we may have different bars, but the companies are (or were) British for the most part. Like Cadbury's. Yes; Hersheys is sold as well, but Cadbury's beats it every time!
@@badfinger61 Coffee crisp is a great candy bar and all but it doesnt taste like coffee at all even though it smells greatly of coffee !! Thats why the original coffee crisp bar never ranks high in my taste testing videos !!!
@@badfinger61 Oh they are very tasty !!! But not coffee flavoured at all. However I tried the Easter Egg version of it in one of my taste testing videos and fell in LOVE with it cause that one has a very strong coffee flavour to it !!!
Hershey's used an additive in the milk to give it a longer life. The additive is also found in vomit and some smelly cheeses. Americans have become so used to this taste that an additive is now included to emulate this taste.
I would say, Cadbury’s has gone severely downhill since Kraft bought it, they claim to have made no changes, but it’s obvious to all they moved it more towards the American flavour, or at least cost cut the ingredients.
I've tried a Hershey bar and the taste it left in my mouth was similar to the taste after you've been sick for me it has to be a starbar. Could see you starting to struggle halfway through but I really appreciate your sacrifice 😵
Personally, I prefer continental European chocolate: Belgian, Swiss or German, for instance. So I buy bars of chocolate from Aldi or Lidl normally. And I much prefer dark chocolate.
Definitely, love the chocolate from Aldis. German / Belgian ... yes, their chocolate wins hand down. Most UK chocolates are way too sickly. Each to their own though !
Pre Kraft. Cadburys used to be harder and not as soft as today. The harder Chocolate was some much better than the soft stuff we have bee forced to put up with now.
Malteasers are one of my faves. Also, to save you struggling to open the malteasers in future, those packs actually smoothly and easily tear horizontally all the way across about an inch from the top.
American chocolate is so great that American chocolate manufacturers lobbied for British chocolate to be banned from the USA because they were worried Americans would stop buying American chocolate if they had access to British chocolate. In the UK American chocolate isn’t banned, but no one buys it because it is widely seen as the worst tasting lowest quality chocolate in the world. I hate contrarian trolls.
To be sold as chocolate in the UK a product needs a minimum of 25% cocoa solids. In the US the minimum is 10%. It therefore stands to reason that British chocolate is objectively 2.5x better than American chocolate. SO THERE!
Incorrect. We have chocolate factories all over that are just as good as Euro chocolate. You can find coco at all levels, even 80%. Most Americans just buy disgusting chocolate because it's cheap. It's the same with our beer. We have craft beer and breweries all over that have excellent beer. Most Americans stick with the cheap disgusting commercial beer.
@@Cloneufc You can absolutely say that America produces very good high-end chocolate and I would agree. However I'm assuming that we're talking about cheap snack bars in which case on the whole I think adding more cocoa does make them better.
There used to be some wonderful ads for Flake back in the 1970s, themed around the idea that eating one was so immersive that you became oblivious to everything going on around you. The most famous one was the woman in the bath with the overflowing water. You can find them if you search UA-cam.
"I feel like I can smell colours" - classic Alanna! Seriously, you are so brave putting yourself through this ordeal for our viewing pleasure. And you're right, Aeros are irresistibubble!
Vomit taste difference: A long time ago in America (dunno when) they would send the chocolate with troops in ration packs. To make them last longer, they did something with the milk to preserve it, giving it that sour taste. When the war was over, the troops wanted the same tasting chocolate when they got home and sort of got used to it, so they proceeded to keep the recipe. To this day, Americans just prefer this flavour, so manufacturers keep doing it. This is what I heard anyway
You missed out on the most iconic British chocolate bar, Cadburys Flake, also Cadburys Fry's Turkish Delight should be in there. Toblerone also, but it's Swiss chocolate.
I believe the texture difference is because the UK melt the ingredients whereas the US use the extruder method which accounts for the grainy texture...Hershey's lobbied to prevent Cadbury imports, so the Cadbury bars in the US are made by Hershey!
@@craigroaring Its gone downhill since being taken over. No after taste like it used to have. Apparently some of the ingredients have been altered. Which probably accounts for the difference. They even renaged on an agreement, not to get rid of jobs,they found a loophole,some production was transferred to somewhere in Europe. I don't buy any Cadbury products now. There are some excellent chocolates out there.
Well the cocoa beans are ground up, the more you grind it the smoother it becomes, so a grainy texture is usually because of lower grinding time. Very finely ground beans are more expensive and require way more time to process. Dove in the US does make finely ground chocolate called "smoothes", which indeed has a very smooth texture. Love the caramel filled ones.
The British company Rowntree Macintosh made various sweets, biscuits and chocolate but they were bought by Nestle in the 80s and I think munchies just don’t taste the same. Yorky bars also originally made by rowntrees were made in York so they did get their name from the city. Golden cups were gorgeous also from the same brand 😋
I agree !!! I LOVE BOUNTY as well !!! That coconut flavour and the texture of desecrated coconut in the center is amazing !!! It always rank high in my taste testing videos !!!
The first time I visited America I ‘had’ to try a Hershey’s chocolate bar. It was disgusting. Other sweet ‘candy’ stuff over there was great, but Hersheys 🤮
Swiss chocolate is better than both American and British chocolate. Change my mind. Even the non premium Swiss chocolate is lovely. Milka chocolate (a mauve coloured packaging with cows on it) is lovely. 🏴🇬🇧🇨🇦.
@@michellee7465 Yeah I agree with you. I’ve really got to be in the mood for chocolate, though. I’ll have a craving for it that lasts around an hour and if that passes, I can take it or leave it. That craving I have is strong though.
Not sure i'd agree. Milka is very good, not Cadbury standard, but good. And once, when in St Moritz, I sampled a bunch of chocs from the Laderach store. A beautiful, high end chocolatiers. I thought their standard chocolate, plain, or with nuts, very good. Not necessarily better, but comparable. However, their fruit flavoured chocs i found very bland, really disappointing. For better, I think you have to look to Belgium. Those Guylian seashells, now they can give Cadbury a run for their money.
Anyone who believes American chocolate is superior to its British equivalent is clearly in need of psychiatric help, possibly sectioning. Rest assured I have already called the relevant first responders.
A Mars Bar really needs to be slightly chilled. They’ve also been badly effected by the shrinking and calorie reductions. The chocolate on top uses to be super thick and have some real bite to it. Now at room temps, you are quite right, as they are a bit moooshy!
I recently found an old school unopened Mars bar while cleaning out the shed. It was GIGANTIC! I was still tempted to open the bad boy up, but wiser heads prevailed. It's a bummer how small they are nowadays.
Bournville rum & raisin There was also one I remember from my childhood in the 80's which was a bar of chocolate but each segment had a different filling. Kinda like a chocolate bar version of milk tray
@@tonybennett1306 Yes it was the Fry’s … I remember my gran buying a bar of Fry’s original mint every Friday for herself and a Crunchie for me and my cousin.. and then years later ( I’m 53 ) they came out with “ thank crunchie it’s Friday” .. I felt like I invented that…😂😂🇬🇧
as long as the Americans make chocolate, i'm staying in Europe! I love Aero (especially the Mint), but that was back when it was made by Rowntree's. Since it belongs to the enormous worldwide Nestles concern (that dabbles in all and anything), it seems to have a flatter taste now... but it's still good. Hey, here's a thought..., aren't the Swiss famous for their Chocolate? Ever tried Lindt, Camille Bloch or Laederach? And as an insider tip, try "Frey's" which is not only good, but also the biggest selling Chocolate by the Swiss themselves!
Best British chocolate. ... hmm ... for me, at the moment has to be Cadburys Dark Milk Giant Buttons. Goes brilliantly with a hot chocolate, tea or a strong coffee. From childhood, toffee crisp and Lion bar.
My fave British chocolate bar is a DOUBLE DECKER. I tried it a while back in my British candy taste testing video and LOVED IT !!!! For me it has a bit of a coffee flavour ( even thought the label doesnt say anything about coffee ) and thats why I LOVE IT !!!!
