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Bolands Fig Rolls - 200g

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Original price $3.99 - Original price $3.99
Original price
$3.99
$3.99 - $3.99
Current price $3.99
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Rated 4.9/5 from 427 reviews
About Bolands Fig Rolls

About Bolands Fig Rolls

Fig rolls occupy a specific and largely uncontested corner of the British biscuit world, and Bolands Fig Rolls are the version that a great many people in Ireland and the UK grew up with. If you are looking for them in Canada, this is exactly what you are after.

Each 200g pack contains the classic fig roll format: a soft, chewy pastry casing wrapped around a dense fig paste filling. They are the sort of biscuit that does not try to be anything other than what they are, which is arguably their greatest quality. Suitable for vegetarians, and made without artificial colours or flavours.

For British and Irish expats, fig rolls tend to sit in the category of biscuits you did not realise you missed until you could not find them. The Great British Shop stocks Bolands Fig Rolls as part of a wide range of British and Irish grocery imports, shipped from Halifax, Nova Scotia to customers across Canada. No waiting on a parcel from the UK, no hoping a relative remembers to pack them.

Bolands is a well-established Irish biscuit brand, and their fig rolls are a staple that has stayed largely unchanged for good reason. The 200g pack is a solid size for keeping in the cupboard, whether you are rationing them carefully or eating several in a row and pretending you are not.

Shop more Bolands in Canada or browse the full range of British biscuits available to ship across Canada.

Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage

Ingredients

Wheat Flour (Wheat Flour, Calcium Carbonate, Iron, Niacin, Thiamin), Figs (25%), Glucose Syrup, Sugar, Palm Oil, Salt, Raising Agent/Leavening (Sodium Bicarbonate), Acidity Regulator (Citric Acid)

Allergens

Contains: Wheat/Gluten (Wheat Flour), May contain Milk, May contain Tree Nuts, May contain Soya.

May contain: Milk, Tree Nuts, Soya.

Storage

Once opened, store in an airtight container.

Frequently asked questions about Bolands Fig Rolls

Q: What do Bolands Fig Rolls taste like?

A: Bolands Fig Rolls have a soft, chewy fig paste centre made with 30% fruit, wrapped in a lightly crisp biscuit outer. The fig filling is naturally sweet with a slightly jammy, earthy quality that is distinct from most biscuit-tin staples. There are no artificial colours or flavours, and no hydrogenated vegetable oil, so what you get is a fairly straightforward fig roll that tastes like it should.

Q: Are Bolands Fig Rolls suitable for vegetarians?

A: Yes, Bolands Fig Rolls are suitable for vegetarians. The ingredients are wheat flour, fig paste, glucose syrup, sugar, palm oil, salt, and a small number of raising and acidity agents, none of which are meat or fish derived. They may contain milk, tree nuts, or soya due to shared production, which is worth knowing if you have allergies to any of those.

Q: Are Bolands Fig Rolls the same as the ones sold in Ireland and the UK?

A: Bolands is an Irish biscuit brand with a long history, and the Fig Rolls sold here are made in the United Kingdom to the same recipe people grew up with. For anyone who remembers them from childhood, the format is exactly as expected: a 200g pack of the same soft-centred fig rolls that have been in Irish and British kitchens for generations. It is the sort of thing that ends up in a care package order because no local substitute quite matches the memory.

More about Bolands Fig Rolls

Fig rolls sit in their own category within the broader British biscuits world: not a chocolate digestive, not a shortbread, not a cream sandwich. They are a filled pastry-biscuit hybrid, and Bolands Fig Rolls are the version most closely associated with the Irish and British grocery tradition. The format has been around long enough that most people who grew up with them have a fairly strong opinion about which brand is correct.

For Irish and British expats in Canada, fig rolls are one of those products that tends to surface on a mental list well after the move. They are not always easy to locate in Canadian supermarkets, which is why people search specifically for Bolands Fig Rolls in Canada rather than settling for whatever is on the shelf.

The 200g pack is a sensible size: enough to last a week if you show restraint, and compact enough to store easily. Once opened, an airtight container keeps them at their best. They are vegetarian-suitable and travel without any particular fuss, which makes them a reasonable addition to a care parcel as well as a personal order.

Bolands produces a small but familiar range of biscuits and crackers with strong recognition among Irish shoppers in particular. You can browse the full Bolands in Canada range if fig rolls are just the starting point.

Orders ship from within Canada, so whether you are in Toronto, Calgary, Charlottetown or Bedford, there is no waiting on an overseas parcel to clear customs before the biscuit tin gets restocked.

