About Robinsons Orange Barley Water
About Robinsons Orange Barley Water
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrédients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: Barley, Sulphur Dioxide/Sulphites.
Contient : Barley, Sulphur Dioxide/Sulphites.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Robinsons Orange Barley Water
More about Robinsons Orange Barley Water
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 Robinsons Orange Barley Water
Orange barley water, the very British sort of sensible
Robinsons Orange Barley Water is one of those drinks that manages to feel both practical and oddly nostalgic. It is not fizzy, not showy, and not trying to be a lifestyle choice. It is a bottle of concentrated orange barley drink that belongs in the cupboard, ready for cold water, ice if you are feeling organised, and perhaps a jug if people are coming round and someone has remembered manners.
Read the full story
The Robinsons name has moved about a bit
The modern Robinsons packet sits behind a fairly tangled family tree, as British grocery brands so often do. The Royal Warrant associated with Robinsons lapsed in 2022 following the death of Queen Elizabeth II. Before that, in 1995, Unilever bought the food business of Reckitt and Colman and sold Robinsons on to Britannia Soft Drinks, the parent company of Britvic. Today Robinsons is manufactured by Britvic Ltd, now part of Carlsberg Britvic after Carlsberg’s acquisition of Britvic plc in 2025. That is the tidy corporate version, which sounds as if everyone wore a suit and nothing sticky ever happened near a bottling line.
Before all that, there was barley
The more useful story for this bottle begins much earlier. Robinsons traces its roots to 1823, when George Robinson and Alexander Belville founded Robinson and Belville Ltd. The business was originally a shipping and trading company, but it also made Patent Barley and Groats. By 1825, Matthias Robinson is said to have developed the use of barley crystals and begun producing barley water as a health drink. So while this orange version should not be dressed up as the original invention, it does belong to a line of drinks with barley water sitting very near the centre of the Robinsons story.
From groats to the drinks cupboard
Robinsons’ history also wanders through some properly British grocery scenery. Early fruit juice connections are linked with Droylsden in Lancashire, while later production became closely associated with Carrow near Norwich after the company moved there in 1925. In between, Robinson and Belville amalgamated with Keen and Sons in 1862 to become Keen Robinson and Company, and the business was later acquired by J and J Colman of mustard fame in 1903. It is a reminder that the British cupboard is less a neat set of brands and more a long argument between barley, mustard, squash and accounting departments.
The shadow of lemon barley water
The best-known Robinsons barley water moment came in 1930, when Eric Smedley Hodgson developed Lemon Barley Water by combining Robinsons’ patent barley crystals with lemon juice and sugar. From 1935, Robinsons became closely linked with the Wimbledon Tennis Championships, a partnership that made barley water feel like part of the English summer furniture. Orange Barley Water shares that broader heritage, even if lemon is the one with the tennis whites and the centre-court manners. Orange is perhaps a little less formal, which is no bad thing.
Why people still look for it in Canada
For British shoppers in Canada, Robinsons Orange Barley Water is not just about making a glass of squash. It is the memory of kitchen counters, school holiday afternoons, grandparents who kept a bottle in the cupboard, and those slightly cloudy jugs that appeared whenever the weather rose above “mildly optimistic”. It is familiar in a way that does not need much explaining. Add water, stir, and suddenly the Canadian fridge has a small, recognisable corner of home in it. The Great British Shop is happy to help with that, quietly and without pretending a bottle of barley water is a national emergency.