About Rose's Lime Marmalade
About Rose's Lime Marmalade
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrédients
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Rose's Lime Marmalade
More about Rose's Lime 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 Rose's Lime Marmalade
A lime marmalade with a complicated surname
Rose's Lime Marmalade is one of those jars that looks perfectly straightforward until you start asking who made what, when, and under which bit of the family tree. On toast, it is much simpler: bright lime peel, sweet set marmalade, and that sharp little citrus edge that makes breakfast feel properly awake. It sits in the British marmalade tradition, but it is not the usual orange business. Lime gives it a cleaner, slightly sharper character, the sort that people remember from a particular kitchen cupboard and then spend years trying to find again in Canada.
Read the full story
The modern Rose's label is a bit of a tangle
Schweppes became Cadbury-Schweppes in 1969, and when Cadbury divested its US beverage operations in 2008, Rose's was transferred to the newly formed Keurig Dr Pepper. In the United Kingdom, Rose's Lime Juice Cordial is manufactured and distributed by Coca-Cola Enterprises Ltd. Rose's lime marmalade, however, is a separate licensed product, with the marmalade brand owned by Hain Celestial Group. That sounds like the sort of corporate family gathering where nobody sits in the right chair, but it matters because the Rose's name covers more than one modern route. The cordial story, the marmalade story, and the packet on the shelf are related, but not identical.
Before the marmalade, there was the lime juice
The older Rose's story begins in Leith, Scotland, with Lauchlan Rose, a ship chandler who developed a way of preserving lime juice in the 1860s. He patented a method using sugar rather than alcohol, which made the preserved juice useful beyond naval stores and much more suited to civilian cupboards, bars, and later British habits of making citrus do more work than seems reasonable. The first L. Rose and Co. factory was set up on Commercial Street in Leith in 1868, close to the docks. That location was not just scenery. Limes had to be imported, and Leith's maritime connections helped make the business possible.
Why lime mattered in the first place
Rose's early success was tied to a very practical British problem: sailors and scurvy. The Royal Navy had long used lemon or lime juice on extended voyages, and that habit helped give British sailors the nickname “limeys”. Rose's did not invent the need for citrus at sea, but the brand grew in the world created by that need. Limes were sourced from places including Dominica, and later the company had supply links with West Africa, including the region now known as Ghana. The lime marmalade itself is generally described as having arrived in the 1930s, after lime exports from the Gold Coast had become part of the wider Rose's supply story. As ever, breakfast turns out to have shipping routes hiding behind it.
From cordial fame to breakfast table regular
For many people, Rose's first means lime cordial, possibly with soda, possibly in a grown-up glass with gin nearby. The brand's association with the gimlet became part of cocktail lore, helped along by Raymond Chandler's line about a real gimlet being half gin and half Rose's lime juice. Lime marmalade is a quieter thing, but it belongs to the same citrus-minded household. It takes the sharpness people associate with Rose's and puts it somewhere much more domestic: toast, crumpets, a slice of bread eaten standing at the counter because the kettle has just boiled and nobody is pretending this is fine dining.
The jar people go looking for
British shoppers in Canada often search for Rose's Lime Marmalade because it is specific. Not just marmalade, not just citrus spread, but the lime one, in the familiar Rose's world. It has the slightly old-fashioned confidence of a jar that expects to live beside the butter and be used properly. For expats, it can bring back hotel breakfast racks, grandparents' cupboards, or the strange seriousness with which British families discuss marmalade preference. Orange, thick cut, thin cut, lemon, lime: these things matter more than outsiders understand. Quietly, that is why The Great British Shop keeps jars like this within reach.