Cadbury Creme Egg
with the Hershey's USA creme egg to the left and the UK Cadbury creme egg to the right | |
Product type | Confectionery |
---|---|
Owner | Cadbury UK |
Country | United Kingdom |
Introduced | 1963 |
Related brands | List of Cadbury products |
Markets | World |
A Cadbury Creme Egg is a chocolate product produced in the shape of an egg. The product consists of a thick milk chocolate shell, housing a white and yellow fondant filling which mimics the albumen and yolk of a chicken egg. Creme Eggs are the best selling confectionery item between New Year's Day and Easter in the UK, with annual sales in excess of 200 million and a brand value of approximately £55 million.[1]
Creme Eggs are produced by Cadbury UK in the United Kingdom and by Cadbury Adams in Canada. They are sold by Mondelēz International in all markets except the US, where the Hershey Company has the local marketing rights. At the Bournville factory in Birmingham, in the UK, they are manufactured at a rate of 1.5 million per day. The Creme Egg was also previously manufactured in New Zealand but, since 2009, they are imported from the UK.
While filled eggs were first manufactured by the Cadbury Brothers in 1923, the Creme Egg in its current form was introduced in 1963.[2] Initially sold as Fry's Creme Eggs (incorporating the Fry's brand), they were renamed "Cadbury's Creme Eggs" in 1971.[3]
Product specification
Packaging
Creme eggs are usually sold individually but are also available in boxes containing a varying quantity of eggs depending on the country the packaging is intended for. The foil wrapping of the eggs was traditionally green, red, yellow and blue in colour in the United Kingdom and Ireland, though green was removed and purple replaced blue early in the 21st century. In the United States, some green is incorporated into the design, which previously featured the product's mascot—the Creme Egg Chick. As of 2015, the packaging in Canada has turned into a 34g, purple, red and yellow soft plastic shell.
Availability
Creme eggs are available annually between 1 January and Easter Day.[4][5] In the UK in the 1980s, Cadbury made Creme Eggs available year-round but sales dropped and they returned to seasonal availability.[6]
Manufacture in New Zealand
Creme Eggs were manufactured in New Zealand at the Cadbury factory in Dunedin from 1983 to 2009. Cadbury in New Zealand and Australia went through a restructuring process which most Cadbury products previously produced in New Zealand being manufactured instead at Cadbury factories in Australia. The Dunedin plant later received a $69 million upgrade to specialise in boxed products such as Cadbury Roses, and Creme Eggs were no longer produced there. The result of the changes meant that Creme Eggs were instead imported from the United Kingdom. The change has also seen the range of Creme Eggs available for sale decreased.[2] The size also dropped from 40g to 39g in this time. The response from New Zealanders has not been positive. Complaints have included the filling not being as runny as the New Zealand version.[7]
Manufacturing process
Cadbury Creme Eggs are manufactured as two half-egg chocolate shells, each of which is filled with a white fondant, then topped with a smaller amount of yellow fondant. Both halves are then quickly joined together and cooled, the chocolate bonding together in the process. The solid eggs are removed from the moulds and wrapped in foil.[8] The filling, to be more precise, is inverted sugar syrup, produced by processing the fondant with invertase.[9][10]
Varieties
Over the years, Cadbury has introduced a number of products related to the original Creme Egg, including:
- Border Creme Eggs. The first variant, wrapped in various colours of tartan foil and containing chocolate fondant. Introduced as "Fry's Border Creme Eggs" in 1970, rebranded as "Cadbury Border Creme Eggs" in 1974 and discontinued in 1981.
- Mini Creme Eggs (bite-sized Creme Eggs)
- Caramel Eggs (chocolate egg with a caramel filling), launched in 1994[3]
- Caramilk Egg (Canadian market only)
- Mini Caramel Eggs (bite-sized Caramel Eggs)
- Chocolate Creme Eggs (chocolate fondant filling), introduced in 1999
- Orange Creme Eggs (Creme Eggs with a hint of orange flavour)
- 'Berry' Creme Eggs (magenta wrapper and pink fondant, sold circa 1997 in Australia)
- Mint Creme Eggs (green "yolk" and mint flavour chocolate)
- Dairy Milk with Creme Egg bars
- Creme Egg Fondant in a Narrow Cardboard Tube (limited edition)
- Creme Egg ice cream with a fondant sauce in milk chocolate
- Dream Eggs (New Zealand). White chocolate with white chocolate fondant filling. Discontinued in 2010.[2]
- Cadbury McFlurry (British, Irish, Canadian and Australian McDonald's only) McFlurry soft serve mix with Creme Egg & chocolate filling.
- Creme Egg Twisted (Britain, Ireland, Australia and Canada) Available all year round. It was introduced to Australia in 2010 but was quickly discontinued.
