About Ambrosia Creamy Rice Pudding
About Ambrosia Creamy Rice Pudding
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrédients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: milk.
Contient : Lait.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Ambrosia Creamy Rice Pudding
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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 Ambrosia Creamy Rice Pudding
The tin that knows what pudding means
Ambrosia Creamy Rice Pudding is not a complicated proposition, which is probably why it has lasted so well in British cupboards. It is rice pudding in a tin: milky, soft, gently sweet, and ready to be warmed through or eaten cold by people who have already made their minds up about that particular debate. For many British shoppers, the 400g tin belongs in the same mental cupboard as custard powder, tinned fruit, sponge puddings and the emergency beans. Sensible food, in other words, with just enough comfort about it to make you suspicious of anyone who calls it boring.
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Lifton, milk, and the Devon connection
Ambrosia’s ambient products are still made at the Lifton creamery in Devon, where the brand also bases its desserts research and development team. Its custard and rice pudding are made with West Country milk sourced from farms in Devon and Cornwall. Lifton itself had a practical sort of food industry setting: a private railway siding opened at Lifton station in 1894 to serve a corn mill, and a factory handling milk opened in the goods yard in 1917, later becoming associated with Ambrosia rice pudding. That is a pleasingly unfussy beginning for a pudding people still buy by name. No marble halls, no trumpets, just milk, railways, and Devon doing what Devon tends to do rather well.
Before the rice pudding came the creamery
The Ambrosia Creamery was founded in 1917 by Alfred Morris in Lifton, his home village. The original purpose was not rice pudding at all, but making rich food for infants. The early product was a dried milk powder, made using milk from local farms, with many of the cows said to have been the Red Ruby breed, and dried by roller dryers. The name Ambrosia reaches back to the food of the gods in Greek classicism, which is quite a grand reference for something that would eventually sit next to the tinned peaches. Still, British grocery names have always had a weakness for drama, even when the product itself is very calmly spoonable.
How rice pudding became the thing
Ambrosia is now mostly known for custard and rice pudding, and the rice pudding part has genuine heritage behind it. Shortly before the Second World War, the Ambrosia creamery became the first company to produce creamed rice pudding ready in a tin. During the war, much of the creamery’s production went into Red Cross food parcels, which gives the pudding a rather more serious background than its nursery-tea reputation might suggest. After the war, Ambrosia relaunched its tinned rice pudding and also brought out a creamed macaroni pudding. That pairing will make perfect sense to anyone raised in Britain and may require a little explanation to everyone else.
The modern packet name and the ownership shuffle
Like many familiar British grocery names, Ambrosia has passed through a few corporate hands. The company was acquired by Colman’s in 1990, then became part of Unilever through the Colman’s business in the mid-1990s. Premier Foods acquired the Ambrosia custard and rice pudding brand from Unilever’s Colman’s division in 2004. That matters mainly because it explains why an old Devon creamery product now sits within a larger British food family alongside names such as Bisto, Oxo and Sharwood’s. The tin still says Ambrosia, the story still points back to Lifton, and the rice pudding remains the bit most people are actually here for.
Why it follows people across the Atlantic
For British expats in Canada, Ambrosia Creamy Rice Pudding is often less about dessert planning and more about recognition. It is the tin a grandparent had in the cupboard, the one that appeared after school, the one served hot when someone decided fruit was not quite enough pudding. It belongs to that category of British food that is both ordinary and oddly specific. If you grew up with it, a substitute rarely feels right, however reasonable it may be. There is comfort in the familiar label, the familiar spoonful, and the familiar certainty that rice pudding is a perfectly acceptable answer to a cold evening. Quietly, from The Great British Shop, it finds its way back into Canadian cupboards where it can sit until needed, which is usually sooner than planned.