Not to be difficult but what you really mean is chocolate for the British market. Nestle is a Swiss company but many of the options you tried came from Rowantree-MacIntosh (which Nestle bought years ago). Also Cadburys is now owned by an American company.
"Get a hobby" That's why we love you! My favourites are Crunchie, Bounty (I realise you have to like coconut), Cadbury Fruit and Nut, Fry's Chocolate Cream.
excellent review. I seem to recall that US chocolate as to use adulterated milk because of the distances it has to travel, and UK milk can be delivered anywhere in country fresh (pasturised).
I find the milk chocolate one to be a little sickly, but the plain chocolate Bounty is probably my all time favourite, especially if left in the fridge to chill for a few minutes before eating.
US chocolate CANNOT legally be called chocolate here in the UK because it doesn't contain enough cocoa solids. Here it MUST contain at least 20% solids. Also our chocolate has real milk and not milk powder
You can find Hershey's Cookies'n'Creme (the only decent tasting Hershey's - their standard Hershey's chocolate is indeed truly awful) in some UK stores - I've seen it in Home Bargains a few times for example (and not priced expensively or in some weird American section). Cadbury's Double Decker is one of the best UK choc bars - surprised you missed it out! Standard Kit Kat was always a basic staple for me - prefer it to the somewhat unwieldy Chunky version. Toffee Crisp was also a "go to" for me. Cadbury's Twirl gives you a great choc hit like the wrapper says - it's much closer to a Galaxy Ripple in form (but way better than a Ripple) than the frankly stupidly unmanageable Cadbury's Flake (only good for putting in a soft whip ice cream cone to make a "99"). Mars Bars are far too sickly even for my crazily sweet tooth, so I rarely eat them - Twix is far more palatable. Just glad you avoided the truly dreadful Fry's Turkish Delight - possibly the foulest UK confectionery ever created that contains chocolate. I suspect a large proportion of UK folks have damaged tastebuds because that's the only expanation why this rosewater jelly monstrosity is still on the market after many decades!
OMG Its always great to find a fellow DOUBLE DECKER lover !!! I tried it in my British candy taste testing video a while back and LOVED IT !!! I find that DOUBLE DECKER has a hidden coffee flavour ( the label doesnt mention anything about coffee ) and thats why I LOVE IT !!!
“Please, get a hobby” 🤣🤣. But since it’s the Internet , let me annoyingly say, we don’t pronounce the T in Nougat. Or I don’t, anyway. More seriously, you have a very entertaining way of doing these vids.
I LOVE her taste testing videos !!!! I hope she does them kore often !! She is on of the youtubers that inspired me to make my own food taste testing channel !!!
The big three companies in the U.K are Cadbury, Mars and Nestle. Mars make everything Galaxy, Mars, Twix etc and Nestle make KitKat, Smarties, Yorkie and so on 🙂
Loved this! I think we forget how lucky we are to have such a great selection of chocolate in the UK thanks to Cadbury, Nestle and Mars. By brand everyone has their favourite: Dairy Milk vs Yorkie vs Galaxy Wispa vs Aero Twirl vs Ripple Timeout vs Kitkat Boost vs Drifter vs Twix Starbar vs Lion Peanut vs Snickers Double Decker vs Milkyway Mini Eggs vs Smarties vs M&Ms
It was a sad day when Nestle bought out Rowntrees. I am one of many people boycotting Nestle, as they encourage bottle getting babies in countries where the water supply is not safe, and to people who are so poor they will be tempted to dilute it to make it go further, also they take water from poor farmers to bottle to sale to rich people, and argue that water should not be a human right. I do miss kit-cats.
I was raised on Godiva chocolate (Belgian) growing up and it's one of my favorites. As an adult, I am living at a poverty level due to health reasons. I can't afford chocolate. As an American who has lived all over the world I would rate German chocolate and ice cream the best. More than likely, I bet each country has one or two better chocolates that win the taste competition. Sorry you suffered for your channel. We love you for your efforts!
Wow that looks like a lot of fun, enjoy. I tried American chocolate when in Florida and I personally found it absolutely disgusting. I love British chocolate, but I’ve been to Switzerland a few times and the chocolate I had there was Amazing it was another level it was absolute Heaven! My personal favourite at the moment is Cadbury’s Dark Milk .
Oh my - this was a sugar rush for you and a nostalgia rush for me! Every Christmas from when I was 5 until I was 12, I used to get a selection box including Lion bars. Like you, I tended to wolf my way through them, and I know how you must have been feeling by the end of recording this! Though you didn't come to them on this video, I spotted the Club bars on the table: I had those in my school lunch box for about four years. Many other thoughts come to mind... The celebrated British chef Heston Blumenthal was inspired by Aero to create an aerated chocolate for the tasting menu at his triple-Michelin starred restaurant The Fat Duck. You'll need to save up to go there - it's close to £300 per head for a meal - but there's a waiting list of a couple of years, so if you start now, you may be able to afford it by the time you can take your booking. Of the various types you were trying, most are made by three brands: Nestlé, Cadbury's and Mars. Clearly, Mars' products don't agree with you, as you disliked both the Mars and Bounty bars. It's interesting to note that the American variant of Mars bars is/was very similar to what we know in the UK as Snickers, albeit here they are made with peanuts rather than almonds; also, when I was little, Snickers went by the name "Marathon." Nestlé UK had a factory close to my university in Yorkshire, and they sponsored a lot of events, thus their products were found in snack vending machines all over the campus - there *is* therefore a connection between Yorkie bars and Yorkshire! Nestlé also make Smarties, which originally rejoiced in the less imaginative name of "Chocolate Beans." The orange ones have always been orange flavoured; I gather that the brown ones are coffee flavoured, but those are the only two colours that are different amongst the rest. Munchies once had a mint-flavoured version called "Mintola," but they changed the name to "Mint Munchies" in the mid-1990s, if memory serves. Now, living in the Midlands, I'm not very far from Cadbury's original factory at Bourneville, near Birmingham. The Bourneville bar is (or was) essentially a darker version of the basic Cadbury bar, which went by the slogan "a glass and a half of full cream milk in every half a pound," accounting for the creaminess you don't tend to find across the Atlantic.
Ahh this takes me back to the first video I saw of yours were you were trying British snacks 😀. Great video. Got to be galaxy for me and bounty’s are great as well.
American made chocolate can tend to have a slight taste of vomit to it and that is because it contains a component that is in vomit, which is butyric acid (the stuff that leaves the taste of sick in your mouth/throat) so yeah. Yum. Puke chocolate. The reason being, combined also with paraffin, is to stabilise the chocolate for a hotter climate so it doesn't melt on the shelves. I'd rather keep chocolate in a cooler than put spew and Paraffin in to my chocolate to be honest.
First of all, fine chocolate is fine chocolate - the comparison is 'ordinary' chocolate like Cadbury vs Hershey. Regular belgium chocolate is probably even better as chocolate but I think the really unique thing about everyday British chocolate are the different textured chocolates like twirl, flake, aero or whispa - it is an idea that hershey just doesn't get.
Thorntons are still in business arn't they ? I know their factory in Belper Derbyshire is no longer there , im sure their Factory in Alfreton is still producing chocolate.
Cocoa power and and Cocoa butter (fat) are where the flavors come from. You can have only one and it's still considered chocolate. Cocoa butter is used for white chocolate. Some chocolates will mix the powder with other cheaper fats or no fat at all. Generally both are needed for the best chocolate flavor.
This all started off in 1866 with Fry’s Chocolate Cream, first mass produced chocolate bar in the world. I didn’t see that on your list! Ps you’re right about Mars and Bounty 🤢 although I still wouldn’t eat a Hershey’s 🤢🤢
Being brought up and living in the UK, in was always Cadbury's for me and I find Hershey's coarse and gritty. On one of my trip across the pond I wisited the Ghirardelli factory in San Francisco and their chocolate was very smooth and creamy; more like Swiss chocolate as I remember, so not all American chocolate is terrible. Just as not all UK chocolate is cadbury's, not all US chocolate is Hershey's!
