It started with the buttons. I suppose it does for most of us. Those delicious melt-in-the-mouth discs. Only they don’t really melt in the mouth, they melt everywhere else.
Boy Three shows how to let a Button melt |
Boy Three replaces his chocolate button eyes with, well, chocolate button eyes |
They might seem innocent enough, but Cadbury Buttons were the start of a life-long relationship that has endured long past most others in my life. Like shoes and gin, chocolate will rarely let you down.
Of course, there was a glass and a half of milk in this stuff (No I never really figured that out, either) so it was probably good for you too.
Not just for children… |
Having kicked off with Buttons the next move was through the cowboy badlands of Milkybar territory (how I wanted to be that boy with the specs and, allegedly a life-time supply of sweeties) and into the sunny uplands of Freddo.
But Freddo didn’t stay a childhood treat, he often came on more grown-up adventures. I have no idea how it stared, but many hikes up Scottish mountains were punctuated by discovering a Freddo on a windswept peak. Even now a sneaky wee Freddo finds his way into the backpack.
Freddo the Munro bagger. |
Of course, by now (late 1980s) work was a significant feature of life. And with work comes weekends and that Friday feeling. Thank Crunchie anyone? No, actually I’ve now worked out that there’s something different that ought to go in the glass.
If the weekend starts here, you’re probably doing it wrong. |
Now having graduated, in the main, from the children’s section of the sweetie shop, other adult pleasures were appearing on the landscape. It’s OK there’s not going to be any chocolate body paint as I can hardly imagine anything worse except perhaps paint-on gravy.
No, it’s Flake territory. The idea that you could mince about in the rain with a bar of flake and look the very model of sexiness. “Only the crumbliest, flakiest chocolate…”
But that was the problem. The very flakiness. You could hardly look saucy scoffing one when half of it ended up on the front of your bias-cut silky nightie (the one you were wearing to stroll in the woods, or was I getting my adverts mixed up?)
The Flake – crumby doesn’t really cover it. |
So leaving behind the raunchy image of a flake as the height of erotic imagery – having been put off by the very unerotic image of washing chocolate stains off silk. The next chapter in my chocolate life were the sophisticated years.
Dark chocolate was the very thing – milk being fodder for simple souls. Bring on the Bournville with it’s exotic complex taste. Oh yes. (See I think we’ve probably got to about 1994 so you’ll forgive me.)
At this stage, I probably imagined myself smoking Gitane and wearing dark glasses – oh the mystery |
I was obviously a Very Serious Person. I think I even imagined I might change the world and make a difference.
I suppose once the World got wind of my plan it had other ideas for me. Soon instead of changing the world, I was changing the nappies.
Thankfully the nappy years are over – thank Crunchie – but I’m still deeply entrenched in the idea that I rather need to change my bank balance and the squalid state of my home and my feral children before I tackle the world.
Sometimes the only way to get through that is chocolate – and in the absence of great huge chunks of it that don’t make me fatter a Galaxy Ripple (stored in the fridge, of course) exactly hits the button.
Oh did someone say Button? Well that’s the other option – buy Buttons for your children then snarf them while the little darlings are in bed. Then, of course, you blame their dad.
The chocolates were all from Asda and you can see more about how Boy Three and I bought them in the Google + album that goes with this post.
sarnison - barnton pharmacy says
Not a fast day, then?
Jeannie says
You omitted the elderly sophisticated stage – but you aren't there yet. That stage consists of buying a Green and Black Classic Minature Bar Collection box (http://www.greenandblacksdirect.com/p/73/classic-miniature-bar-collection) on the basis that you only really like three of them, so someone else will eat the other two – but then never giving the other person the chance.
Msalliance says
Where is your Like button, sweetie?
This post is strangely familiar and inviting. But I have realised that I am a chocolate addict: for me it is a passionate affair that corrodes and will eventually destroy me. More's the pity…
Ellen Arnison says
How can you tell?
Ellen Arnison says
Jeannie, I do like a bit of G&Bs, but I hadn't considered this nuanced approach. I might have to give it a go.
Ellen Arnison says
Gita, The answer then is surely to embrace it with both arms and enjoy every last crumb. It would be an honourable way to go.
Lilinha Espindula says
Haha, I don't know what you are talking about. I don't eat little man's buttons, they go to the moon when he's not looking! haha 🙂 x
New Mum Online says
Like me you bought Galaxy on a Cadbury adventure – oooops.
Great to see your chronology of chocolate xxx
Slummy single mummy says
Ah, such happy memories! I went through a sort 'cool and rugged' stage in my late teens where I ate a lot of marathons. When I am being terribly grown up I like a box of rose and violet creams. The more expensive they are the less calories they have. Fact.
Ellen Arnison says
That's a good one. My son sometimes wonders where his went, I'll see if he likes that explanation.
Ellen Arnison says
Great minds…
Ellen Arnison says
So the really posh ones are virtually saintly? Excellent news.
MumB / @mumbosh says
Mmmmmmmm chocolate – enough said!!!