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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I work close-by in Bayer’s Lake and love to pop in for a healthy and delicious lunch when I don’t bring one from home! I’ve had over 10 flavours of the pies, and tried almost every sweet they make. I adore this place, from the amazing food, to the nostalgic candies and British goods they carry, and especially the wonderful staff who always greet me by name and ask how Im doing every time I come in. My Papa was born and raised in England and loved to share tastes of home with his whole family, I wish he was able to see this place, he would’ve been delighted ❀️❀️❀️
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The story of Bolands Fig Rolls

A fig roll with its feet in the biscuit tin

Bolands Fig Rolls are not trying to be exciting in the modern snack sense, which is part of their appeal. They are the sort of biscuit that looks plain until you remember exactly why you bought them: soft fig filling, a mild biscuit casing, and that particular old-fashioned usefulness that makes them work with tea, packed lunches, and cupboards belonging to people who say they are β€œjust having one”. Fig rolls have long had a place in Irish and British biscuit habits, though for this particular packet the fully sourced story is the Bolands name behind it rather than a neat little tale about the first Bolands fig roll rolling nobly into history.

Read the full story

The modern Bolands packet

The Bolands name survives today across a range of biscuits and crackers produced by Jacob Fruitfield Food Group, including familiar cupboard names such as custard creams, cream crackers and Bourbon creams. In 2009, Bolands was re-launched in new packaging with a broader range, positioned as a budget alternative to Jacobs. Jacob Fruitfield Food Group is now part of brands owned by Valeo Foods. That helps explain why a modern packet of Bolands Fig Rolls belongs to a larger Irish biscuit family rather than standing alone as a tidy founder-invented-this-biscuit story. Grocery heritage is rarely tidy. If it were, half the biscuit aisle would have nothing to mutter about.

Capel Street beginnings

The older Bolands story begins in Dublin, around Capel Street, where the Boland family lived and where the original bakery premises were located nearby, between Mary Street, also known as Abbey Street, and Little Mary Street. Patrick Boland was the head of the family business in the nineteenth century, and after his death the bakery was formally floated in 1888 by Bishop Nicholas Donnelly, his brother-in-law and executor. By the late nineteenth century, Boland's Bakery was described as the largest bakery in Dublin. That does not mean this exact fig roll was being made there, but it does place the name in the proper setting: a Dublin baking business that grew from family premises into a sizeable food producer.

When biscuits became the point

Bolands did not begin as a narrow biscuit concern. The company sold bread, biscuits, cakes, confectionery and flour, which sounds like the sort of shop where a person could walk in for one thing and leave having justified six. Over time, biscuits became the main product category. The business had production facilities around Dublin, including buildings around Grand Canal Dock, with Boland's Mill becoming one of the names most strongly tied to the company. Some of those mill buildings date from the nineteenth century, which gives the Bolands name a proper industrial backdrop: flour, ovens, city streets, and the solid Dublin practicality of feeding people before anyone had invented lifestyle snacking.

A name caught up in Irish history

Bolands also carries a sharper piece of history than most biscuit names. The main bakery building on Grand Canal Street played a prominent role in the 1916 Easter Rising, when it was occupied by Γ‰amon de Valera's 3rd Battalion of Irish Volunteers. After the Rising, the mills were appropriated by the British military, and the owners later raised the issue of compensation, with hundreds of jobs at stake. It is a reminder that food brands are not just labels on packets. Sometimes they sit right in the middle of a city’s working life, political life, and arguments over who gets to tell the story afterwards. Biscuits, somehow, do not always stay in the biscuit tin.

Mergers, moves, and the familiar shelf name

In the late 1970s, Bolands merged with Jacobs Biscuits Limited to form Irish Biscuits Limited, with much of production moving to Belgard in Tallaght. Irish Biscuits later passed through several owners and eventually came under Groupe Danone. In 2004, production at the Tallaght facility stopped and the business was sold to the Irish Fruitfield Food Group. The important point for today’s shopper is simpler than the corporate paperwork: Bolands remains a recognisable Irish biscuit name, even though the manufacturing story has changed. That slightly complicated route is why the modern packet carries old Dublin resonance, Jacob Fruitfield family connections, and the usual biscuit-aisle ability to make ownership history feel more dramatic than the contents suggest.

Why it still lands in Canadian cupboards

For British and Irish shoppers in Canada, Bolands Fig Rolls are less about discovering something new and more about finding something that behaves properly. They sit in the same emotional territory as biscuits from grandparents' cupboards, corner shop shelves, and parcels sent with stern instructions not to eat everything at once. A fig roll is practical, comforting, and faintly virtuous if you squint, which may be why people keep buying them. Here in Halifax, The Great British Shop is happy to let the packet do what it has always done best: sit quietly by the kettle and disappear faster than anyone admits.