KitKat has delivered a customisable basket of chocolate and lollies just in time for Easter.
The baskets, which weigh practically 1.5kg and cost $45, contain KitKat chocolate blocks, chocolate melts, Smarties and small scale eggs just as Allen’s Freckles, Raspberries and Party Mix.
They can be gathered from one of Australia’s two KitKat stores – one in the Mid City shopping center in Sydney CBD and the other in Melbourne CBD, which turned into the main lasting ‘KitKat Chocolatory’ outside Japan when it opened in 2016.
Baskets have created a ruckus since they were first uploaded to KitKat’s true Instagram account on March 4, with fans leaving strings of pleased emoticons in the remarks segment.
Australian KitKat fans have been celebrating since the brand in July opened a ‘Chocolatory’ shop in Sydney – complete with 30,000 uncommon flavor blends, a tasting train, DIY station and a feast in bistro serving KitKat-themed desserts.
The flagship formally opened in Sydney CBD’s Mid City centre on Monday, July 6, after its craftsman chocolates demonstrated fruitful in its Melbourne shop.
Offering a scope of customized, premium chocolates, clients can plan their own eight-finger wafers from a variety of connoisseur fixings at the ‘Make Your Break’ chocolate-production station.
Visitors can taste special flavors, for example, yuzu ganache, peanut butter and raspberry and wasabi crème as they pass by on the ‘KitKat chocolate train’.
At the ‘tasting table’, shoppers can investigate a carefully made selection of plated treats offering the most recent patterns in chocolate – as reservations are accessible for up to 10 visitors briefly seating.
When KitKats are customized at the plan station, visitors can either watch chocolatiers make their bar, or get back to gather it.
For the individuals who need an variety of flavours, the shop offers an elite ‘Blend Your Break’ range, including 12 separately wrapped manifestations, for example, cotton treats, guava, churros, purpose and matcha.
The Sydney store joins other KitKat Chocolatories around the globe, including Japan, Malaysia, UK, Canada and Brazil.