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#844741 by pjh
27 Apr 2013, 11:57
I've just consumed my last Payday, spent the week nibbling Reece's Pieces that someone brought back from FLA and sent #1 son the Baby Ruths he asked us to buy him in NYC. This set me thinking as to what V-Flyers bring back from foreign shores in terms of sweets and chocolates. In addition to the above, we always seek out Almond M&Ms.

Paul

ps I know you can buy many of these in the UK now, but it's at a price, they never taste the same and frankly it's cheating :)
#844744 by shazam
27 Apr 2013, 12:19
Peanut Butter or Pretzel M&Ms & Reeces Peanut Butter Cups yummmmmm

S
#844746 by Neil
27 Apr 2013, 12:37
Hershey's Symphony Milk Chocolate Almond and toffee bar in with my favorite.
However I have two ultimate sweet treats that I adore more and can only get in the US, which are a Jonny Rockets Strawberry Milkshake and the Mango Key Lime cheesecake from the Cheesecake Factory, I just need to figure out how to get them back to the UK.
#844749 by Petmadness
27 Apr 2013, 13:08
Neil wrote:and the Mango Key Lime cheesecake from the Cheesecake Factory, I just need to figure out how to get them back to the UK.


My Father-in-law is now too old to fly but used to love trips to The Cheesecake Factory...so last year we bought him a slice is Linda's Fudge Cake, froze it the night before our flight and took it home for him...it survived nd he loved it y) (no fresh cream etc!)

My personal US favs are Limited edition Oreos, Lays Wavy Ranch and Publix donuts ^)
#844751 by ratechaser
27 Apr 2013, 14:11
Am I the only one here that thinks that 'American chocolate' is a total oxymoron :-)

Personally I tend to load up on sweets from the CH and those Divine chocolate bars onboard when I'm heading over to the states, because apart from a handful of artisan/foreign producers, there's not much I'd touch with a bargepole!

Oh, and don't get me started on the obsession with peanut butter...

La Maison du Chocolat in the Rockefeller Center isn't bad though...
#844755 by tontybear
27 Apr 2013, 15:06
ratechaser wrote:Am I the only one here that thinks that 'American chocolate' is a total oxymoron :-)



Yep most US chocolate is totally, totally, totally awful
#844756 by hiljil
27 Apr 2013, 15:31
Have to say I agree . US chocolate just does not taste like chocolate . However, one Easter I took out some chocolate from England and when we got to eat it it didn't taste right either ! Must be the effect of the climate on my taste buds ! :?
#844759 by mitchja
27 Apr 2013, 16:16
Yep, have to agree American chocolate is just horrible.

I believe it's because US chocolate has a lower cocoa content than ours does (in the UK the cocoa content must be 20% or more to be called 'chocolate'; anything under that and it has to be labeled as 'chocolate flavour', where as in the US the minimum level of cocoa required is only 10%)

For example, a UK Cadbury Dairy Milk bar contains ~23% cocoa solids, whereas a US Hershey bar contains about 11%.
#844761 by pjh
27 Apr 2013, 16:59
ratechaser wrote:
Personally I tend to load up on sweets from the CH and those Divine chocolate bars onboard when I'm heading over to the states, because apart from a handful of artisan/foreign producers, there's not much I'd touch with a bargepole!

Oh, and don't get me started on the obsession with peanut butter...

La Maison du Chocolat in the Rockefeller Center isn't bad though...


The Divine bars certainly helped when we couldn't find Almond M&Ms.

Peanut butter is an oddity for me. Can't abide it on toast, but whack the stuff into ice cream and I can't get enough.

Personally, never trust any company with 'Chocolat' in their name. Gives the impression of artisans, wooden spoons and white hats. The reality can be very different; Hotel Chocolat's manufacturing is based behind Kwikfit on a grungy (not in a hip way) industrial estate in Huntingdon.
#844764 by ratechaser
27 Apr 2013, 17:38
pjh wrote:
ratechaser wrote:
Personally I tend to load up on sweets from the CH and those Divine chocolate bars onboard when I'm heading over to the states, because apart from a handful of artisan/foreign producers, there's not much I'd touch with a bargepole!

Oh, and don't get me started on the obsession with peanut butter...

La Maison du Chocolat in the Rockefeller Center isn't bad though...


The Divine bars certainly helped when we couldn't find Almond M&Ms.

Peanut butter is an oddity for me. Can't abide it on toast, but whack the stuff into ice cream and I can't get enough.

Personally, never trust any company with 'Chocolat' in their name. Gives the impression of artisans, wooden spoons and white hats. The reality can be very different; Hotel Chocolat's manufacturing is based behind Kwikfit on a grungy (not in a hip way) industrial estate in Huntingdon.


Even so, I quite like their salted caramels, however ubiquitous that particular flavour has become recently.

I have no real issue with where a product is made provided it's good quality. Marketing spin generally has to be taken with a pinch or 2 of salt anyway. I remember once as a student going for an interview with a shirtmaker that operated out of far from fashionable warehouse premises in Hammersmith. Didn't get the job, but they are still the only shirts that I feel comfortable in!
#844765 by tontybear
27 Apr 2013, 18:05
Cafe Nero has a roasting factory in between the Waterloo and Victoria main railway lines just north of Clapham Junction - hardly the glamour of coffee growing countries.

Gordon Ramsay used to have what was essentially a cook-chill facility on Wandsworth Road


And I guess VS airline meals are made on industrial estates not that far from LHR and LGW.
#844767 by pjh
27 Apr 2013, 18:37
ratechaser wrote:I have no real issue with where a product is made provided it's good quality. Marketing spin generally has to be taken with a pinch or 2 of salt anyway.


Absolutely. I only picked on them because I remember being able to shock a number of metropolitan friends who were convinced the chocolate was hand crafted by a secret cadre of pure bred Aztecs.

Most foodstuffs have to be prepared in splendid isolation from their immediate environment anyhow, so it's the who, how and what rather than the where. Even my beloved Adnams beer is produced in a stainless steel, computer controlled, environment. This stands in stark contrast to a trip to a rum distillery in Antigua where we were allowed to wander up to the open and deep fermentation vats with the only safety feature being a request that we take care not to fall in.
#844784 by honey lamb
27 Apr 2013, 22:40
Tinuks wrote:UK, it's Lily O'Brienk's Uglies

Lily O'Brien's chocolates are Irish and not from the UK (although they are available there) v(
#844793 by Tinuks
28 Apr 2013, 04:15
honey lamb wrote:
Tinuks wrote:UK, it's Lily O'Brienk's Uglies

Lily O'Brien's chocolates are Irish and not from the UK (although they are available there) v(

Sorry HL. I actually meant Ireland. I got a box of them when I was in Dublin last year. Blame the slip on the Long Island Iced Teas I'd been drinking.
#844880 by waatp
29 Apr 2013, 11:19
Mine has to be peanut butter M&M's. Drink would have to be Dr Pepper Cherry ii)

We have an American Candy Store 200 yards away from where I live but I can't bring myself to go in there! Seems wrong!
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