About Barratt Chewy Nougat
About Barratt Chewy Nougat
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
May contain: Tree nuts.
Peut contenir : Noix.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Barratt Chewy Nougat
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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 Barratt Chewy Nougat
A chewy bar with sweetshop manners
Barratt Chewy Nougat is one of those small British sweet bars that does not need much ceremony. It is a 35g piece of chewy, sugary, old-school confectionery, the sort of thing that once sat near the till with drumstick lollies, sherbet, chews and other pocket-money decisions. Nougat in this setting is not trying to be grand or continental. It is sweetshop nougat, cheerful and chewy, built for people who know that a proper British sweet can be a little bit daft and still be exactly right.
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The Barratt name behind the wrapper
There is no neatly sourced origin story for this particular chewy nougat bar, so the honest story here is the Barratt one. In the 1880s, Barratt introduced Yankee Panky, described as a low-boiled sweet wrapped in wax paper, with that wrapping noted as an industry first for that type. Black Jack and Fruit Salad followed in 1920, then the Sherbet Fountain in 1925. That Sherbet Fountain originally came in a paper-wrapped cardboard tube with a liquorice straw stuck in the top, which is either charming design or chaos with a brand name, depending on how much sherbet ended up on your jumper.
From Hoxton sugar boiling to a national sweet habit
Barratt began much earlier than those famous twentieth-century sweets. George Osborne Barratt established Barratt & Co. in London in 1848, starting at 32 Shepherdess Walk in Hoxton with one sugar boiler. Before confectionery, he had worked in a lawyerβs office and briefly as a pastry cook, which is a pleasingly British career route: paperwork, pastry, then sweets. In the early years he delivered and promoted his products around London by pony and trap. It is a long way from that to a modern nougat bar in a printed wrapper, but the connection is the same sort of everyday sugar confectionery that British shoppers have been buying without making a speech about it.
Why Barratt belongs in the sweetshop memory
By the later nineteenth century the business had outgrown Hoxton and moved to a former piano factory at Wood Green in north London, with the first building there ready in 1882. The company became a major confectionery maker, and by 1906 it was reported to employ around 2,000 people and produce 350 tonnes of sweets a week. That scale matters because Barratt was not just a name on a packet. It became part of the background noise of British childhood: jars on shelves, paper bags, sticky fingers, and adults pretending they only bought sweets for the children.
The modern Barratt packet
The Barratt name has passed through a few hands, as old British grocery brands often do. Barratt & Co. was acquired by Bassettβs in 1966, and Bassettβs later became part of Cadbury Schweppes. Since 2008, the Barratt brand has sat within the Tangerine Confectionery portfolio, later Valeo Confectionery, headquartered in Pontefract, West Yorkshire. The Barratt name was brought back into active use in 2018. That is why a modern packet can carry a very old name without pretending the whole business has stood still. It has not. British sweets rarely have tidy family trees. They have mergers, relaunches, and wrappers that somehow still make people feel eight years old.
Why it travels well to Canada
For British expats in Canada, Barratt Chewy Nougat is less about fine confectionery language and more about recognition. It is the kind of thing that belongs in a parcel from home, tucked beside crisps, teabags, gravy granules and a few suspiciously specific sweets requested by someone who swore they were not bothered. Small bars like this carry a lot of memory for their size: corner shops after school, newsagent shelves, grandparentsβ cupboards, and the quiet satisfaction of finding the thing you meant, not the nearest Canadian approximation. A chewy nougat bar will not solve homesickness, obviously, but it can make a cup of tea feel better arranged. The Great British Shop is happy to leave it at that.