About Robertson's Golden Shred Marmalade
About Robertson's Golden Shred Marmalade
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrédients
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Robertson's Golden Shred Marmalade
More about Robertson's Golden Shred Marmalade
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 Robertson's Golden Shred Marmalade
The jar with the orange glow
Robertson's Golden Shred Marmalade is one of those jars that looks as if it has always belonged on a British breakfast table. Not in a dramatic way, because marmalade is not generally dramatic unless someone has used the last of it. It is more a steady presence: amber, sharp-sweet, properly orangey, and ready for hot buttered toast. Golden Shred is the Robertson's name most people picture first, the orange marmalade with enough bite to feel awake and enough sweetness to keep the peace at breakfast.
Read the full story
From Paisley grocery to Golden Shred
Robertson's is a Scottish brand of marmalades and fruit preserves, founded in 1864 by James Robertson in Paisley, Scotland. Before the preserve business, James Robertson had opened an independent grocery at 86 Causeyside Street, Paisley, in 1859. The story usually told of Golden Shred begins in 1864, when Robertson bought a barrel of Seville oranges from a struggling salesman. His wife Marion Robertson made them into a sweet marmalade, and James later refined the recipe, with Golden Shred emerging as the branded name in the 1870s. Like many good food stories, it starts with someone buying too much fruit and then making it everyone else's problem, usefully.
Why Paisley matters
Paisley was not just a picturesque name on the label. It was a busy Scottish industrial town, and Robertson's grew from a grocer's counter into a preserve maker with real scale. In 1880, James Robertson bought land on Stevenson Street in Paisley and built a purpose-made marmalade factory. That detail matters because it shows how quickly the orange jar moved beyond lucky-barrel folklore. Golden Shred was not simply a kitchen experiment that people liked. It became a recognisable product, made in quantity, and sent out into the wider British breakfast argument about how much peel is correct.
A brand that travelled further than breakfast
As demand grew, Robertson's expanded beyond Scotland, with factories later opened in places including Droylsden near Manchester, Catford in London, and Brislington near Bristol. Ownership changed in later decades, as it often does with old grocery names, and the brand passed through larger food businesses. That can make the family tree look rather less homely than the jar suggests, but it explains why the name remained visible on supermarket shelves long after the Paisley grocery had become history. The important bit for this jar is that Golden Shred stayed attached to the Robertson's name, which is the part most shoppers actually look for while pretending they are only browsing.
The marmalade memory
Golden Shred has the sort of British recognition that does not need much explaining. It belongs with toast racks, tea that has gone slightly too strong, grandparents' cupboards, and the small domestic panic of finding only crumbs left in the bread bin. For many British shoppers in Canada, marmalade is not just another spread. It is a breakfast habit with a postcode attached. The flavour carries a particular kind of morning: school before coats were properly zipped, Sunday papers on the table, or a parcel from home with jars wrapped far too optimistically in newspaper.
Still doing its quiet work
Robertson's Golden Shred Marmalade - 454g remains a familiar British pantry jar because it does not need reinvention. It has a long Scottish preserve story behind it, a proper Golden Shred origin tale, and the everyday usefulness of something that makes toast feel finished. In Canada, that matters more than the label probably knows. Some foods shout about heritage; marmalade just sits there, waits for the kettle, and gets on with it. A quiet nod from The Great British Shop, for anyone who knows exactly which jar they were missing.