Heroes (confectionery)
Appearance
(Redirected from Cadbury heroes)
Product type | Confectionery |
---|---|
Introduced | September 1999 |
Related brands | List of Cadbury products |
Markets | United Kingdom, Ireland, New Zealand and Australia |
Heroes (previously Cadbury's Miniature Heroes, and known as Favourites in Australia and New Zealand) is a brand of boxed/tinned confectionery of a miniature collection of chocolate bars currently manufactured by Cadbury. Introduced in September 1999,[1] they were a response to rival Mars' Celebrations and contain miniature versions of various Cadbury chocolate bars. Heroes are most popular around holidays, such as Christmas, Halloween and Easter.
Its name was changed to its current "Heroes" in 2002, after launching as "Cadbury's Miniature Heroes" in 1999.
Contents
[edit]United Kingdom, the Isle of Man and Ireland
[edit]- Fudge
- Dairy Milk Caramel
- Dairy Milk
- Wispa (Added in 2015)
- Twirl
- Creme Egg Twisted (Added in 2009)
- Eclair (Added in 2008)
- Double Decker (Known as "Dinky Decker", added in 2019)
- Crunchie (Originally as Crunchie Bite. Removed in 2008 but re-added in 2019 as Crunchie Bits)
Fallen Heroes
[edit]Source:[2]
- Bournville (Added in 2008, removed in 2013)
- Dairy Milk Whole Nut (Dairy Milk with added hazelnut in the centre. Added in 2002, removed in 2008)
- Dream (Added in 2002, Removed in 2008)
- Fuse (Removed in 2004)
- Picnic (Removed in 2007)
- Time Out (Removed in 2007)
- Toblerone (Added for Christmas 2013, 2014 and 2015)
- Nuts About Caramel (Cadbury's Caramel with added hazelnut in the centre. Removed in early-2000's)
Australia and New Zealand
[edit]- Boost
- Crunchie
- Dairy Milk
- Dairy Milk Caramello
- Flake
- Cherry Ripe
- Dream
- Freddo Frog
- Fry's Turkish Delight
- Moro
- Old Gold
- Picnic
- Time Out
- Twirl
- Mint Bubbly
- Marvellous Creations Jelly Popping Candy Beans
References
[edit]- ^ "Cadbury Heroes". Archived from the original on 2007-10-27. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
- ^ < "Chocolate box favourites ditched". Newsbeat, BBC Radio 1. 19 December 2018. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
External links
[edit]