- Holiday Ornament Creme Egg
- Mad About Chocolate Egg (Australia and New Zealand). Purple wrapper, milk chocolate with chocolate fudge filling. Discontinued in 2010.[2]
- Peppermint Egg (New Zealand). Discontinued in 2010.[2]
- Jaffa Egg (New Zealand) Dark chocolate with orange filling
- Marble Egg (New Zealand) Dairy Milk and Dream Chocolate swirled together
- Giant Creme Eggs, a thick chocolate shell with white and caramel fondant filling. Manufactured in North America. Discontinued in 2006.
- Caramilk Egg – Manufactured in New Zealand, a mixture of caramel and white chocolate with a creamy centre of the same flavour.
- Creme Egg Splats - fried egg shaped pieces of milk chocolate filled with fondant.
- Screme Egg - traditional milk chocolate shell with a white and green fondant center - available for Halloween[11]
- Screme Egg Minis - Mini version of the Screme Egg - available for Halloween[12]
- Fudgee-O Egg (Canada). Introduced at the start of 2015. Filled with a fudge creme centre.
- Oreo Cream Egg (Canada). Introduced in 2016. Filled with a white cream center containing Oreo cookie crumbs.
Changes to product
During an interview a 2007 episode of Late Night with Conan O'Brien, actor B. J. Novak drew attention to the fact that American market Cadbury Creme Eggs had decreased in size, despite the official Cadbury website stating otherwise.[13] American Creme Eggs at the time weighed 34 g and contained 150 calories.[14] Before 2006, the eggs marketed by Hershey were identical to the UK version, weighing 39 g and containing 170 calories.[15][16]
In 2015, the British Cadbury company under the American Mondelēz International conglomerate announced that it had changed the formula of the Cadbury Creme Egg by replacing its Cadbury Dairy Milk chocolate with "standard cocoa mix chocolate". It had also reduced the packaging from 6 eggs to 5 with a less than proportionate decrease in price.[17][18][19] This resulted in a large number of complaints from consumers.[20] Analysts IRI found that Cadbury lost more than $12 million in Creme Egg sales in the UK.[21]
Advertising
The Creme Egg has been marketed in the UK and Ireland with the question "How do you eat yours?" and in New Zealand with the slogan "Don't get caught with egg on your face". Australia and New Zealand have also used a variation of the UK question, using the slogan "How do you do it?" Over the years, there have been several major Cadbury's Creme Egg campaigns.
- "Shopkeeper" campaign of the 1970s in which a boy asks for 6000 Cadbury Creme Eggs.
- "Irresistibly" campaign showing characters prepared to do something unusual for a Creme Egg, similar to the "What would you do for a Klondike bar?" campaign in America.
- 1985: The "How Do You Eat Yours?" campaign begins.
- 1985–1996: "Don't get caught with egg on your face" advertisement in New Zealand[22]
- 1990–1993: The first television campaign to use the "How Do You Eat Yours?" theme, featuring the zodiac signs.
- 1994–1996: Spitting Image characters continued "How Do You Eat Yours?"
- 1997–1999: Matt Lucas, with the catchphrase "I've seen the future, and it's egg shaped!"
- 2000–2003: The "Pointing Finger" campaign.
- 2004: The "Roadshow" finger campaign
- 2005 The "How Do You Eat Yours?" campaign
- 2006–2007: "Eat It Your Way" campaign
- 2008–2009: "Here Today, Goo Tomorrow" campaign (UK)
- 2008–2009: "Unleash the Goo" campaign (Australia and new Zealand)
- 2009: "Release the Goo" campaign (Canada)
- 2010: "You'll Miss Me When I'm Gone" campaign (UK)
- 2011: "Goo Dares Wins" campaign (UK)
- 2011: The "Get your goo on!" campaign (Australia)
- 2012: "Gooing For Gold" campaign (UK)
- 2012: "It's Goo Time" campaign (Australia)
- 2013–present: "Have a fling with a Creme Egg" (UK)
In North America, Creme Eggs are advertised on television with a small white rabbit called the Cadbury Bunny (alluding to the Easter Bunny) which clucks like a chicken. Ads for caramel eggs use a larger gold-coloured rabbit which also clucks, and chocolate eggs use a large brown rabbit which clucks in a deep voice. The advertisements use the slogan "Nobunny knows Easter better than him", spoken by TV personality Mason Adams. The ads have continued to air nearly unchanged into the high definition era, though currently the ad image is slightly zoomed to fill the screen. The majority of rabbits used in the Cadbury commercials are Flemish Giants.
