Having just eaten a Kit Kat Chunky Caramel it seems I'm eating these in the wrong order, but the Kit Kat chunky is another of the now rather extended Kit Kat brand chocolate bars by Nestle. The idea of a ?chunky? Kit Kat is that it's thicker than a normal one with much more wafer in the centre making up the vast part of it's bulk. The bar looks more like a Yorkie than a typical 2 (or 4) finger Kit Kat in general shape though it keeps the red of the Kit Kat we all know and love, the Kit Kat logo and the Kit Kat biscuit formula.
Nutritional Information (per 50g bar)
261 Calories
3.1g Protein
31.6g Carbohydrates
13.4g Fat
Sorry for putting that so early into the review but with Kit Kats (and Nestle in general) not having the treat wise guide on them, it's actually a struggle to read the nutrition details due to the fact I ...
Advantages: Sweet Nestle chocolate, really thick, crisp wafer, gorgeous Disadvantages: Only a white choc and peanut butter variation of the chunky
I have found a new love is Nestle chocolate- in particular, the Kitkat chunky. Sorry Mars Bar, but now that you've changed the texture of your nougat, you're no longer my top.
Now, I've never really liked wafer chocolate bars like Time outs or Drifters and indeed, the standard Kitkats as I always found them a little bland and boring, prefering the creamy sweet caramel filled chocolate bars. I remember trying one of these once with my brother when we were on a plane (going on hols) and we didn't like them much and felt sick after a couple of bites. However, seeing them on offer once at 5 for £1 I had to give them another go and I've never regretted spending that £1, and the many that have followed.
Kitkat chunky is different to a normal Kit Kat (yeah Yeah, I know, it's chunkier!). Kit kat, to brief over, is made by Nestle ...
Advantages: Ingenius parody of Hitler and Mussolini Disadvantages: Half of it is just another Tramp movie
Charlie Chaplin is probably the most well known movie actor ever, who progressed from his ten to fifteen minute short films, such as 'The Champion' (1915), to larger works such as 'Modern Times' (1936) and this, 'The Great Dictator' (1940).
The film follows two seperate storylines. The first is of the Dictator of Tomania, Adenoid Hynkel (Chaplin), who is planning to conquer the world; while the other is about the Dictator's double, a Jewish barber (also Chaplin), who had suffered amnesia after WWI to wake up to find that he has to live in the ghetto and that Hynkel's soldiers prowl the streets. Meanwhile, Hynkel has decided to go one further than his competetive 'friend' Napaloni, Dictator of Bacteria, by invading Bacteria.
The film is obviously a parody of Adolf Hitler and the Nazis with Napaloni representing Mussolini. Of course ...