AN off-licence in Northern Ireland has been flooded with orders for its Buckfast-themed Easter eggs.

D-Bees, in Lurgan, County Armagh, took more than 2000 orders within 24 hours of advertising a special Easter egg package inspired by the tonic wine, according to owner Derek Brennan.

Brennan, who has promoted novel Bucky products in the past, said the idea grew out of the shop’s “massively successful” Christmas and Valentine’s hampers. The package includes a 140g chocolate egg with a miniature 5cl Buckfast bottle as well as a Buckfast-branded pen, lighter and magnet.

Brennan said he has 20,000 eggs to sell and will ship all over Britain. The Easter egg package costs £9.99 and will start selling online from April 3.

Buckfast Tonic Wine has been made by Benedictine monks at Buckfast Abbey in Devon for almost 100 years and is particularly popular in Scotland, as well as both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. The quasi-legendary drink has an alcohol content of 15 per cent and the caffeine equivalent of about four coffees per 75cl bottle and was originally sold in small quantities as medicine.

It is frequently linked to violence and anti-social behaviour and in Scotland has nicknames like “wreck the hoose juice” and “commotion lotion”.

In 2015, the Scottish Prison Service found 43.4 per cent of inmates had consumed Buckfast before their last offence despite it accounting for less than one per cent of total alcohol sales nationally.