I am not sure when chocolate became a "thing" for Easter. It has to be a commercial thing of course. It is something which can be sold to us as "traditional"...and expensive.
The big bars of chocolate have more than doubled in price over the last two years. I bought the last bar of "the good stuff" for the Senior Cat around five years ago. It took us several months to eat it. Yes, we liked it but it was not something we wanted every day. Prior to that my Easter chocolate consumption was limited to a chocolate "bilby" given to me by a very elderly woman I kept an eye on. I shared some of it with the Senior Cat but most of it was eaten by visiting children.
The late Whirlwind tried to make me an egg one year. It was marshmallow and supposed to come out of the mould cleanly. It was a mess. I hugged her for the thought and we had hot chocolate without marshmallows. I still can't face marshmallows with hot chocolate.
When I was a kitten Easter came with eggs...two eggs. There was the chocolate egg from my paternal grandparents and the sugar one from my maternal grandmother. (My maternal grandfather never played a role in these things.) We were not permitted to open them or eat them until Easter Sunday. They were rationed out on the Sunday and then in pieces until we had eaten them.
One year we were also given hard boiled eggs which had been dyed red and beautifully decorated by the woman next door to the house we were living in at the time. She came from the old Yugoslavia and the eggs were traditional. It was years later that I came across such eggs again. Middle Cat's mother-in-law did not decorate but she did dye eggs red. Other people gave Middle Cat's boys chocolate eggs. Unlike most children they were not interested. After they had gone to waste one year the older of her two told her to give the next lot away. I doubt we could have done that as children.
Now I look around the supermarket and wonder at the amount of chocolate on display. It has doubled and even tripled in price because of the cocoa shortage and other shortages. People still seem to buy it. At our library knitting group last Saturday the community officer appeared with those small gold covered chocolates and told us they were "Easter eggs". After he had gone they sat there until two small boys appeared with their grandmother. They ate some. The rest of them got taken home to others who would eat them. I have some sitting here which Middle Cat is supposed to collect today. They have a visitor coming for the weekend. He apparently likes chocolate. I wonder about that. He's a retired dentist.
Eggs. Maybe I could have a boiled egg for breakfast on Easter Sunday morning?