About Ambrosia Devon Custard
About Ambrosia Devon Custard
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrédients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: milk.
Contient : Lait.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Ambrosia Devon Custard
More about Ambrosia Devon Custard
Additional Information
Packaging Accuracy. We keep product information as accurate and up to date as possible. Manufacturers sometimes change packaging, ingredients, nutritional information, allergen advice, pack sizes or branding without notice, so the product you receive may look slightly different from the images shown. If you have a question about ingredients or allergens before ordering, please get in touch and we will gladly check for you.
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The story of Ambrosia Devon Custard
The tin that knows what crumble is for
Ambrosia Devon Custard is one of those British cupboard fixtures that does not need much explaining. It is custard in a tin, ready to pour, heat, spoon, or quietly apply to apple crumble with the confidence of someone who has done this before. The 400g tin is a familiar size too, large enough for a family pudding, suspiciously easy to finish if there are only two of you, and very hard to regard as merely practical once sponge pudding enters the room.
Read the full story
A Devon name with a real place behind it
Ambrosia’s ambient products are still made at the Lifton creamery in Devon, and the brand says its custard and rice pudding are made with West Country milk from farms in Devon and Cornwall. Lifton itself had a railway connection before Ambrosia arrived: a private siding opened at Lifton station in 1894 to serve a corn mill, and a factory handling milk opened in the goods yard in 1917, later becoming associated with Ambrosia. That is a pleasingly unglamorous beginning for such a sentimental pudding name. Not a marble temple of dessert, then, but milk, rail goods, local farming, and a Devon village doing useful work.
From infant food to pudding cupboards
The Ambrosia Creamery was founded in 1917 by Alfred Morris in Lifton, his home village. The original product was not custard, but a dried milk powder made for infants, using milk from local farms and roller drying. The name Ambrosia, rather grandly, refers to the food of the gods in Greek classicism. British grocery history often enjoys this sort of contrast: a divine name, a practical tin, and a factory in Devon. During the First World War, the early product was taken up in significant quantities by the British armed forces, which gives the brand a rather more serious beginning than the soothing yellow contents of a custard tin might suggest.
How Ambrosia became pudding shorthand
Ambrosia later became especially known for tinned milk puddings. Just before the Second World War, the creamery was producing creamed rice pudding ready in a tin, and during the war much of its production went into Red Cross food parcels. After hostilities ended, Ambrosia relaunched its tinned rice pudding and added a creamed macaroni pudding. Custard belongs to that same broad world of milk-based British puddings: steady, pale, comforting, and rarely improved by overthinking. A new factory opened near the original Lifton site in 1957 as demand grew, helping cement Ambrosia as one of the names people expected to see in the pudding aisle.
The modern packet family, without tidying the mess too much
Like many British grocery brands, Ambrosia has passed through a few corporate hands. Colman’s acquired the company in 1990, Colman’s later became part of Unilever, and Premier Foods acquired the Ambrosia custard and rice pudding brand from Unilever’s Colman’s division in 2004. That explains why the name now sits among a wider family of recognisable British cupboard brands. It does not mean those later companies invented the Devon story. The useful thing to know is simpler: the Ambrosia name on a modern custard tin is tied to a much older Lifton creamery tradition, with Devon and West Country milk still central to how the brand presents itself.
Why it travels well in memory
For British shoppers in Canada, Ambrosia Devon Custard is not just a pudding ingredient. It is school dinners with jam sponge, Sunday crumble, grandparents’ cupboards, and the tin that appeared when nobody fancied making custard properly. It belongs to the same emotional department as tinned rice pudding and custard powder, only with less stirring and fewer opportunities to glue something to the saucepan. In a Canadian kitchen, it can make a very ordinary winter evening feel briefly like home, especially if there is a crumble involved and nobody is being too strict about portions. A quiet nod from The Great British Shop, then, to the enduring British belief that most puddings are improved by custard.