About Mcvitie's Digestives Original
About Mcvitie's Digestives Original
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
| Nutrition Facts Valeur nutritive | ||
|---|---|---|
| Per 100g | Per Biscuit | |
| Energy / Γnergie | 483 kcal | 71 kcal |
| Fat / Lipides | 21.3 g | 3.1 g |
| Saturated / saturΓ©s | 10.1 g | 1.5 g |
| Carbohydrate / Glucides | 63.6 g | 9.3 g |
| Sugars / Sucres | 15.1 g | 2.2 g |
| Fibre / Fibres | 3.7 g | 0.5 g |
| Protein / ProtΓ©ines | 7.0 g | 1.0 g |
| Salt / Sel | 1.3 g | 0.2 g |
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: wheat.
May contain: milk.
Contient : wheat.
Peut contenir : milk.
Frequently asked questions about Mcvitie's Digestives Original
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 | Per Biscuit | |
| Energy / Γnergie | 483 kcal | 71 kcal |
| Fat / Lipides | 21.3 g | 3.1 g |
| Saturated / saturΓ©s | 10.1 g | 1.5 g |
| Carbohydrate / Glucides | 63.6 g | 9.3 g |
| Sugars / Sucres | 15.1 g | 2.2 g |
| Fibre / Fibres | 3.7 g | 0.5 g |
| Protein / ProtΓ©ines | 7.0 g | 1.0 g |
| Salt / Sel | 1.3 g | 0.2 g |
Values are typical and may vary. Always check the pack on delivery for the most accurate information.
The story of Mcvitie's Digestives Original
The biscuit that knows its place
McVitie's Digestives Original is not a show-off biscuit. It sits in the cupboard, waits for the kettle, and behaves as though half the British tea table would fall into chaos without it. It has the plain, wheaty, slightly sweet character that makes it useful in almost any domestic situation: with tea, with cheese if you are that sort of household, or as the emergency biscuit when someone says they do not want anything fancy. In Britain, the digestive is less a novelty than a fixture. It is the biscuit equivalent of a sensible cardigan, and frankly that is meant as praise.
Read the full story
From Rose Street to the biscuit tin
Robert McVitie was born in Dumfries in 1809 and moved to Edinburgh in 1834 after serving a baker's apprenticeship. He initially operated a provision shop at 130 Rose Street, just north of Princes Street in Edinburgh's New Town. By 1856, the business was being described as a baker and confectioner rather than a provision shop, which suggests the shelves were gradually giving way to ovens and a more serious baking trade. That is the useful bit of the McVitie's story here: not a grand corporate beginning polished smooth for a leaflet, but a Scottish food business that grew from practical shopkeeping into baking, then into the sort of biscuit name people now recognise without squinting at the packet.
The arrival of the digestive
The McVitie's digestive biscuit was first manufactured in 1892. It is closely associated with Alexander Grant, an experienced biscuit maker from Forres who had joined the company a few years earlier. The name βdigestiveβ came from the period belief that the biscuit's baking soda content could help digestion. Modern shoppers may take that with the raised eyebrow it deserves, but the name stuck, and the biscuit certainly did. The important thing is that the Original Digestive was not a spin-off from a modern snack range. It belongs to the older part of British biscuit history, when a good plain biscuit could become a household standard by being reliable, affordable, and very good at sitting next to a mug of tea without causing a fuss.
Edinburgh, Gorgie, and the business of biscuits
McVitie's moved into larger-scale production as the business grew, with the St Andrews Biscuit Works in the Gorgie district of Edinburgh completed in 1888. That timing matters because it puts the digestive into the world of late Victorian industrial baking, when British biscuits were becoming less of a local bakery item and more of a national cupboard staple. McVitie & Price was part of that shift. The company later expanded beyond Scotland, including a Harlesden factory in north-west London built in 1902, but the roots of the digestive sit firmly with the Edinburgh business and the Scottish biscuit-making tradition behind it. Corporate history often tidies this into a neat arrow pointing towards the modern packet. Real food history is usually messier, with shops, bakers, factories, family firms, mergers, and many cups of tea along the way.
The modern packet name
The McVitie's name has travelled through a fair bit of ownership history. McVitie & Price merged with Macfarlane, Lang & Co. in 1948 to form United Biscuits, and United Biscuits was acquired by YΔ±ldΔ±z Holding in 2014 before becoming part of Pladis. That matters only because it explains why an old Scottish biscuit now sits inside a modern brand family with Jaffa Cakes, Hobnobs, Rich Tea, and chocolate digestives. It does not change the basic point of the Original Digestive. This is still the plain round biscuit people mean when they say βDigestivesβ with the confidence of someone who assumes everyone else understands the biscuit hierarchy. In many British homes, that assumption is entirely fair.
Why it still matters in Canada
For British shoppers in Canada, McVitie's Digestives Original is often less about discovery and more about recognition. It is the packet that belonged in a grandparents' cupboard, a student kitchen, a work tea round, or the emergency biscuit tin brought out when visitors arrived and nobody had made a cake. It is also the biscuit that reminds you how specific British groceries can be. A digestive is not just a βwheat biscuitβ, whatever that means. It has a particular snap, a particular crumble, and a particular habit of making tea feel properly organised. If you are restocking the cupboard from Halifax, Nova Scotia rather than Halifax, Yorkshire, The Great British Shop is a quiet little bridge back to the biscuit tin, which is more emotionally important than anyone sensible would admit.