You can give up chocloate for Lent and its a voluntary act. Go to America for any length of time and you give up chocolate because you have to. When you went for the Time Out Alanna I was taken back to your vid on Polish stuff and your reactions to the two epic wafers you tried then are still etched in my memory! Nice video :-)
You posed the question “Does the Yorkie bar have anything to do with York?” and the answer is “Definitely!” York was a major centre for chocolate production (Rowntree, Terry, Craven, & all of them Quaker families), & it was Rowntree who created Yorkie (BN - before Nestle). Rowntree also built the “model” (ie, this is the model for worker housing) village of New Earswick, from 1902, to house its workforce
KRAFT bought Cadbury and certain items were shifted away from the U.K. to POLAND and the taste changed on those items (for the poorer). PROFIT was the KRAFT mantra.
I think galaxy is called dove in North America. Love the chocolate tasting video. I prefer Cadbury’s but malteasers are my favourite. Have you considered doing a chocolate tier list?
You are correct about GALAXY and DOVE being the same !!! can you believe Cadbury has 11 different DAIRY MILK bars in Canada ?? I tried them all in one video and by the end of it was was ona sugar high LOL
I’m a Brit, that moved to BC (Victoria) then to the States & have Canadian & US citizenship… love the channel, subscribed… HERSHEY’s is garbage! On the crisps front… NAILED IT! I drive miles to our international market in Las Vegas to get your & my fav (Heinz beans on toast). Now can you get Tim Hortons to open a store here?
Alanna there's a job for you somewhere as a chocolate taster. Bounty is a thin wrapper of chocolate around a large quantity of honey soaked coconut. Life is all about learning, it's even better if we can enjoy the experience as well. The straight chocolate Yorkie is the best version.
Hershey's tast like sick. And why? it contains Butyric acid. literally vomit taste! As far as what's the best chocolate probably has more to do with what you ate as a child. Swiss Belgium chocolate is good but I'll stick to Cadbury's.
I get exactly what you mean about caramel and also find the Mars bar too sweet...BUT!!! YOU will adore Mars bars if you start by DEEP FREEZING ( not just in chilling - full blown in the freezer). Don't attempt to eat until thawed a bit as you'll just break your teeth. They reach a point where you can start biting chunks off as it also makes the bar quite brittle. They then taste far less sweet and sickly and the caramel is no hard but softens on the palette The texture of the nougat is to die for. the other great thing - is one Mars lasts for ages! (Frozen mars bars used to be a big seller in our school tuck shop in the 70s!)
If you've been brought up in north America then your taste buds are accustomed to American chocolate. Cadburys taken over by Americans was a distinct downer for most British people. Hershey bars ,for example, are not popular in UK because American chocolate tastes awful. Many have felt sick afterwards because of the butyric acid contained in many American milk chocolate products. It is a compound found in Parmesan cheese and vomit. Judged by any criteria of what goes into product American corporate chocolate suffers by comparison to its European neighbours, particularly Swiss chocolate makers. But, if you prefer American chocolate then good luck to you. But, go on any comparison site listing the differences between American and European chocolate then you'll be in the minority if stating a preference for the former. America is famous for many things, but don't see producing decent chocolate as one of them.
Hi Alanna! I’ve been keeping this back for a long time. I’m one of you Patreons so now is a good time. I did a PhD in physics in the nineties at the The University of York. At that time Terry’’s and Rowntree were one of the main employees in the city, based on a history of making chocolate. There’s a good reason the bar made in York is called a Yorkie. Anyway, after finishing my PhD, I was offered a job as, basically inventing new chocolate in the factory. Not even a real interview. Given the job. I was shown how I basically had my mini production line that I could configure ways to make new chocolate. After much deliberation, I declined. I know to many people it sounds like the dream job, and I hope one of them got it. Me? I hate chocolate. This is actually fact.
The problem is, all of them have SO MUCH SUGAR inside them. They would still taste good with a quarter of the sugar. The problem is, manufacturers have had a "sugar arms race", making their products ever more sugary to compete with each other, changing the publics' palates to get used to so much sugar.
Well said. And for that reason my favourite chocolate is Green & Blacks Organic dark chocolate with 85% cocoa solids. It doesn't make your teeth feel like they're dissolving.
@@micko5664 They really ought to replace their standard Dairy Milk with that reduced sugar version, as the latter still has 37% sugar by weight. The G&B's 85% cocoa solids contains only 14% sugar, and doesn't taste at all bitter.
@@joshbrailsford Yes, that is about the only sort of chocolate I enjoy now, something with taste and not teeth dissolving (don't think they would have sold them well with that in the adverts though back in the 70s)
Hi Alanna, interesting seeing all the chocolate there. I am not sure if we have a lot of British or American chocolate in Australia, as we seem to have tons of our own chocolate. I recognize Bounty chocolate, as we have that here as well. We don't have Galaxy or Hershey's, but we do have Cadbury chocolate along with Nestlé, which used to be Nestles. We also used to have Fry's, which were later taken over by Canbury, though these mostly cover our Crunchie Bars, which mostly contain chocolate and honeycomb. We also have Violet Crumble Bars, which are similar to the Crunchie Bars, but with a stronger taste. We have Maltesers, Smarties and Kit Kats here In Australia. I have also seen, Twirl, Flakes, Milky Bars and Mars Bars here. Anyway, thanks for sharing yet another excellent video. Take care and all the very best. Robert.
I was always led to believe that chocolate was formulated according to the climate where it is sold. I can see the case where UK chocolate wouldn't fare well in really hot climes.
Mars advert used to say "Mars helps you work, rest and play". In the UK. Have you tried the Cadburys milk choc.and nut (hazelnut) block about 10 segments, as opposed to a bar? Plus the milk choc., fruit and nut block again about 10 segments. Scrummy! Also Cadburys used to have Brazil nuts which are brazil nuts covered in milk chocolate. I think, in a box or pack. Haven't had any for years. Yum! All Allergies permitting.
Can literally feel the sugar coursing through your veins, the telling the hair to stop, the sass towards the trolls in the comment section and making yourself sick for the views, peak lockdown and early naps content right here and I’m loving it 😂😂
That's a lot of chocolate! Personally I think it really depends on the brand/product. Some American chocolate is okay but some is truly awful & tastes like vomit! I'd eat all of them, apart from the Bounty... Coconut, grim, no thanks! You ever had magic stars? Love magic stars... and m&ms, yum!
@@AdventuresAndNaps @GemDotThirteen the reason that american chocolate tastes worse is because they put butyric acid in it... And the very same acid is what is in yes you guessed it... Vomit so thats why gem you say... It tastes of vomit... And the reason british chocolate doesnt taste the same in the US? The Hershey Company owns the rights to manufacture Cadbury chocolate in the US. It banned imports of British-made Cadbury chocolate in 2015. British expats claim that Cadbury's chocolate in the US tastes nothing like its UK counterpart, but according to Hershey, there's barely any difference in the ingredients. (which is code for sure there is a difference... We just wont tell you what it is)
I remember from a documentary that UK+US chocolate are made from cocoa butter and, for example, continental (European) choc is made from the cocoa powder - making the UK+US version softer and waxier. So, I can imagine that US and UK choc aren't so different. I don't really know US chocolate. I'm with you on the Aero love - particularly the peppermint version. You're a wrong 'un with your dislike of coconut, though. Bounty's rule! When I was young I remember Munchies and Mintola as being something special. Mintola were really the ones for me - it's the mint again. I found out recently that you can still get Mintola's but they're called After Eight mini-bites (or something like that). Very nice still. Curly-Wurly's are also iconic. Mars bars were probably most kid's favourites when I was growing up. I certainly loved them - that's the British version. Nev er tried the US version.
The Yorkie bar was created by the Rowntree chocolate factory in York (now owned by nestle) kitkats and Aeros were also created here. As usual Yorkshire makes the best things 😂
When, usually at Christmas, people get the bite-sized mixed tubs of chocs, the ones left behind in the tubs when all the favourites have been eaten, are Bounties and Mars. I've seen this in friends and relatives houses, and it applies to my house too. So you are right, they're the least popular of the lot.
