About Jammie Dodgers Raspberry
About Jammie Dodgers Raspberry
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
| Nutrition Facts Valeur nutritive | |
|---|---|
| Per 100g | |
| Energy / Γnergie | 429.0 kcal |
| Fat / Lipides | g |
| Saturated / saturΓ©s | g |
| Carbohydrate / Glucides | g |
| Sugars / Sucres | g |
| Fibre / Fibres | g |
| Protein / ProtΓ©ines | g |
| Salt / Sel | g |
Frequently asked questions about Jammie Dodgers Raspberry
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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| Nutrition Facts Valeur nutritive | |
|---|---|
| Per 100g pour 100g | |
| Energy / Γnergie | 429.0 kcal |
| Fat / Lipides | g |
| Saturated / saturΓ©s | g |
| Carbohydrate / Glucides | g |
| Sugars / Sucres | g |
| Fibre / Fibres | g |
| Protein / ProtΓ©ines | g |
| Salt / Sel | g |
Values are typical and may vary. Always check the pack on delivery for the most accurate information.
The story of Jammie Dodgers Raspberry
The biscuit with the little window
Jammie Dodgers Raspberry are instantly recognisable in the way only British biscuits can be. Two pale shortcake-style biscuits, a splodge of raspberry-flavoured jam in the middle, and that little heart-shaped window on top, as if the biscuit is making a modest attempt at romance before being dunked. It is not a complicated idea, which is probably why it works. The packet says Burton's today, and for many people that is enough: they know the biscuit, they know the jam sticks slightly to the teeth, and they know the first one rarely remains an only child.
Read the full story
A Burton's story, not a tidy product origin tale
There is no supplied product-level origin story here for Jammie Dodgers Raspberry, so it would be daft to pretend we can march confidently back to the first ever batch. What we can say is where the Burton's biscuit family comes from. The first Burton's biscuits were baked by George Burton, born in 1829 in Leek, Staffordshire, who began production on Corporation Street in Blackpool, Lancashire. The Burton's Biscuits firm was formally founded by George's grandson, Joseph Burton, in 1935. Much later, the modern Burton's Biscuit Company was formed by the merger of Burton's Gold Medal Biscuits and Horizon Biscuit Company in October 2000. Biscuit history, like most British cupboards, is rarely as neat as it looks from the outside.
Blackpool, biscuits, and sensible pleasures
Blackpool is a useful place to picture when thinking about Burton's. Not because every biscuit should be forced into a seaside postcard, but because the setting makes sense. A busy north-western town, a working population, visitors, shops, tea, snacks, and the great British belief that a packet of biscuits can improve almost any ordinary afternoon. Burton's grew from that sort of practical biscuit culture rather than from anything too grand. Jammie Dodgers sit comfortably in that world: cheerful, affordable, familiar, and aimed at people who do not need a biscuit to arrive with a speech.
The modern packet name
The Burton's name has been through the usual food-industry shuffling, because biscuits apparently cannot be left alone by balance sheets. The company was known as Burton's Foods before rebranding as Burton's Biscuit Company in 2011. In 2021, Burton's Biscuit Company was acquired by Ferrero. Those details matter only because they help explain why a childhood biscuit can sit on a modern shelf with a corporate family tree behind it. The thing most shoppers notice, quite reasonably, is still the Jammie Dodger itself: the jam centre, the shortcake bite, the red flash through the cut-out, and the mild risk of biscuit crumbs on your jumper.
Why people remember them
Jammie Dodgers belong to a particular category of British memory: lunchboxes, school fairs, grandparents' biscuit tins, corner shops, and packets opened with the vague promise that they were βfor everyoneβ. They are not solemn tea biscuits and they are not fancy. They are childhood biscuits that somehow followed people into adulthood without asking permission. For British expats in Canada, that matters. A packet like this can bring back the sound of a kettle, a kitchen drawer full of carrier bags, or the slightly over-organised biscuit tin that still had the good ones hidden underneath the Rich Tea.
A small jammy sign-off
Jammie Dodgers Raspberry have lasted because they do one very British thing well: they make an ordinary biscuit feel like an event without becoming remotely posh about it. The shape is familiar, the jam is the point, and the whole thing has the cheerful confidence of a biscuit that knows children and adults will both pretend to be sensible around it. For anyone in Canada missing the packets they used to spot back home, this is the kind of cupboard staple that does not need explaining twice. Quietly, and with crumbs likely, The Great British Shop is glad to have it on the shelf.