About Walker's Nonsuch Creamy Toffee Slab With Hammer
About Walker's Nonsuch Creamy Toffee Slab With Hammer
Frequently asked questions about Walker's Nonsuch Creamy Toffee Slab With Hammer
More about Walker's Nonsuch Creamy Toffee Slab With Hammer
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.
Customers also add
Based on baskets that include this product.
Shop our most popular products
A handy shortcut to the British favourites flying out the door.
View most popular
The story of Walker's Nonsuch Creamy Toffee Slab With Hammer
A slab that expects a bit of effort
Walker's Nonsuch Creamy Toffee Slab With Hammer is not a shy bag of wrapped sweets. It is a 400g slab of toffee that arrives with its own little hammer, because apparently civilisation peaked when someone decided confectionery should involve light carpentry. There is something wonderfully British about it: practical, slightly daft, and absolutely clear about the job at hand. You do not unwrap one neat piece. You break it, share it, argue over the size of the bits, and pretend the corner you have just taken is “only a small piece”.
Read the full story
The Walker's Nonsuch story behind the packet
Walker's Nonsuch was founded in 1894 by Edward Joseph Walker and his son Edward Victor Walker. The business began in Longton, which at the time was an independent municipal borough in Staffordshire, before it later became part of Stoke-on-Trent in 1910. Longton had been a market town in the parish of Stoke, and by the time the Walkers started making toffee it had become the Borough of Longton. That matters because this is not a vague “old British brand” story floating about without a place. It is rooted in a working industrial town in North Staffordshire, where sweets and toffee were everyday pleasures, not glass-cabinet luxuries.
Longton, The Potteries, and proper toffee country
Longton sits within the Stoke-on-Trent area known as The Potteries, a part of England shaped by ceramics, kilns, pot banks, and generations of working families. It is not difficult to see why a sturdy, no-nonsense toffee maker would make sense there. Toffee is patient stuff. It asks for heat, timing, and a tolerance for stickiness. Rather like the Potteries themselves, it has never seemed especially interested in glamour. The Walker's Nonsuch name belongs to that world of factory towns, corner shops, tea breaks, paper bags, and the small sweet things people bought because the week had been long enough already.
What “Nonsuch” is doing there
The word “Nonsuch” is an old English term meaning “none such”, or without equal. It has been used in English history for grand houses, ships, and other things whose owners were not exactly suffering from modesty. On a packet of toffee, it feels both confident and faintly charming. British confectionery has always had a weakness for names that sound as though they were decided by someone in a waistcoat. Still, the name has lasted, and in this case it has become tied very closely to toffee itself. Walker's Nonsuch is recognised as an English toffee manufacturer, which helps distinguish it from the other Walker's names that wander around British grocery shelves causing mild confusion.
The hammer is part of the memory
The slab format has a different sort of nostalgia from a bag of individually wrapped sweets. It is communal, slightly chaotic, and best approached with a plate unless you enjoy finding shards of toffee in places toffee has no business being. For many British shoppers, this kind of slab belongs to Christmas cupboards, seaside purchases, gift tins, grandparents who kept sweets “for visitors”, and homes where visitors were expected to know where the kettle lived. The little hammer is not just a gimmick. It changes the whole ritual. You are not simply eating toffee. You are conducting a small domestic event.
Why it travels well in memory
For British expats in Canada, sweets like this do a very specific job. They are not just sugar and butter notes and a familiar chew. They bring back the feel of British shops where the shelves made sense without needing translation. A toffee slab with a hammer is especially good at this because it is so particular. It is not trying to be modern or tidy. It asks you to break it into uneven pieces and get on with it. That is part of the appeal, really. A neat square would be easier, but easier is not always the point.
A quiet sign-off from the sweet cupboard
Walker's Nonsuch Creamy Toffee Slab With Hammer carries the heritage of a Staffordshire toffee maker more than a tidy product-origin tale, and that is the honest version of the story. The brand begins with a father and son in Longton in 1894, grows out of an industrial town with a proper appetite for everyday confectionery, and still turns up today in a form that requires a small hammer. That is difficult not to respect. The Great British Shop keeps it here for the people who remember exactly how satisfying that first crack can be.