The reason you can tell something is Cadbury's just by looking at the colour of the packaging is that for over 20 years Cadbury held a trademark on the colour, although eventually a court ruled that the trademark was unenforceable. For myself, I have to go with Swiss. Lindt with hazelnuts.
Well, Swiss is technically better, but it can be expensive. American isn't always bad, for some reason Reese's get their chocolate right, and I've been brought up on British chocolate so I'm biased, but let's throw a spanner into the works - German chocolate can be very good too, and not too expensive. (Belgian is nice too, but too, too SWEET!)
Thorntons chocolate is one of my favourites,although originally a british brand from Sheffield in Yorkshire,it is now owned by italian company Ferrero since 2015,but their chocolates are now often seen in many supermarkets in the UK
You've made me bloody hungry!!☺ I got excited trying Hershey kisses a friend brought back from America, and nearly three up in my mouth....tried a regular Hersheys a while after...same thing🤢😖
Around Christmas you can usually get a tube of just the Orange Smarties alongside the mixed tubes (and this year just Pink and just Blue), which is probably going to be even more popular seeing as there's seemingly an orange version of every chocolate coming out.
Cadbury has gone downhill since the Americans bought it. Tastes nothing like it used to.
Taste more sweet and less creamy
@@glastonbury4304 That's just wrong. Cadbury was bought by Kraft, now Mondelez in 2010. Mondelez is an American company based in Chicago.
@@SciFi2525252000 yes you're right , however cadburys in the US is still very different than cadburys in the UK ...the UK still manufacture cadburys in the same way and Hershey's still manufacture cadburys under licence, however cadburys is still a British company , just owned by an American parent company , but it's chocolate remains the same in the UK
IDK man , I just did a whole taste testing video trying 11 CADBURY DAIRY MILK variants and they all seemed good to me with the exception of a few.
@@FoodTastertv modern Cadbury's is nothing like the original thing,, it's now the Kraft cheese of the chocolate world, when once it inspired the author Roald Dahl 🕊️🤍
When you say "British is different to American" I think the word you were looking for is "Superior"!!!
Exactly she was trying not to admit it.
Vastly!
The clue's in the name "GREAT" Britain. (Dozey Canuk) 🤣
Who makes the best chocolate: Britain or the USA?
*Belgium has now left the chat*
Belgian chocolate is the gold standard.
British is good but its a bit bland, like most of our food
Belgian chocolate is absolutely the best.
Swiss chocolate waves hi.
@@shlibbermacshlibber4106 how very dare you ?!?!?!
I have a cousin in Alabama and every year I send her 3 parcels of Cadbury chocolate from the UK and prawn cocktail crisps. She always says it’s the highlight of her year.
Your cousin just became my most respected American, just because of the prawn cocktail crisps.
She must get really sad 😢when it’s coming to the end of her stash 😂
@@dianeharrison4975 🤣🤣🤣 she does. I’m due to send her some more though. Her Christmas parcel is late because I’ve been in hospital 👍🏼
@@1961-v9k ahh hope you’re better now . She ll enjoy her new supply I bet 🥰
@@dianeharrison4975 yes, thank you 👍🏼
I’m sorry to report a massive omission here. The humble Double Decker. Massively underrated but absolutely epic.
If left in the fridge it can also double as a self defense weapon because it becomes one of the hardest substances known to science
And Crunchie
@@harrypike5140 Yes but Crunchie is really not very nice, a bit like Maltesers in bar form but doesn't taste anywhere near as good.
@@schrodingerscat1863 Crunchy is Honeycomb, Maltesers are Malty, different flavours altogether. Cadburys have deteriorated since being bought out by another company. They have altered the ingredients Etc.
@@iriscollins7583 Maltesers are cinder toffee too same as Crunchy but has a malty flavour added when making it, Crunchy is the natural cinder toffee flavour. I think they altered the Cadbury recipe when they got bought out to make it cheaper and also to make it melt at a higher temperature so they could market it in hot countries. It isn't even close to the chocolate I remember from my childhood.
We are so lucky in Canada: we may have different bars, but the companies are (or were) British for the most part. Like Cadbury's. Yes; Hersheys is sold as well, but Cadbury's beats it every time!
I agree with you hundred percent !!!
Annnd...we have Coffee Crisp in Canada.
Nuff said.
@@badfinger61 Coffee crisp is a great candy bar and all but it doesnt taste like coffee at all even though it smells greatly of coffee !! Thats why the original coffee crisp bar never ranks high in my taste testing videos !!!
@@FoodTastertv Point taken. But they're still tasty in my opinion and something about the texture that I like.
@@badfinger61 Oh they are very tasty !!! But not coffee flavoured at all. However I tried the Easter Egg version of it in one of my taste testing videos and fell in LOVE with it cause that one has a very strong coffee flavour to it !!!
You can’t beat American chocolate! If you’re partial to that authentic ‘hint of vomit’ flavour…….
I noticed that it tasted like sick !!!! 😫
Hershey's used an additive in the milk to give it a longer life. The additive is also found in vomit and some smelly cheeses. Americans have become so used to this taste that an additive is now included to emulate this taste.
Haha you beat me to it
I thought that was what the vomit bucket was for - dip the chocolate in to make it taste more American.
@@Escapee5931 well done 😂
I would say, Cadbury’s has gone severely downhill since Kraft bought it, they claim to have made no changes, but it’s obvious to all they moved it more towards the American flavour, or at least cost cut the ingredients.
not just the flavour,the construction. leaking caramel,crunchies with the coating missing in places. horrible.
Yep, as a Brummie and life-long cheerleader of Cadburys, Kraft was the worst thing that ever happened to them.
Yes especially as the vast amount of their products are no longer made in the uk
Unfortunately your right, I noticed tase changed, in chocolate with cream egg
Cadbury makes Hershey's taste like dirt. Flake, Wispa, Twirl are the best.
I haven't eaten dirt since I was 3, it was more mud TBH
actually hershey tasty like vomit. it has to do with an acid they use to speed up mufacturing.
Cadburys is being corrupted by its American owner
@@hairyairey They had better not mess with Dairy Milk or things will get ugly!
Ive tried FLAKE and TWIRL in my British candy taste test video and they are very good !!!!
I've tried a Hershey bar and the taste it left in my mouth was similar to the taste after you've been sick for me it has to be a starbar. Could see you starting to struggle halfway through but I really appreciate your sacrifice 😵
Yes totally agree with that , I tried it once and had to spit it out, tasted like Vomit!
I agree, starters are so nice
Starbars
That will be the additive butyric acid … same as in vomit
Yep tastes like bile.
Personally, I prefer continental European chocolate: Belgian, Swiss or German, for instance. So I buy bars of chocolate from Aldi or Lidl normally. And I much prefer dark chocolate.
Definitely, love the chocolate from Aldis. German / Belgian ... yes, their chocolate wins hand down. Most UK chocolates are way too sickly. Each to their own though !
Best I've found is Asda Smart Price Dark chocolate.30p for a 100g bar.And it tastes so good!
@Richdragon Try the smaller companies. Once you start mass producing anything, quality goes out of the windows.
I'm British ... the BEST chocolate is definitely Belgian chocolate. 🌟🌟
Dark at least 70% or it’s not. Chocolate for me
Yeah, but Belgian chocolate is special, it's not something that you'd spend your pocket money on after school.
Or Swiss
Be careful with Belgian dark chocolate though as it tends to be bitter. Mind you British dark chocolate can be if it's over about 75% cocoa
NEVER
As if there isn't enough controversy in the world, Alanna comes up with this!
Adventure and Naps lights the fireworks and runs away!!!🍫
🥳
Its a public service.
@@AdventuresAndNaps you're so gorgeous
Tbf she dabbled too. Telling people to get the jab. I don’t appreciate youtubers giving medical advice and no I’m not anti vax.
There isnt a controversy, British chocolate is better then American, its a self evident fact.
Wispa is made with CO2, whereas Aerobar the bubbles are nitrogen. That's why they're slightly different.
TIL
WISPA THE CLIMATE CHANGE BAR
@@2ridiculous41 If they made a helium filled bar they'd be flying off the shelves!
