Premier Supermarkets Express Dairy already ran a chain of nearly 400 retail dairy and grocery shops in the London area with others across England. They also had a chain of tea room and restaurants that were serviced from a central Bakery at Highbury, north London. Post war, Britain was changing. The chairman's new son-in-law, American citizen and ex-sailor of the
US Navy, Patrick Galvani, had been studying retailing before coming to the United Kingdom, particularly
supermarkets. Galvani made a pitch to the board, which resulted in Britain's first supermarket opening in
Streatham,
South London in 1951 under the
Premier Supermarket brand. In 1960, in an attempt to expand nationwide, Galvani made a pitch to the board to buy the 212 stores of John Irwin and Sons, based in Liverpool and Merseyside, but they refused to back him;
Jack Cohen of
Tesco subsequently bought the chain.
Eden Vale In 1955, Express Dairies set up a subsidiary to maintain and promote demand for dairy products, using the
Eden Vale brand. The Eden Vale division became responsible for Express' chilled food interests including yogurts, desserts, salads, cottage cheese and fromage frais. In addition to the Eden Vale name, it also sold yogurt under the
Ski brand (launched in 1963) and in the early 1980s launched a range of child-orientated yogurts based around characters from the
Munch Bunch books and television series. In 2002,
Northern Foods, the then-owners of Express Dairies, sold the Ski and Munch Bunch brands, along with their Cheshire yogurt plant, to
Nestlé. In 2004, Northern Foods sold the Eden Vale plant at
Minsterley to
Uniq. ==References==