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snacks and drinks

Please select from the list below:

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Dairy Milk

Delicious chunks of creamy milk chocolate.

In June 1904, George Cadbury and his team of confectioners created a chocolate containing a 'far higher milk content than previously known' to challenge the Swiss domination of the chocolate market. After names such as 'Highland Milk' and 'Dairy Maid' were considered, Cadbury Dairy Milk (CDM) was launched in 1905 and became an instant success. Over 100 years later and the recipe is relatively unchanged and is kept under lock and key.

COST: £0.60
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DRINK: Coke - 330ml

Can of Coke

COST: £0.65
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DRINK: Cristaline still mineral water - 330ml

Still water

COST: £0.80
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DRINK: Diet Coke - 330ml

Can of Diet Coke

COST: £0.65
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DRINK: Premium orange juice - 500ml

Thirst-quenching and zesty

COST: £1.40
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DRINK: Red Bull

Energy drink

COST: £1.50
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DRINK: Rio

tropical fruit sparkling spring water

COST: £0.65
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Gorgeous Granola & Creamy Yoghurt

Our much loved crispy homemade granola: delicious honey roasted oats, sesame seeds, almonds, sunflower seeds and raisins served with creamy natural yoghurt

COST: £1.00
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Kit Kat

Have A Break, Have A Kit KatŪ

The popular 4 finger chocolate biscuit. Kit Kat is made from delicious creamy chocolate and crispy wafer.

Launched in 1935 as Chocolate Crisp, Kit Kat was supposedly named after the Kit-Kat Club, an 18th century Whig literary club. As the building had very low ceilings, it could accommodate only paintings which were wide but not too high. In the art world, such paintings became known as 'kitkats'. It is therefore conceivable that the Kit Kat derived its name from paintings, which had to be snapped off to fit into low ceilinged rooms.

COST: £0.60
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Mars Bar

Work ~ Rest ~ Play

Chocolate malt nougat topped with a layer of caramel and covered with delicious milk chocolate.

In 1932 Frank C. Mars gave his son Forrest $50,000 and the formula for Milky Way to start his own business called Mars Limited in Slough. The first Mars Bars were handmade on August Bank Holiday Monday. Despite World War II confectionery rationing, Mars Bars continued to be manufactured and were distributed as part of Armed Forces rations from 1940-45. Currently three million Mars Bars a day are made at the company's Slough plant in the UK. When Mars Bars were first exported to Russia in 1991 demand was so great that they were rationed to four per person.

COST: £0.50
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Mini Cheddars

The original cheese biscuit snack.

Despite their deceptive size, Mini Cheddars deliver a surprisingly satisfying cheesy hit any time the munchies strike. Mini Cheddars are ideal for when you have the tummy rumbles and you want something genuinely cheesy to keep you going. Original Mini Cheddars are free from artificial colours, flavours and MSG.



COST: £0.60
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Twirl

Two Flake-style chocolate fingers, with a smooth chocolate coating.

It was made by Cadbury Ireland and then sold by Cadbury UK. The Twirl first appeared in the Irish market in the early 1970s. The original Twirl bar was a single finger, approximately the size of a standard Cadbury's Flake bar. The Twirl bar was repackaged in 1984 as a twin bar, and from the 1990s onwards, has been marketed outside of Ireland. In January 2007 the packaging of the Twirl bar was amended to incorporate the new slogan - 'The Intense Chocolate Hit!'

COST: £0.60
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Twix

Crunchy shortcake twice, tasty caramel twice, covered in smooth milk chocolate... soooo nice.

A Twix timeline: 1967: Mars, Inc. launched Twix in the UK. 1979: Twix was introduced in the USA. 1983: The Peanut Butter Twix was introduced; stayed on the market until 1997 and was reintroduced in 2000. 1991: The name 'Twix' was made universal, switching from 'Raider' in some European countries (incl Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, and Switzerland). 2000s: The Twix 100 Calorie Bar was introduced. 2005: A Twix Dark was introduced for a limited time. 2006: Twix Pods were introduced in Australia, which saw the traditional bar turned into a round shell. 2008: The Twix Java was released for one month (Feb); the variant featured a chocolate biscuit, chocolate flavouring, and milk chocolate coating.

COST: £0.60
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Tyrells Crisps - Seas Salt & Cider vinegar

Tyrrells make fine English crisps on their farm in Herefordshire. They cook them by hand in small batches and always leave the jackets on.

Super crunchy crisps with the burly kick of cider vinegar paired with the subtle yet satisfying sting of sea salt.

COST: £0.80
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Walkers Crisps - Cheese and Onion

Reminiscent of the enticingly rustic sounding ploughman's lunch* (cheese, onion salad and bread). For some people Cheese & Onion is the ultimate flavour combination.

* The Ploughman's Lunch is actually a 20th century invention, the name was created by The English Country Cheese Council. The idea was such a success that Ploughman's Lunch is a much loved English favourite in pubs all over the UK.

COST: £0.55
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Walkers Crisps - Ready Salted

A hit for over 60 years. The key to the success of Walkers Ready Salted crisps is their classic simplicity; tasty, 100% British potatoes, done to a turn with a pinch of salt to bring out the flavour.

Did you know Henry Walker started as a butcher in Leicester in the 1880s? By 1945 meat was so scarce that Henry branched out and began cooking slices of potato. They sold well and in 1954 the first flavoured crisps were created, Henry Walker became Walkers, and the rest, as they say, is history.

COST: £0.55
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Walkers Crisps - Salt and Vinegar

Ahhh... The smell of fish and chips with oodles of salt and vinegar is undoubtedly a Great British institution. With even Dickens mentioning a fried fish warehouse, the combination of salt and vinegar with potatoes as chips or crisps is a much loved classic.

Records suggest that the first fish and chip shop opened around 1870 and was either in London's East End or in the textile factory districts of northern England. The dish was always thought to be enlivened with lashings of salt and vinegar.

COST: £0.55