@@hairyairey Yes, and they'd give you a squeaky voice!!!
The fact that I can remember when all of these were twice the size is making me feel really old! 😭
Me as well especially the Mars that used to be twice as thick.
Or maybe, as a child, your hands were smaller. Just a thought...
They weren't twice the size, your hands were smaller
Pre Kraft. Cadburys used to be harder and not as soft as today. The harder Chocolate was some much better than the soft stuff we have bee forced to put up with now.
@@trevorenever265 Explain the Yorkie then, a whole chunk just vanished, that was some magic hand transformation.
American 'chocolate' is easily the worst I have ever tasted. Their cheese is a similar story.
Malteasers are one of my faves. Also, to save you struggling to open the malteasers in future, those packs actually smoothly and easily tear horizontally all the way across about an inch from the top.
American chocolate is so great that American chocolate manufacturers lobbied for British chocolate to be banned from the USA because they were worried Americans would stop buying American chocolate if they had access to British chocolate. In the UK American chocolate isn’t banned, but no one buys it because it is widely seen as the worst tasting lowest quality chocolate in the world. I hate contrarian trolls.
To be sold as chocolate in the UK a product needs a minimum of 25% cocoa solids.
In the US the minimum is 10%.
It therefore stands to reason that British chocolate is objectively 2.5x better than American chocolate.
SO THERE!
Hahaha
Boom!
Correct and thus the reason Hershey tastes more like "wax" vs chocolate.
Incorrect. We have chocolate factories all over that are just as good as Euro chocolate. You can find coco at all levels, even 80%. Most Americans just buy disgusting chocolate because it's cheap. It's the same with our beer. We have craft beer and breweries all over that have excellent beer. Most Americans stick with the cheap disgusting commercial beer.
@@Cloneufc You can absolutely say that America produces very good high-end chocolate and I would agree. However I'm assuming that we're talking about cheap snack bars in which case on the whole I think adding more cocoa does make them better.
There used to be some wonderful ads for Flake back in the 1970s, themed around the idea that eating one was so immersive that you became oblivious to everything going on around you. The most famous one was the woman in the bath with the overflowing water. You can find them if you search UA-cam.
"I feel like I can smell colours" - classic Alanna! Seriously, you are so brave putting yourself through this ordeal for our viewing pleasure. And you're right, Aeros are irresistibubble!
Thanks so much!! ☺️
@@AdventuresAndNaps actually it's a condition called synaesthesia. Where your senses are mixed up. And you can taste yellow for example.
I'm so glad she didn't use the word "Candy"
@@hairyairey She maybe a savant, We'll have to call her Rainwoman from now on!
Aeros are good unless it’s mint one which is rank
Cadbury chocolate was wonderful until Kraft bought it and had the temerity to imagin that changing the recipe would improve things.
It didn't.
Vomit taste difference: A long time ago in America (dunno when) they would send the chocolate with troops in ration packs. To make them last longer, they did something with the milk to preserve it, giving it that sour taste. When the war was over, the troops wanted the same tasting chocolate when they got home and sort of got used to it, so they proceeded to keep the recipe. To this day, Americans just prefer this flavour, so manufacturers keep doing it.
This is what I heard anyway
I've heard that too. Was in on Steve the MRE testers channel?
This is also why Americans are such a laughing stock, cause they prefer eating vomit
The word[s] you're after is: Butyric Acid.
You missed out on the most iconic British chocolate bar, Cadburys Flake, also Cadburys Fry's Turkish Delight should be in there. Toblerone also, but it's Swiss chocolate.
I believe the texture difference is because the UK melt the ingredients whereas the US use the extruder method which accounts for the grainy texture...Hershey's lobbied to prevent Cadbury imports, so the Cadbury bars in the US are made by Hershey!
That's a pity. Cadbury is a quality chocolate at a decent price.
"Dont let them try good stuff or they won't want ours!!!"
@@craigroaring Its gone downhill since being taken over. No after taste like it used to have. Apparently some of the ingredients have been altered. Which probably accounts for the difference. They even renaged on an agreement, not to get rid of jobs,they found a loophole,some production was transferred to somewhere in Europe. I don't buy any Cadbury products now. There are some excellent chocolates out there.
Well the cocoa beans are ground up, the more you grind it the smoother it becomes, so a grainy texture is usually because of lower grinding time. Very finely ground beans are more expensive and require way more time to process. Dove in the US does make finely ground chocolate called "smoothes", which indeed has a very smooth texture. Love the caramel filled ones.
So much for the American Free Market they like to go on and on about.
The British company Rowntree Macintosh made various sweets, biscuits and chocolate but they were bought by Nestle in the 80s and I think munchies just don’t taste the same. Yorky bars also originally made by rowntrees were made in York so they did get their name from the city. Golden cups were gorgeous also from the same brand 😋
Yorkies don't taste the same either.
Bounty is great if you like coconut, i love coconut so one of my favs. Your face when eating it was priceless though 😂
Has to be the red Bounty though.
@@MoviesNGames007uk Weirdly in Cadbury boxes it's the most unloved one.
I agree !!! I LOVE BOUNTY as well !!! That coconut flavour and the texture of desecrated coconut in the center is amazing !!! It always rank high in my taste testing videos !!!
Bounty is ok but it takes ages to chew up a mouthful.
@@suttoncoldfield9318 I love that desecrated coconut texture !!! LOL
Just a quick tip. Never leave an open bag of open Maltesers on the dashboard when driving round a roundabout.
Fair 😅
PMSL, been there..........
Another one would be....Never leave an open bag of Maltesers near me.
Cadbury in America is made by the company that owns Hershey’s and I believe they use dried milk, whereas we use proper milk.
The first time I visited America I ‘had’ to try a Hershey’s chocolate bar. It was disgusting. Other sweet ‘candy’ stuff over there was great, but Hersheys 🤮
Swiss chocolate is better than both American and British chocolate. Change my mind. Even the non premium Swiss chocolate is lovely. Milka chocolate (a mauve coloured packaging with cows on it) is lovely. 🏴🇬🇧🇨🇦.
I love Milka!
The only British chocolate I like is Galaxy. Swiss, Belgium are all my favs. 😍
Yeah, Milka is just stonking.
@@michellee7465
Yeah I agree with you. I’ve really got to be in the mood for chocolate, though. I’ll have a craving for it that lasts around an hour and if that passes, I can take it or leave it. That craving I have is strong though.
Not sure i'd agree. Milka is very good, not Cadbury standard, but good. And once, when in St Moritz, I sampled a bunch of chocs from the Laderach store. A beautiful, high end chocolatiers. I thought their standard chocolate, plain, or with nuts, very good. Not necessarily better, but comparable. However, their fruit flavoured chocs i found very bland, really disappointing.
For better, I think you have to look to Belgium. Those Guylian seashells, now they can give Cadbury a run for their money.
Anyone who believes American chocolate is superior to its British equivalent is clearly in need of psychiatric help, possibly sectioning. Rest assured I have already called the relevant first responders.
"I don't care, please! get a hobby!" then proceeds to eats all of the Chocolate 🤣
A Mars Bar really needs to be slightly chilled.
They’ve also been badly effected by the shrinking and calorie reductions. The chocolate on top uses to be super thick and have some real bite to it.
Now at room temps, you are quite right, as they are a bit moooshy!
Try a deep fried Mars Bar. I think it was invented in Scotland.
I recently found an old school unopened Mars bar while cleaning out the shed. It was GIGANTIC! I was still tempted to open the bad boy up, but wiser heads prevailed. It's a bummer how small they are nowadays.
Bournville rum & raisin
There was also one I remember from my childhood in the 80's which was a bar of chocolate but each segment had a different filling. Kinda like a chocolate bar version of milk tray
Old Jamaica ... of course, dipped in some nice dark rum as well
Wasn't that one of the Frys chocolate bars with 5 or 6 different fillings?
