About McVitie's Club Salted Caramel
About McVitie's Club Salted Caramel
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: milk, soya, wheat.
Contient : Lait, Soya, BlΓ©.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about McVitie's Club Salted Caramel
More about McVitie's Club Salted Caramel
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 McVitie's Club Salted Caramel
A Club biscuit with modern manners
McVitie's Club Salted Caramel is not the sort of biscuit that asks you to study it. It is a chocolate-covered biscuit bar with a caramel note and a little salt, made for the very British business of having something proper with a brew and pretending one will be enough. The Club name carries its own cupboard recognition, especially for anyone who remembers foil-wrapped biscuit bars in lunchboxes, school bags, glove compartments, or the emergency drawer at work. This salted caramel version is a newer flavour in that familiar format, so its story is less about a grand Victorian invention and more about an old biscuit house keeping a well-known style of biscuit bar moving with the times.
Read the full story
The McVitie's family behind the packet
The Chocolate Digestive was introduced by McVitie's in 1925 under the name Chocolate Homewheat Digestive, which is a splendidly practical title and very much of its age. Jaffa Cakes followed in 1927, first produced by McVitie & Price and named after Jaffa oranges. Before both of those, McVitie & Price had been commissioned in 1893 to make a wedding cake for the Duke of York and Princess Mary, later King George V and Queen Mary, with the cake standing over seven feet tall and costing 140 guineas. None of that means McVitie's Club Salted Caramel dates from those moments, of course. It means the modern packet sits inside a biscuit family that has spent a very long time making Britain take tea, chocolate, cake, and biscuits rather seriously.
From Rose Street to the biscuit aisle
The McVitie's name goes back to Robert McVitie and the Scottish business associated with Rose Street in Edinburgh. The records are a little untidy, as food history often is once it has been polished for public display. The brand is commonly traced to McVitie & Price, established in Edinburgh in the nineteenth century, with Robert McVitie moving from Dumfries roots and a baker's apprenticeship into the Edinburgh trade. By the 1850s the business was being described as a baker and confectioner, which is a useful shift to notice. It was no longer just provisions on a shelf, but a maker of baked things people would ask for by name. That is the important bit for shoppers now: McVitie's became a name attached to particular biscuits, not just a company logo floating above them.
The industrial biscuit, politely behaved
McVitie's grew with the rise of British biscuit manufacturing, including the St Andrews Biscuit Works in Edinburgh's Gorgie district, completed in 1888, and later expansion beyond Scotland. Alexander Grant, an experienced biscuit maker from Forres, joined the firm in the late 1880s and is tied to the development of the McVitie's Digestive in 1892. That Digestive matters even when we are talking about Club, because it helped establish the house style: practical biscuits, widely available, not too pleased with themselves. The later chocolate-covered and filled formats belong to a different shelf, but they still draw on the same national habit. Britain developed a remarkable ability to classify biscuits by purpose, dunkability, wrapper, and moral danger. Club sits firmly in the βbest not open absent-mindedlyβ category.
What the modern name is really telling you
Today McVitie's sits within a much larger ownership story, after the old McVitie & Price business became part of United Biscuits in 1948 and United Biscuits was acquired by Yildiz Holding in 2014, later becoming part of Pladis. That sort of corporate family tree can make a packet look simpler than the history behind it. For this product, the useful thing is not to pretend that salted caramel Club has a Victorian birth certificate tucked under the wrapper. It is a modern McVitie's biscuit bar flavour carrying a name British shoppers already recognise, from a brand family with deep biscuit roots. The packet may be current, but the reflex it triggers is older: kettle on, wrapper off, crumbs appearing where no crumbs were invited.
Why it travels well in memory
For British expats in Canada, a packet like this is rarely just about needing biscuits. It is about the particular sort of biscuit you meant, not a chocolate bar doing an impression of one, and not a Canadian substitute that gets close but somehow misses the point. Club has that lunchbox and corner-shop feel, the kind of thing you remember from multipacks, packed lunches, or someone producing one from a handbag with the confidence of a person who plans ahead. Salted caramel may be a newer flavour, but the feeling is familiar enough: a wrapped biscuit bar, a cup of tea, and a small domestic argument with self-control. Quietly enough, that is why The Great British Shop keeps making room for it.