About Gales Lemon Curd
About Gales Lemon Curd
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: egg.
Contient : Εufs.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Gales Lemon Curd
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 Gales Lemon Curd
A Jar That Knows Its Way Around Toast
Galeβs Lemon Curd is one of those British cupboard things that looks modest until you remember what it does to toast, scones, sponge cakes and the occasional spoon. Lemon curd has always sat in a slightly different corner from jam and marmalade. It is brighter, smoother, more pudding-adjacent, and somehow able to make a weekday slice of bread feel as if someone has made an effort. Not a heroic effort, obviously. We are still talking about opening a jar. But a recognisable British effort all the same.
Read the full story
The Galeβs Story Behind the Label
There is not a neatly sourced origin tale for this particular jar of Galeβs Lemon Curd, so the honest story here is the brand family behind the modern label. Under Reckitt and Colman ownership, Galeβs production was carried out at Carrow in Norwich, where the business also introduced mincemeat in 1962 and a peanut spread called Smoothβn Nutty in the early 1960s. For many years, Galeβs was known as the UKβs biggest manufacturer of honey, which is the kind of claim that tells you it was not a fringe shelf-dweller. In 1986, Galeβs was acquired by Rowntree Mackintosh Confectionery, and production moved to Hadfield in Derbyshire. Corporate grocery history does like to pack the jars and move them about.
From South London Beginnings
The name goes back to 1919, when Richard Westley Gale of Richmond and Sidney Thomas Rayner of Mortlake began trading together as Rayner and Gale. The partnership was dissolved in 1926, after which the business continued as R.W. Gale and Co. Ltd, based in the SW9 district of south London. That background matters because Galeβs did not begin as a faceless supermarket invention. It came out of the older world of British food firms that built their names on everyday pantry goods, especially honey, at a time when reliable jars on the shelf were becoming a normal part of household shopping.
Norwich, Hadfield, Histon and the Usual Grocery Shuffle
After Joseph Farrow and Company, a Reckitt and Colman subsidiary, bought Galeβs in 1948, the brand became tied to larger food manufacturing networks. Later came Rowntree Mackintosh, then NestlΓ© after Rowntree Mackintosh was acquired in 1988, and Premier Foods in 2002. The Hadfield site closed in the first quarter of 2004, with production moving to Premier Foodsβ plant at Histon, north of Cambridge, a site also associated with Hartleyβs jam. None of that makes a spoonful of lemon curd taste more romantic, but it does explain why a familiar British name can carry such a busy family tree behind a very ordinary-looking lid.
Why Lemon Curd Sticks In The Memory
Lemon curd has a particular place in British kitchens because it sits halfway between breakfast and baking. It belongs on toast, certainly, but also in sandwich cakes, tartlets, fairy cakes and the sort of pudding assembled when people are coming round and nobody has the emotional strength for pastry. For many British shoppers in Canada, Galeβs Lemon Curd is not just a spread. It is the taste of a grandparentβs cupboard, a church hall cake table, or the jar that appeared whenever someone decided plain bread needed cheering up. It is sunny in a very British way, meaning it still expects rain.
A Quietly Familiar Finish
What makes Galeβs Lemon Curd worth remembering is not a grand origin myth, but its place in the dependable, slightly eccentric world of British spreads. The brand behind it has passed through south London, Norwich, Derbyshire and Cambridgeshire, picking up owners and factory addresses along the way, while the jar itself remains the thing people look for. If you grew up with lemon curd in the cupboard, it does not need much explaining. It just needs a clean knife, hot toast, and perhaps someone pretending they were not going back for another slice. A small taste of home, kept within reach by The Great British Shop.