@@tonybennett1306 Yes, loved that bar. Don't think they have had that one for ages but I would buy it if they re-release it
@@tonybennett1306 Yes it was the Fry’s … I remember my gran buying a bar of Fry’s original mint every Friday for herself and a Crunchie for me and my cousin.. and then years later ( I’m 53 ) they came out with “ thank crunchie it’s Friday” .. I felt like I invented that…😂😂🇬🇧
as long as the Americans make chocolate, i'm staying in Europe!
I love Aero (especially the Mint), but that was back when it was made by Rowntree's. Since it belongs to the enormous worldwide Nestles concern (that dabbles in all and anything), it seems to have a flatter taste now... but it's still good.
Hey, here's a thought..., aren't the Swiss famous for their Chocolate? Ever tried Lindt, Camille Bloch or Laederach? And as an insider tip, try "Frey's" which is not only good, but also the biggest selling Chocolate by the Swiss themselves!
Best British chocolate. ... hmm ... for me, at the moment has to be Cadburys Dark Milk Giant Buttons. Goes brilliantly with a hot chocolate, tea or a strong coffee. From childhood, toffee crisp and Lion bar.
Oooh can't say I've had Cadbury's dark milk giant buttons..! I'll be on the lookout
@@AdventuresAndNaps I think there are giant Bournville buttons too. Did you miss Bournville? Interesting place as well.
My fave British chocolate bar is a DOUBLE DECKER. I tried it a while back in my British candy taste testing video and LOVED IT !!!! For me it has a bit of a coffee flavour ( even thought the label doesnt say anything about coffee ) and thats why I LOVE IT !!!!
@@AdventuresAndNaps dark milk is propper nice , i dare to say its slightly better than cadburys dairy milk ( ooo controversy haha )
@@AdventuresAndNaps Cadbury's Boost.
Not to be difficult but what you really mean is chocolate for the British market. Nestle is a Swiss company but many of the options you tried came from Rowantree-MacIntosh (which Nestle bought years ago). Also Cadburys is now owned by an American company.
Uh, I seem to recall you mentioning several times you're a savoury person all the way - this kind of sacrifice is Nobel prize worthy.
Doing it in the name of science lol
@@AdventuresAndNaps Dr Naps surgery is open for business!
@@AdventuresAndNaps I didn’t see any wagon wheels & they are British
Mars was founded in Tacoma Washington, and is currently headquartered in McLean, Virginia. The British Mars bar is not produced in the US however.
"Get a hobby" That's why we love you!
My favourites are Crunchie, Bounty (I realise you have to like coconut), Cadbury Fruit and Nut, Fry's Chocolate Cream.
BOUNTY is delicious !!! It always ranks very high in my taste testing videos !!!!
excellent review. I seem to recall that US chocolate as to use adulterated milk because of the distances it has to travel, and UK milk can be delivered anywhere in country fresh (pasturised).
bounty does deserve its own chocolate bar , its a fabulous delight of coconut and chocolate ×2 😉 give it another go , you'll luv it , fabulous video ❤
Does Bounty count as one of your five a day? Asking for a friend...
I find the milk chocolate one to be a little sickly, but the plain chocolate Bounty is probably my all time favourite, especially if left in the fridge to chill for a few minutes before eating.
Dark Chocolate Bounty ftw
I LOVE bounty !!!! Ive tried it in a few videos and it always ranks high !!!!
Bounty is my favourite. Being taste tested my someone who doesn't like coconut is rather unfair on the bar!
US chocolate CANNOT legally be called chocolate here in the UK because it doesn't contain enough cocoa solids. Here it MUST contain at least 20% solids. Also our chocolate has real milk and not milk powder
You can find Hershey's Cookies'n'Creme (the only decent tasting Hershey's - their standard Hershey's chocolate is indeed truly awful) in some UK stores - I've seen it in Home Bargains a few times for example (and not priced expensively or in some weird American section). Cadbury's Double Decker is one of the best UK choc bars - surprised you missed it out! Standard Kit Kat was always a basic staple for me - prefer it to the somewhat unwieldy Chunky version. Toffee Crisp was also a "go to" for me.
Cadbury's Twirl gives you a great choc hit like the wrapper says - it's much closer to a Galaxy Ripple in form (but way better than a Ripple) than the frankly stupidly unmanageable Cadbury's Flake (only good for putting in a soft whip ice cream cone to make a "99"). Mars Bars are far too sickly even for my crazily sweet tooth, so I rarely eat them - Twix is far more palatable.
Just glad you avoided the truly dreadful Fry's Turkish Delight - possibly the foulest UK confectionery ever created that contains chocolate. I suspect a large proportion of UK folks have damaged tastebuds because that's the only expanation why this rosewater jelly monstrosity is still on the market after many decades!
OMG Its always great to find a fellow DOUBLE DECKER lover !!! I tried it in my British candy taste testing video a while back and LOVED IT !!! I find that DOUBLE DECKER has a hidden coffee flavour ( the label doesnt mention anything about coffee ) and thats why I LOVE IT !!!
I love Turkish delight I had one today on the drive home from work
Watching you trying to pull open the malteasers is hysterical when the packet is made to rip the top off easily 😂😂
“Please, get a hobby” 🤣🤣. But since it’s the Internet , let me annoyingly say, we don’t pronounce the T in Nougat. Or I don’t, anyway.
More seriously, you have a very entertaining way of doing these vids.
Yeah without the t is the newer millennial way of pronouncing it, its always had a t to me, pronounce like a nugget of gold!
@@MarcusTDM I am 62, no millenial me :)
@@MarcusTDM Nougat should be pronounced as NOOGA. It is a French word.
@@iriscollins7583 it is accepted in Britain as an alternative pronunciation. Guess is depends where you live.
@@martincook9795 you just look like one! 😉
Loved This! 🤩 Feels like Alanna’s old videos, It’s great to see the direction your taking with your channel, with Adventures, Naps and Food too
I LOVE her taste testing videos !!!! I hope she does them kore often !! She is on of the youtubers that inspired me to make my own food taste testing channel !!!
I can imagine you visiting Cadbury’s World and falling out legless 🤣
And whilst in Brum why not treat yourself to a Balti, at the Balti triangle, about 3-4 miles away?
The amount of chocolate you walked out with at the end of one of those tours was quite surprising.
(Disclaimer this was a really long time ago).
The big three companies in the U.K are Cadbury, Mars and Nestle. Mars make everything Galaxy, Mars, Twix etc and Nestle make KitKat, Smarties, Yorkie and so on 🙂
You must find a 'Topic' greatest chocolate bar ever made (IMO) and I must congratulate you on your use of proper English CRISPS 👏👏👏👏👏👏
Loved this! I think we forget how lucky we are to have such a great selection of chocolate in the UK thanks to Cadbury, Nestle and Mars.
By brand everyone has their favourite:
Dairy Milk vs Yorkie vs Galaxy
Wispa vs Aero
Twirl vs Ripple
Timeout vs Kitkat
Boost vs Drifter vs Twix
Starbar vs Lion Peanut vs Snickers
Double Decker vs Milkyway
Mini Eggs vs Smarties vs M&Ms
Why's noone mention Thornton's? I'd take Thornton's chocolates over either Cadburys or Galaxy (or Mars, Nestle, etc.)
It was a sad day when Nestle bought out Rowntrees. I am one of many people boycotting Nestle, as they encourage bottle getting babies in countries where the water supply is not safe, and to people who are so poor they will be tempted to dilute it to make it go further, also they take water from poor farmers to bottle to sale to rich people, and argue that water should not be a human right. I do miss kit-cats.
I was raised on Godiva chocolate (Belgian) growing up and it's one of my favorites. As an adult, I am living at a poverty level due to health reasons. I can't afford chocolate. As an American who has lived all over the world I would rate German chocolate and ice cream the best. More than likely, I bet each country has one or two better chocolates that win the taste competition. Sorry you suffered for your channel. We love you for your efforts!
Best ice cream is Joes Ice Cream Welsh-Italian ice cream, if you haven’t tried it you should but would need to come to Wales for it.
Amazing. You could’ve included some Tunnocks products, these are also British chocolate.
OMG I just tried TUNNOCKS in my recent video and it was very good !!!!
Tunnocks are wonderful !!