In the UK, around the year 2000, selected stores were provided stand alone paperboard cutouts of something resembling a "love tester". The shopper would press a button in the centre and a "spinner" (a series of LED lights) would select at random a way of eating the Creme Egg, e.g. "with chips". These were withdrawn within a year. There are also the "Creme Egg Cars" which are, as the name suggest, ovular vehicles painted to look like Creme Eggs. They are driven to various places to advertise the eggs but are based mainly at the Cadbury factory in Bournville. Five "Creme Egg Cars" were built from Bedford Rascal chassis. The headlights are taken from a Citroën 2CV.[23]
For the 2009 season, advertising in the UK, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand and Canada consisted of stopmotion adverts in the "Release the Goo" campaign which comprised a Creme Egg stripping itself of its wrapper and then breaking its own shell, usually with household appliances and equipment, while making various 'goo' sounds, and a 'relieved' noise when finally able to break its shell. The Cadbury's Creme Egg website featured games where the player had to prevent the egg from finding a way to release its goo.
A similar advertising campaign in 2010 featured animated Creme Eggs destroying themselves in large numbers, such as gathering together at a cinema before bombarding into each other to release all of the eggs' goo, and another which featured eggs being destroyed by mouse traps.
In 2012, Cadbury parodied the Olympic Games by using Creme Eggs instead of athletes. The first advert was 31 seconds long and consists of an Opening Ceremony, performed by stripped and packed Creme Eggs. Each other advert contained a Creme Egg trying to ‘release the goo’ whilst in an Olympic event. An online game was created by Cadbury, so the public could play the ‘Goo Games’. Six events were available to play and each of them was shown as a cartoon sketch.
In 2016, Cadbury opened a pop-up Creme Egg café titled "Crème de la Creme Egg Café" in London.[24] Tickets for the café sold out within an hour of being published online.[25] The café in Greek Street, Soho, was open every Friday, Saturday, Sunday from January 22, 2016 to March 6, 2016[26]
References
- ↑ "Cadbury UK brand information". United Kingdom: Cadbury. Retrieved 16 April 2011.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "FAQ’s – NZ Product Changes". Cadbury New Zealand. Retrieved 16 April 2011.
- 1 2 "Cadbury UK Easter Egg Information" (PDF). United Kingdom: Cadbury. Retrieved 27 April 2011.
- ↑ "Kraft Foods brand information". Retrieved 16 April 2011.
- ↑ "Creme Egg". Cadbury. 15 January 2009. Retrieved 1 February 2012.
- ↑ "Campaign article on short sales season". United Kingdom: Campaign Magazine. Retrieved 27 April 2011.
- ↑ "Creme Egg fans say UK imports no yolk". New Zealand Herald. 14 February 2010.
- ↑ Cadbury Creme Egg from the Cadbury website
- ↑ Cadbury website. Retrieved April 10, 2015.
- ↑ LaBau, Elizabeth. What is Invertase? About.com. Retrieved April 10, 2015.
- ↑ "Hershey's Screme Egg Information". United States: Hershey's. Retrieved 1 November 2014.
- ↑ "Cadbury Screme Egg Minis Information". United Kingdom: Cadbury. Retrieved 1 November 2014.
- ↑ "Archive.org: Cadbury Creme Egg FAQ". Archive.org. Archived from the original on 28 March 2006. Retrieved 15 March 2016.
- ↑ "The Hershey Company product information". Retrieved 16 April 2011.
- ↑ "Hershey's Cadbury Creme Egg, Original nutrition information". dietfacts.com.
- ↑ "Cadbury Creme Egg – 39g". United Kingdom: Cadbury. Archived from the original on 25 October 2007. Retrieved 22 April 2009.
- ↑ Adam Gabbatt. "Shellshock! Cadbury comes clean on Creme Egg chocolate change". the Guardian.
- ↑ "Cadbury's changes the Creme Egg recipe". BelfastTelegraph.co.uk.
- ↑ Levi Winchester. "Cadbury's US owners accused of 'ruining Easter' after changing Creme Egg shell chocolate - Weird - News - Daily Express". Express.co.uk.
- ↑ "Shock as Cadbury's changes the Creme Egg recipe". The New Zealand Herald.
- ↑ "This is why you don’t mess with people’s chocolate". news.com.au. News Limited. 13 January 2016. Retrieved 13 January 2016.
- ↑ "Cadbury Creme Eggs Ad (1985 ad, 1992 Version)". YouTube. Retrieved 1 February 2012.
- ↑ "The stig does the creme egg car!!". YouTube. Retrieved 23 March 2010.
- ↑ "Cracking news! A Creme Egg café is coming to Soho". Time Out London. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
- ↑ "Cadbury Crème de la Creme Egg Cafe". Eventbrite. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
- ↑ Bishop, Rachel. "Crème Egg Café to open featuring a ball pool and a very chocolatey menu". mirror. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
External links
- Cadbury UK
- Cadbury Chocolates from Hershey's website
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