Kofola
Kofola is a Czechoslovakian beverage, which replaced Coca-Cola and Pepsi during the 1960s and 1970s. Kofola consists of 14 herbal and fruit ingredients.
Romanca
Unique for its dotted surface, sandwich-like Romanca is a combination of 2 crunchy biscuits joined together with a delicious cocoa cream filling. Romanca is on the market since 1960s, and besides a few packaging redesigns, it remains the same because we have always loved it as it is!
Snacking tip: peel off the wafer, eat the chocolate first.
Named after a singer
Herbal candies taking the name of a Czech singer Hasler from 1920s. Allegedly, he ate them before performances to keep his voice strong. Haslerky are not only effective for sore throat, but also simply as a sweet treat. Be careful, you might not be able to stop eating them once you start
Exists by coincidence
Missing hazelnuts! That's how Horalky came around. The recipe originates in Tatranky (wafer with hazelnut filling). However, one day, market was out of hazelnuts. Instead of hazelnuts, peanuts were added into the filling and a new recipe and product existed. Today, despite the huge range of snacks (that was not there during socialism, when Horalky were first introduced), it is a very popular snack of choice. It's delicious and fulfilling and we take it for hikes, bike trips or anywhere else.
Shop by category
Sweets
Most favourite Czechoslovak sweet treats from wafers, chocolate bars to candies and many more arrived to Denmark. Relive your childhood, feel the nostalgy and satisfy your sweet tooth.
Salty
Original Czechoslovak salty snacks from potato chips, cheese sticks to poppy seed crackers that you won’t normally find in a Danish supermarket. Bring your party, study or movie night to another level.
Beverages
Let the bubbles refresh your day! Czechoslovak non-alcoholic beverages like Kofola, Vinea or Magnesia are irreplaceable. And how about Granko? Do you remember the classic polka-dot mug from TV commercials?
Baking and cooking
Don't you miss the favorite dish of almost every kid, the cream of wheat, often nicknamed as a "Fairytale of Youth" (in Czech "Pohádka mládí")? With butter and cocoa on the top, you were recommended to start eating it from the edge, so you don't burn your tongue.
Most popular
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Hochwald Ice coffee / Ledová káva 0,5l
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- 12,00 DKK
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- 12,00 DKK
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Radler 0.0% Lemon-Elder-Mint (Citron-Baza-Mata) 0.05 l
- Regular price
- 15,00 DKK
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- 15,00 DKK
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