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A classic Canadian chocolate bar just got quietly discontinued

If your childhood snack drawer included a Jersey Milk bar, this one might sting. After 75 years on Canadian shelves, Mondelez, the maker behind the confectionary best used for smores, has quietly pulled the plug on the creamy white-wrapped classic, citing low demand.

No press release. No farewell tour. Just gone, like the last piece of Halloween candy you swear you saved.

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For many Canadians, Jersey Milk was a time machine in the form of a chocolate bar. Smooth, simple, no-frills milk chocolate. Like the kind your grandmother kept in a glass dish, or that showed up in Christmas stockings before fancy dark chocolate took over. Maybe it was the last chocolate you'd grab from your Halloween stash, before you'd take that bite that reminded you how good it really was.

It wasn’t flashy, but it was ours.

Other bittersweet goodbyes

Jersey Milk’s departure is the latest in a bittersweet trend: Iconic Canadian treats disappearing as tastes shift and costs climb.

Remember Cherry Blossom bonbons? The syrup-soaked cherry, coated in chocolate and chopped peanuts, once made in Quebec and a weird-but-wonderful Valentine’s Day tradition? Gone by early 2025, after years of declining sales and a move to U.S. production.

Clodhoppers, born in a Winnipeg kitchen and beloved for their fudge-covered graham crunch? Vanished in 2012, never quite the same after being bought and rebranded.

Even the Maritimes lost a legend: Ganong’s wintergreen mints, a pink, puckering staple since the 1800s, were discontinued in 2019.

And it’s not just chocolate. Frozen favourites are melting away too.

The Choco Taco — that crunchy, creamy dessert taco that tasted like freedom from the back of an ice cream truck — was axed in 2022. The internet did what it does, sharing memes, petitions and even garnering a joke from a U.S. senator about using the Defense Production Act. But it wasn’t enough.

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You can add Jell-O Pudding Pops, Funny Feet popsicles and Good Humor’s Toasted Almond Bars to the list. All gone. All missed.

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The business of letting go

There’s more behind this "candy purge" than changing palates. Food companies are under pressure, from rising cocoa prices, supply chain issues, inflation and limited shelf space. Nostalgic favourites that don’t perform get quietly shelved to make room for protein-packed bars, plant-based snacks or TikTok-ready novelty candies.

And there’s money in nostalgia. Discontinued treats often spark bidding wars online. Specialty retailers and resellers capitalize on limited runs. One box of Cherry Blossoms might now fetch triple its store price, if you can find it.

A final wrapper on the trend

So what’s a nostalgic snacker to do when the candy aisle starts feeling emptier?

First, keep an eye on the shelves. If a childhood favourite starts vanishing from your local store, that might be your cue to stock up. Once the news breaks, prices can spike and resellers know exactly what you’re willing to pay for a taste of the past.

Second, take a closer look at those impulse buys at the checkout. As legacy treats disappear, you might find yourself indulging less, not just emotionally, but financially too. That quiet shift could actually be saving you money, one less candy bar at a time.

Finally, there’s a silver lining: the rise of DIY nostalgia. Online, there’s a thriving community of snack revivalists sharing recipes for everything from homemade Clodhoppers to Cherry Blossom knockoffs.

Recreating a lost treat in your kitchen might not come with foil or retro branding, but it just might taste like memory.

One last bite

The death of Jersey Milk is a business move, yes. But it's also another small goodbye to a version of Canada that’s fading. As new flavours rise and old favourites disappear, the snack aisle is turning into a reflection of our changing tastes and the changing times.

So next time you grab a chocolate bar, give it a second look. It might be the last one you'll ever see.

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Leslie Kennedy Senior Content Editor

Leslie Kennedy served as an editor at Thomson Reuters and for Star Media Group, followed by a number of years as a writer and editor and content manager in marketing communications, before returning to her editorial roots. She is a graduate of Humber College’s post-graduate journalism program and has been a professional writer and editor ever since.

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