Tunnocks omg to die for
To talk about "Cadbury vs. Galaxy" is a bit wrong. Cadbury is a manufacturer, Galaxy is a product, made by MARS Inc.
Wow that looks like a lot of fun, enjoy.
I tried American chocolate when in Florida and I personally found it absolutely disgusting.
I love British chocolate, but I’ve been to Switzerland a few times and the chocolate I had there was Amazing it was another level it was absolute Heaven!
My personal favourite at the moment is Cadbury’s Dark Milk .
Oh my - this was a sugar rush for you and a nostalgia rush for me! Every Christmas from when I was 5 until I was 12, I used to get a selection box including Lion bars. Like you, I tended to wolf my way through them, and I know how you must have been feeling by the end of recording this!
Though you didn't come to them on this video, I spotted the Club bars on the table: I had those in my school lunch box for about four years.
Many other thoughts come to mind...
The celebrated British chef Heston Blumenthal was inspired by Aero to create an aerated chocolate for the tasting menu at his triple-Michelin starred restaurant The Fat Duck. You'll need to save up to go there - it's close to £300 per head for a meal - but there's a waiting list of a couple of years, so if you start now, you may be able to afford it by the time you can take your booking.
Of the various types you were trying, most are made by three brands: Nestlé, Cadbury's and Mars. Clearly, Mars' products don't agree with you, as you disliked both the Mars and Bounty bars. It's interesting to note that the American variant of Mars bars is/was very similar to what we know in the UK as Snickers, albeit here they are made with peanuts rather than almonds; also, when I was little, Snickers went by the name "Marathon."
Nestlé UK had a factory close to my university in Yorkshire, and they sponsored a lot of events, thus their products were found in snack vending machines all over the campus - there *is* therefore a connection between Yorkie bars and Yorkshire! Nestlé also make Smarties, which originally rejoiced in the less imaginative name of "Chocolate Beans." The orange ones have always been orange flavoured; I gather that the brown ones are coffee flavoured, but those are the only two colours that are different amongst the rest. Munchies once had a mint-flavoured version called "Mintola," but they changed the name to "Mint Munchies" in the mid-1990s, if memory serves.
Now, living in the Midlands, I'm not very far from Cadbury's original factory at Bourneville, near Birmingham. The Bourneville bar is (or was) essentially a darker version of the basic Cadbury bar, which went by the slogan "a glass and a half of full cream milk in every half a pound," accounting for the creaminess you don't tend to find across the Atlantic.
Ahh this takes me back to the first video I saw of yours were you were trying British snacks 😀. Great video. Got to be galaxy for me and bounty’s are great as well.
Thanks Brian!!
They were my favourite
Ive tried the Galaxy bar in one of my videos and wasnt a huge fan but I LOVE BOUNTY !!!!
American made chocolate can tend to have a slight taste of vomit to it and that is because it contains a component that is in vomit, which is butyric acid (the stuff that leaves the taste of sick in your mouth/throat) so yeah. Yum. Puke chocolate. The reason being, combined also with paraffin, is to stabilise the chocolate for a hotter climate so it doesn't melt on the shelves.
I'd rather keep chocolate in a cooler than put spew and
Paraffin in to my chocolate to be honest.
First of all, fine chocolate is fine chocolate - the comparison is 'ordinary' chocolate like Cadbury vs Hershey. Regular belgium chocolate is probably even better as chocolate but I think the really unique thing about everyday British chocolate are the different textured chocolates like twirl, flake, aero or whispa - it is an idea that hershey just doesn't get.
Besides Bobby from Austria, a double decker is the only chocolate bar I've ever had with cereal pieces or puffs in it
Btw, drinking black coffee clears the palette, so doing this in between sweet bites would make each taste as they should.
what suprises me the most is how well that plant in the corner is doing. taking into consideration it's yours.
Very rude and very funny well said.
When I lived in the UK, my favourite was Yorkie Raisin and Biscuit. On another note, isn't Galaxy the same as Dove in the US?
There really is no comparison.
Best UK chocolate is either Cadbury's or Thornton's (RIP)
I tried Hershey's once, it was a gritty horrible punishment.
Thorntons are still in business arn't they ? I know their factory in Belper Derbyshire is no longer there , im sure their Factory in Alfreton is still producing chocolate.
I do like Lily o Brian's dessert chocolates more than any other
Cocoa power and and Cocoa butter (fat) are where the flavors come from. You can have only one and it's still considered chocolate. Cocoa butter is used for white chocolate. Some chocolates will mix the powder with other cheaper fats or no fat at all.
Generally both are needed for the best chocolate flavor.
This all started off in 1866 with Fry’s Chocolate Cream, first mass produced chocolate bar in the world. I didn’t see that on your list!
Ps you’re right about Mars and Bounty 🤢 although I still wouldn’t eat a Hershey’s 🤢🤢
Award that girl a medal for being brave and putting her self through this test.
Being brought up and living in the UK, in was always Cadbury's for me and I find Hershey's coarse and gritty. On one of my trip across the pond I wisited the Ghirardelli factory in San Francisco and their chocolate was very smooth and creamy; more like Swiss chocolate as I remember, so not all American chocolate is terrible. Just as not all UK chocolate is cadbury's, not all US chocolate is Hershey's!
That's fair!
It is also incredibly expensive
You can give up chocloate for Lent and its a voluntary act. Go to America for any length of time and you give up chocolate because you have to. When you went for the Time Out Alanna I was taken back to your vid on Polish stuff and your reactions to the two epic wafers you tried then are still etched in my memory! Nice video :-)
You judged Bounty on the fact it was coconut, and not on the chocolate.
Yeah. I thought Bounty was from the US.
But it's from the UK.
You posed the question “Does the Yorkie bar have anything to do with York?” and the answer is “Definitely!” York was a major centre for chocolate production (Rowntree, Terry, Craven, & all of them Quaker families), & it was Rowntree who created Yorkie (BN - before Nestle). Rowntree also built the “model” (ie, this is the model for worker housing) village of New Earswick, from 1902, to house its workforce
Naming Yorkie after York, just goes a long way to explain why they didn't build the factory in Goole!! 🤣
Cadburys was never the same since it got bought by another company and they seemed to have changed a lot of the recipes.
A US company... :-(
KRAFT bought Cadbury and certain items were shifted away from the U.K. to
POLAND and the taste changed on those items (for the poorer). PROFIT was the KRAFT mantra.
One item you missed out was a Galaxy Twirl , which was their version of the Cadbury flake, except they coated the flake with a covering of chocolate.
No such thing as galaxy twirl. It's Cadbury.
@@saturdayplayer2492 yes your correct, it’s a galaxy ripple which was the galaxy version of the Cadbury twirl
I think galaxy is called dove in North America.
Love the chocolate tasting video. I prefer Cadbury’s but malteasers are my favourite. Have you considered doing a chocolate tier list?
You are correct about GALAXY and DOVE being the same !!! can you believe Cadbury has 11 different DAIRY MILK bars in Canada ?? I tried them all in one video and by the end of it was was ona sugar high LOL
I’m a Brit, that moved to BC (Victoria) then to the States & have Canadian & US citizenship… love the channel, subscribed… HERSHEY’s is garbage!
On the crisps front… NAILED IT! I drive miles to our international market in Las Vegas to get your & my fav (Heinz beans on toast).
Now can you get Tim Hortons to open a store here?
Hershey's would be better if they put a wick in it.
Alanna there's a job for you somewhere as a chocolate taster. Bounty is a thin wrapper of chocolate around a large quantity of honey soaked coconut. Life is all about learning, it's even better if we can enjoy the experience as well. The straight chocolate Yorkie is the best version.
Hershey's tast like sick. And why? it contains Butyric acid. literally vomit taste! As far as what's the best chocolate probably has more to do with what you ate as a child. Swiss Belgium chocolate is good but I'll stick to Cadbury's.
