Product name: Cadbury
Dairy Milk: Daim
Purchase details: £1.00 for a 120g bar (Tesco Superstore)
Calories: 80 per three chunk serving (630 per bar)
Country of origin: UK
Purchase details: £1.00 for a 120g bar (Tesco Superstore)
Calories: 80 per three chunk serving (630 per bar)
Country of origin: UK
My old colleagues used to rave about the Milka Daim bar that
the shop in work sold so, one day, I decided to give it a go. To be fair, it
was pretty good, but I can’t remember exactly what it tasted like. I’ve not had
one since, and this was my first go of the newer Cadbury Dairy Milk version, so
I was interested to see if I’d find it as enjoyable.
I’m not actually a huge fan of the standard Daim because, like the Skor bar I’ve previously reviewed, it’s a bit too crunchy for me – I prefer my chocolate treats softer. However, as I’d experienced with the Milka version, I had no problems with the little ‘crunchy almond caramel pieces’ that were scattered throughout 20% of this milk chocolate.
I’m not actually a huge fan of the standard Daim because, like the Skor bar I’ve previously reviewed, it’s a bit too crunchy for me – I prefer my chocolate treats softer. However, as I’d experienced with the Milka version, I had no problems with the little ‘crunchy almond caramel pieces’ that were scattered throughout 20% of this milk chocolate.
The chocolate itself was the standard Dairy Milk, containing
23% milk solids, and a minimum of 20% cocoa solids. As usual, it came in a
purple wrapper, but this variety had a toffee-coloured strip along the bottom
to represent the flavour. There was also an image of the chocolate which showed
how much ‘Daim yumminess’ was ‘nestling amongst’ the ‘creamy chocolate’
(Cadbury’s words – not mine!).
The bar had the normal Dairy Milk large bar shape made of
slightly angular chunks and it was three of these that made up a 15g serving.
Inside, the crystallised amber-coloured pieces were clearly visible, and they
were evidently abundant.
As I’d hoped, there was a great, strong Dairy Milk smell, as
well as the classic taste. The chocolate melted well, as always, but there were
jagged edges from the Daim. When melting, the Daim didn’t seem to add any
flavour to the chocolate itself but, when left behind, there was an additional
mellow toffee taste at the end of each piece. It was much better to chew –
fantastic, in fact – since the chunky texture went well with the slight crunch
from the crispy and sugary pieces which weren’t too hard at all. Furthermore, the
taste became richer, sweeter, and slightly buttery and, every so often, I hit
an almondy piece which was an added bonus. (I don’t know if this was
intentional, but it didn’t seem to be present in all of the Daim pieces.)
I must admit that, prior to trying it myself, I thought
people may have been over-hyping this bar. However, it genuinely was brilliant
and had a solid flavour – shame on me!
If only my current workplace had a shop...
If only my current workplace had a shop...
Appearance: 8/10
Aroma: 8/10
Taste: 8.5/10
Texture: 8.5/10
Overall score: 8.25/10
Aroma: 8/10
Taste: 8.5/10
Texture: 8.5/10
Overall score: 8.25/10
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