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Product type | Confectionery |
---|---|
Owner | Cadbury |
Country | United Kingdom |
Introduced | 1920; 105 years ago (1920) |
Related brands | List of Cadbury products |
Markets | United Kingdom, Canada, Ireland, South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand |
Flake is a British brand ofchocolate bar currently manufactured by British chocolate companyCadbury, owned byMondelez International, consisting of thinly foldedmilk chocolate. The bar has a unique crumbly texture, and softens but does not melt when heated (unless put in a velvetiser).
The original Flake product was first developed in 1920 and was discovered by chance by Ralph Thompson, an employee of Cadbury's at theBournville factory who noticed thin streams of excess chocolate falling from moulds cooled into flaky ripples.[1][2]
By 1930, Cadbury's was selling half-length Flake specifically for garnishingvanilla soft serveice cream in a cone ("99 Flakes") which was served by ice cream vendors.[2] First sold in the United Kingdom, they would later be sold in Ireland, Australia, South Africa and other nations. The later product, CadburyTwirl, has two Flake-style bars covered in milk chocolate.
Flakes are no longer manufactured at Bournville and are now made inDublin, Ireland, and10th of Ramadan, Egypt.[3]
In 2021 and again in 2022, Mondelez announced that there wereshortages of Flakes in the UK and Ireland. In 2021 this was attributed to high levels of demand due to good weather.[4] In 2022, Mondelez attributed the shortages to "some globalsupply chain disruptions" alongside demand pressures.[5]
Cadbury refers to the exact process of making Flakes as a closely guarded secret;[6] however, experimental evidence by Australian food scientistAnn Reardon shows that the result can be recreated byseizing chocolate.[7][8]
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Several varieties of Flake have been produced over the years, including:
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The product gained some notoriety for its highly sensualadvertising. In the UK, the advertisements showed people – almost always women – enjoying a Flake whilst relaxing.
The Flake Girl became famous as a symbol of indulgence and secret pleasure. Her emphasis – to a jingle ("Only the crumbliest, flakiest chocolate, tastes like chocolate never tasted before") – was on allowing herself a guilt-free luxury.[citation needed] The advertising of a girl in a field was produced byBarry Myers.
The Flake song was composed by UK jingle writer Ronnie Bond,[12] who also composed "Tasty tasty very very tasty" forBran Flakes, and "I'd rather have a bowl of Coco Pops" forCoco Pops.
FormerTyrannosaurus Rex percussionistSteve Peregrin Took wrote a song, Peppermint Flickstick, in 1970 as a satire on the campaign. The song was recorded that year by his bandShagrat and released in 1990.[13]
In 1999, a tribute advertisement to the Flake Girls of decades past was released. The montage began with a clip of the very first Flake Girl advertisement from 1959, followed by a 1965 clip of a girl relaxing in a rowing boat whilst being pestered by a cheekyswan for a peck of her Flake bar. The next clip showed the 1973 advertisement of a doe-eyed artist in a field of poppies painting a watercolour and indulging in a Flake bar, before being caught in a summer shower. This was followed by a clip of the exotic 1987 ad in which a restless woman in silk negligee reposes on a window sill on a sultry night, indulging in a Flake bar whilst a gecko lizard is noted crawling over a ringing telephone. Next was a clip of the classical 1991 Flake advertisement in which a woman sporting a dark, cropped hairstyle reposes in an overflowing bath tub in a great painted hall. Lastly, this tribute montage advertisement ended with the latest Flake Girl advertisement (1999), featuring aParisienne relaxing in a summery garden overlooking theEiffel Tower. As she bites into the Flake bar in her ice-cream, the garden sprinklers are set off and she is drenched in refreshing water.[citation needed]
The Flake girl was finally retired after 40 years, in 2004.[14] However, in 2005 she was found to have a 19% recall in the UK population, leading to a revival in 2007.[15] The new advertisement featured Australian modelAlyssa Sutherland eating a Flake in a convertible during a shower of rain.[16]
UK singerJoss Stone became the new Flake girl in 2008 – the first non-model to promote the product.[17] In thetelevision advertisement she is seen breaking off a small piece of Flake before popping it into her mouth and brushing the crumbs off her blouse whilst softly singing the Flake theme song.
On 8 June 2010, a new advertisement (first aired onChannel 4) saw a woman float around on a black background. Whilst part of 'The Flake girl' series, there is no mention of any text or slogan aside from the image of the bar at the end of the advertisement, and the familiar music jingle is replaced by a haunting piano piece.
I didn't even realise that Cadbury's produced a plain flake[accompanying image displays- amongst other items- 'Plain Flake' in crimson wrapper with gold writing]