About Walker's Nonsuch English Creamy Toffee
About Walker's Nonsuch English Creamy Toffee
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: milk, soya.
May contain: nuts.
Contient : Lait, Soya.
Peut contenir : Noix.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Walker's Nonsuch English Creamy Toffee
More about Walker's Nonsuch English Creamy Toffee
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

Values are typical and may vary. Always check the pack on delivery for the most accurate information.
The story of Walker's Nonsuch English Creamy Toffee
A Proper Piece of Toffee Business
Walkerβs Nonsuch English Creamy Toffee is not trying to be mysterious. It is toffee, in the old British sense: firm enough to make you respect it, creamy enough to keep you going back, and wrapped in the sort of packet that looks as if it belongs in a family cupboard beside the tea bags and the emergency biscuits. The 150g bag is a familiar format for people who like their sweets individually wrapped, partly for sharing and partly for creating the illusion of sensible pacing. Toffee has always had that slightly practical side. It is sweet, yes, but also something to tuck into a coat pocket, keep in the car, or post across an ocean to someone who has been making pointed remarks about Canadian confectionery.
Read the full story
Longton Before the Packet
Longton was, when Walkerβs Nonsuch was founded, an independent municipal borough in Staffordshire, and it later became part of Stoke-on-Trent in 1910. Before that, it had been a market town in the parish of Stoke, becoming the Borough of Longton in 1865. The wider Stoke-on-Trent area is known as The Potteries, long associated with pottery and ceramics, and with the working life that came with kilns, factories, shifts, soot, and strong tea. That background matters because Walkerβs Nonsuch comes out of a place where ordinary pleasures had to earn their keep. A bag of toffee was not a grand gesture. It was small, sturdy, sweet, and very much at home in an industrial town.
The Walker Family Name
Walkerβs Nonsuch was founded in 1894 by Edward Joseph Walker and his son Edward Victor Walker. That father-and-son beginning is useful to know, not because it turns every sweet into a sepia photograph, but because it places the brand in the period when British confectionery was becoming a much more everyday part of life. Sugar, machinery, transport, and busy towns all helped make sweets more widely available. The exact story of this English Creamy Toffee as a separate product is not supplied here, so it is better not to pretend otherwise. What can be said is that it belongs to a brand built around toffee, and one that has kept Longton, Stoke-on-Trent, firmly attached to its identity.
What βNonsuchβ Is Doing There
The word βNonsuchβ is one of those old English flourishes that sounds a little grand on a sweet packet, which is probably part of the charm. It means βnone suchβ, in the sense of unequalled, and has a long history in English naming, from buildings to ships and other ambitious things. On a bag of toffee, it feels cheerfully confident. British grocery shelves have always had room for names that make large claims in small print, and βNonsuchβ manages to sound both historical and faintly like something your nan would say while defending her preferred brand. It is not subtle, but then toffee has never been a shy food.
Creamy Toffee and the British Cupboard
English Creamy Toffee sits in a very particular corner of British memory. It is not the bright pick-and-mix sort of sweet, nor the chocolate bar bought in a hurry at the newsagent. It is more cupboard-based. It appears after Sunday lunch, on long car journeys, at Christmas, in office drawers, and in the homes of relatives who believe a wrapped sweet counts as hospitality. The texture is part of the point: slower than a boiled sweet, more determined than fudge, and capable of making conversation pause while everyone deals with the first chew. There is a modest ceremony to unwrapping a piece, even if nobody would admit to anything so dramatic.
Why It Travels Well Emotionally
For British shoppers in Canada, this sort of toffee can carry more weight than its 150g suggests. It is the kind of thing that turns up in parcels from home, or gets requested with alarming specificity by someone who says they are βnot fussedβ and then names three exact brands. Walkerβs Nonsuch English Creamy Toffee has that recognisable British steadiness: no need for reinvention, no great performance, just a bag of proper toffee doing what people remember it doing. The Great British Shop keeps it in the mix for exactly that quiet cupboard feeling, the one where a single wrapped sweet somehow turns into a small, chewy argument with homesickness.