

From Nestle Japan - Uji Maccha Kit Kats. Available for a limited period only. Unless they sell well, in which case you'll be able to get them whenever you want.
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Mulboyne wrote:From Nestle Japan - Uji Maccha Kit Kats. Available for a limited period only. Unless they sell well, in which case you'll be able to get them whenever you want.
Caustic Saint wrote:Mulboyne wrote:From Nestle Japan - Uji Maccha Kit Kats. Available for a limited period only. Unless they sell well, in which case you'll be able to get them whenever you want.
I bought some of these to Korea to give to a friend. Not because I thought they'd be good, but because the last limited flavor:
(this summer's Lemon Cheesecake)
is finally no longer availablle.
Pity, since those were the best damned Kit-Kats ever!
The Green Tea flavor was well-liked, but it's no Lemon Cheesecake.
Mulboyne wrote:
From Nestle Japan - Uji Maccha Kit Kats. Available for a limited period only. Unless they sell well, in which case you'll be able to get them whenever you want.
Kuang_Grade wrote:I'm going to have to add kit kat subculture to by my ebay speculation research list.
Captain Japan wrote:I just picked up a green tea kit kat. Not bad. Though I don't really get that green tea flavor all that much. But I think that is true of green tea ice cream as well.
vir-jin wrote:Captain Japan wrote:I just picked up a green tea kit kat. Not bad. Though I don't really get that green tea flavor all that much. But I think that is true of green tea ice cream as well.
since I just meet you here and OF COURSE read the masa story again,
I just have to tell you how happy I am to be able to post to such a genious: captain- future- Japan!!! I couldn't imagine this interview done by anybody else- I'm not kidding! and I loved how every link is leading to the top page, cause every single report is worth to have a very very close look.
I'd say I owe you something
The familiar KitKat chocolate bar was invented in Britain's Yorkshire in 1935. During World War II, the government of Winston Churchill recommended the bar's consumption, saying that it was ``a cheap and healthy source of nourishment'' and that a bite of a KitKat would enable a soldier to march for two hours.
The government's endorsement helped make KitKats the national snack for Britons.
While Margaret Thatcher was prime minister in the 1980s, the Swiss company Nestle staged a hostile takeover of the company making KitKats. With opponents taking to the streets to ``protect the taste of Britain,'' what was known as the chocolate war broke out.
The current government of Tony Blair no longer gives its blessing to KitKat bars in line with anti-obesity programs.
Out of the news for years, the chocolate bar came back as something of a hot topic in Britain this month, following reports by British newspapers and the BBC that Japanese students are snapping up the traditional British chocolate bar as a lucky charm....the rest...
aquamarine wrote:So I just finished eating one of the new 'White' kit-kats that I picked up from AM/PM & thought to myself... this is identicle to the green-tea kit kats...
Mind if I ask this onne simple question... Why on earth would they issue two types of chocolate bars which are so close in terms of taste, flavor and texture!??
cstaylor wrote:Are these gifts for yourself?aquamarine wrote:Speaking of, what should I buy for white day??
Sexy panties? Check
Body Shop products? Check
G-Spot vibrator? Check
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