About Birds Trifle Raspberry
About Birds Trifle Raspberry
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrédients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: milk, wheat, egg.
May contain: Cereals Containing Gluten.
Contient : Lait, Blé, Œufs.
Peut contenir : Cereals Containing Gluten.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Birds Trifle Raspberry
More about Birds Trifle Raspberry
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 Birds Trifle Raspberry
A Box That Knows Its Way Round a Sunday Table
Birds Trifle Raspberry is not trying to be subtle. It belongs to the grand British pudding tradition of layers, jelly, custard, sponge, cream if you are feeling organised, and a certain amount of family negotiation over who got the bigger spoonful. The 141g packet sits in the pantry as a practical little promise: trifle can happen without turning the kitchen into a catering college. For many British households, raspberry trifle is not just dessert. It is Boxing Day, birthdays, church hall teas, and the sort of pudding that appears in a glass bowl because someone, somewhere, wanted everyone to admire the layers.
Read the full story
The Bird’s Name Starts With Custard, Not Trifle
Bird’s Custard was first formulated by Alfred Bird in 1837 at his chemist shop in Birmingham, England. Alfred Bird was born in Nympsfield, Gloucestershire in 1811 and later trained as a chemist and druggist in Birmingham. In that same year, 1837, he opened his shop on Bull Street as an experimental chemist, which sounds grand but also rather like the sort of place where pudding might be approached with a measuring spoon and a raised eyebrow. The famous custard powder came first, and that matters here because Bird’s later pudding mixes sit under a name built on the British habit of trusting Bird’s with the custard course.
A Practical Invention With Domestic Roots
The best-known Bird’s origin story is wonderfully unshowy. Alfred Bird developed an egg-free custard powder because his wife Elizabeth was allergic to eggs and yeast. Instead of thickening custard with egg, he used cornflour to create a custard-like result. It was apparently first made for home use, then moved beyond the family table after guests responded well to it. There is a pleasingly British rhythm to that: a domestic problem, a chemist’s solution, and then everyone else deciding they wanted some too. That original custard powder became so embedded in British kitchens that, for many people, “custard” came to mean the Bird’s-style powder made up with milk, rather than an egg custard made from scratch.
From Custard Powder to Pudding Cupboard
Bird’s did not remain a one-product story. By the later nineteenth century, the company had expanded into other powdered pantry goods, including blancmange powder, jelly powder and egg substitute. That wider pudding-cupboard world helps explain why a modern packet of Birds Trifle Raspberry feels at home under the Bird’s name, even when the fully sourced heritage belongs more clearly to the brand family than to this exact raspberry trifle mix. It is part of the same British convenience-pudding lineage: powders and mixes that helped ordinary kitchens put something wobbly, creamy or comforting on the table without starting from first principles.
Birmingham, Banbury and the Packet You Recognise
The Bird’s story is strongly tied to Birmingham. The company’s Digbeth factory became a notable part of the city’s food history, and when production moved to Banbury in 1964, the old Gibb Street site eventually found a second life as the Custard Factory arts centre. That is the kind of fact that sounds made up by a civic branding committee, but it is real enough, and nicely odd. Later ownership passed through larger food companies, including General Foods, Kraft and Premier Foods. Those changes help explain why the modern packet sits within a broader British grocery family, but they do not need to steal the story. The important bit is still the name on the pudding shelf and what British shoppers expect when they see it.
Why Raspberry Trifle Travels So Well
For British expats in Canada, trifle can be a strangely precise memory. Not just “dessert”, but the particular wobble of raspberry jelly, the soft sponge, the custard layer, and the suspicion that someone has gone heavy on the cream because guests are coming. It is the sort of thing a relative might tuck into a parcel, along with tea bags and biscuits, because they know Canadian supermarkets are useful but not always emotionally accurate. Birds Trifle Raspberry carries that familiar British pudding shorthand: easy to make, slightly ceremonial once assembled, and impossible to serve without someone mentioning how their mum used to do it.
A Quiet Spoonful of Home
There are grander desserts in the world, and there are certainly desserts that require more bowls, more patience and more confidence. But trifle has never depended on being grand. It depends on recognition, on layers, and on the gentle chaos of people arguing whether it should have fruit in it, sherry in it, or absolutely no sherry because there are children present. Birds Trifle Raspberry belongs to that happy, practical corner of British food memory. For anyone rebuilding a proper pudding cupboard on this side of the Atlantic, The Great British Shop is glad to keep that particular wobble within reach.