I get exactly what you mean about caramel and also find the Mars bar too sweet...BUT!!! YOU will adore Mars bars if you start by DEEP FREEZING ( not just in chilling - full blown in the freezer). Don't attempt to eat until thawed a bit as you'll just break your teeth. They reach a point where you can start biting chunks off as it also makes the bar quite brittle. They then taste far less sweet and sickly and the caramel is no hard but softens on the palette The texture of the nougat is to die for. the other great thing - is one Mars lasts for ages! (Frozen mars bars used to be a big seller in our school tuck shop in the 70s!)
If you've been brought up in north America then your taste buds are accustomed to American chocolate. Cadburys taken over by Americans was a distinct downer for most British people. Hershey bars ,for example, are not popular in UK because American chocolate tastes awful. Many have felt sick afterwards because of the butyric acid contained in many American milk chocolate products. It is a compound found in Parmesan cheese and vomit. Judged by any criteria of what goes into product American corporate chocolate suffers by comparison to its European neighbours, particularly Swiss chocolate makers. But, if you prefer American chocolate then good luck to you. But, go on any comparison site listing the differences between American and European chocolate then you'll be in the minority if stating a preference for the former. America is famous for many things, but don't see producing decent chocolate as one of them.
Hi Alanna! I’ve been keeping this back for a long time. I’m one of you Patreons so now is a good time.
I did a PhD in physics in the nineties at the The University of York. At that time Terry’’s and Rowntree were one of the main employees in the city, based on a history of making chocolate.
There’s a good reason the bar made in York is called a Yorkie.
Anyway, after finishing my PhD, I was offered a job as, basically inventing new chocolate in the factory.
Not even a real interview. Given the job.
I was shown how I basically had my mini production line that I could configure ways to make new chocolate.
After much deliberation, I declined. I know to many people it sounds like the dream job, and I hope one of them got it. Me? I hate chocolate.
This is actually fact.
Oh. my god!! 😂
WOW !!!!! That wouldve been my dream job !!!!
The problem is, all of them have SO MUCH SUGAR inside them. They would still taste good with a quarter of the sugar. The problem is, manufacturers have had a "sugar arms race", making their products ever more sugary to compete with each other, changing the publics' palates to get used to so much sugar.
Well said. And for that reason my favourite chocolate is Green & Blacks Organic dark chocolate with 85% cocoa solids. It doesn't make your teeth feel like they're dissolving.
I AGREE !!!!!
@@micko5664 It could be much less and still be tasty
@@micko5664 They really ought to replace their standard Dairy Milk with that reduced sugar version, as the latter still has 37% sugar by weight. The G&B's 85% cocoa solids contains only 14% sugar, and doesn't taste at all bitter.
@@joshbrailsford Yes, that is about the only sort of chocolate I enjoy now, something with taste and not teeth dissolving (don't think they would have sold them well with that in the adverts though back in the 70s)
Have you ever had the rare finger of kit kat that escaped the wafering process? Solid chocolate all the way through 😋
Haven’t eaten any of these for years, lost my sweet tooth, swapped for wine 🍷🤪 a great journey down memory lane.
Thanks for watching!
Hi Alanna, interesting seeing all the chocolate there. I am not sure if we have a lot of British or American chocolate in Australia, as we seem to have tons of our own chocolate. I recognize Bounty chocolate, as we have that here as well. We don't have Galaxy or Hershey's, but we do have Cadbury chocolate along with Nestlé, which used to be Nestles. We also used to have Fry's, which were later taken over by Canbury, though these mostly cover our Crunchie Bars, which mostly contain chocolate and honeycomb. We also have Violet Crumble Bars, which are similar to the Crunchie Bars, but with a stronger taste. We have Maltesers, Smarties and Kit Kats here In Australia. I have also seen, Twirl, Flakes, Milky Bars and Mars Bars here. Anyway, thanks for sharing yet another excellent video. Take care and all the very best. Robert.
I was always led to believe that chocolate was formulated according to the climate where it is sold. I can see the case where UK chocolate wouldn't fare well in really hot climes.
They change the formula for hot climates. Unfortunately the taste suffers.
@@davidleighton1763 I heard that too. Australian chocolate is not good at all
Mars advert used to say "Mars helps you work, rest and play". In the UK.
Have you tried the Cadburys milk choc.and nut (hazelnut) block about 10 segments, as opposed to a bar? Plus the milk choc., fruit and nut block again about 10 segments. Scrummy!
Also Cadburys used to have Brazil nuts which are brazil nuts covered in milk chocolate. I think, in a box or pack. Haven't had any for years. Yum!
All Allergies permitting.
I love a Bounty Bar ....... multi-pack preferably !
Best with dark chocolate.
Can literally feel the sugar coursing through your veins, the telling the hair to stop, the sass towards the trolls in the comment section and making yourself sick for the views, peak lockdown and early naps content right here and I’m loving it 😂😂
Thanks so much for watching!
That's a lot of chocolate!
Personally I think it really depends on the brand/product. Some American chocolate is okay but some is truly awful & tastes like vomit!
I'd eat all of them, apart from the Bounty... Coconut, grim, no thanks!
You ever had magic stars? Love magic stars... and m&ms, yum!
Yasss magic stars!!
@@AdventuresAndNaps @GemDotThirteen the reason that american chocolate tastes worse is because they put butyric acid in it... And the very same acid is what is in yes you guessed it... Vomit so thats why gem you say... It tastes of vomit... And the reason british chocolate doesnt taste the same in the US? The Hershey Company owns the rights to manufacture Cadbury chocolate in the US. It banned imports of British-made Cadbury chocolate in 2015. British expats claim that Cadbury's chocolate in the US tastes nothing like its UK counterpart, but according to Hershey, there's barely any difference in the ingredients. (which is code for sure there is a difference... We just wont tell you what it is)
@@ysabelcook9521 Yes and they have completely ruined Cadbury
I remember from a documentary that UK+US chocolate are made from cocoa butter and, for example, continental (European) choc is made from the cocoa powder - making the UK+US version softer and waxier. So, I can imagine that US and UK choc aren't so different. I don't really know US chocolate. I'm with you on the Aero love - particularly the peppermint version. You're a wrong 'un with your dislike of coconut, though. Bounty's rule!
When I was young I remember Munchies and Mintola as being something special. Mintola were really the ones for me - it's the mint again. I found out recently that you can still get Mintola's but they're called After Eight mini-bites (or something like that). Very nice still. Curly-Wurly's are also iconic. Mars bars were probably most kid's favourites when I was growing up. I certainly loved them - that's the British version. Nev er tried the US version.
The Yorkie bar was created by the Rowntree chocolate factory in York (now owned by nestle) kitkats and Aeros were also created here. As usual Yorkshire makes the best things 😂
When, usually at Christmas, people get the bite-sized mixed tubs of chocs, the ones left behind in the tubs when all the favourites have been eaten, are Bounties and Mars. I've seen this in friends and relatives houses, and it applies to my house too. So you are right, they're the least popular of the lot.
The reason you can tell something is Cadbury's just by looking at the colour of the packaging is that for over 20 years Cadbury held a trademark on the colour, although eventually a court ruled that the trademark was unenforceable. For myself, I have to go with Swiss. Lindt with hazelnuts.
Well, Swiss is technically better, but it can be expensive. American isn't always bad, for some reason Reese's get their chocolate right, and I've been brought up on British chocolate so I'm biased, but let's throw a spanner into the works - German chocolate can be very good too, and not too expensive. (Belgian is nice too, but too, too SWEET!)
Thorntons chocolate is one of my favourites,although originally a british brand from Sheffield in Yorkshire,it is now owned by italian company Ferrero since 2015,but their chocolates are now often seen in many supermarkets in the UK
I admire your dedication to the task. Someone has to do it........
All in the name of science
In Japan you can get kit kats in over 200 flavours!!! There are videos on UA-cam of a shop that just sales kit kats !!
So cool! I wish we could get them here
You've made me bloody hungry!!☺ I got excited trying Hershey kisses a friend brought back from America, and nearly three up in my mouth....tried a regular Hersheys a while after...same thing🤢😖
Around Christmas you can usually get a tube of just the Orange Smarties alongside the mixed tubes (and this year just Pink and just Blue), which is probably going to be even more popular seeing as there's seemingly an orange version of every chocolate coming out.