About McVitie's Penguin Orange
About McVitie's Penguin Orange
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: milk, soya, wheat.
Contient : Lait, Soya, BlΓ©.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about McVitie's Penguin Orange
More about McVitie's Penguin Orange
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 McVitie's Penguin Orange
The orange Penguin in the biscuit tin
McVitie's Penguin Orange is not a biscuit trying to be mysterious. It is a chocolate covered biscuit bar with orange flavour in the middle of the story, and that is very much the point. For many British shoppers, Penguins belong to school lunchboxes, office drawers, swimming bag snacks and that bit of the cupboard where individually wrapped things somehow vanish faster than loose biscuits. The orange version adds a small citrus nudge to a format already built for practical British snacking: biscuit, cream, chocolate coating, wrapper, job done.
Read the full story
A McVitie's story, not a tidy Penguin origin tale
There is no supplied product-level origin story here, so it would be a bit cheeky to pretend we can trace this exact orange Penguin back to one dramatic moment in biscuit history. What we can say is that it sits under the McVitie's name, one of the great familiar names of British biscuit shelves. McVitie's is widely described as the best-selling biscuit manufacturer in the United Kingdom, known for Jaffa Cakes, Chocolate Digestives, Hobnobs and Rich Tea. Under United Biscuits ownership, McVitie's also held a Royal Warrant from Queen Elizabeth II. In 2022, the brand closed its last factory in Scotland, ending a long stretch of Scottish manufacturing heritage, which is the sort of fact that makes a biscuit packet feel unexpectedly weighty.
From Edinburgh provision shop to biscuit shorthand
The McVitie's name goes back to Robert McVitie and the Scottish biscuit maker McVitie and Price, with roots on Rose Street in Edinburgh. The early business began as a provision shop and, by the mid nineteenth century, was being described as a baker and confectioner. That is a very British sort of evolution: start with practical goods, end up becoming part of the national tea habit. The St Andrews Biscuit Works in Edinburgh's Gorgie district opened in the late nineteenth century, and the company later expanded beyond Scotland, including the Harlesden site in north-west London. The story is not one neat line, because food companies rarely are, but the McVitie's name has been attached to British biscuit life for generations.
Why the name carries so much cupboard authority
McVitie's became more than a maker of individual biscuits because its products settled into ordinary routines. Digestives, Rich Tea, Chocolate Digestives and Jaffa Cakes all occupy that peculiar British space between household staple and emotional support item. Penguin bars fit the same world, even if their own supplied history is not laid out here. They are not formal biscuits for a plate and napkin. They are wrapper biscuits, car biscuits, lunchbox biscuits, the thing you eat while pretending one will be enough. The orange version keeps that same dependable shape but gives it a brighter flavour, which is just enough variation without causing a national identity crisis.
The modern packet and the messy business behind it
Like many British grocery names, McVitie's has passed through larger company structures. McVitie and Price merged with Macfarlane, Lang and Co. in 1948 to form United Biscuits. United Biscuits was later acquired by YΔ±ldΔ±z Holding in 2014 and is now part of Pladis. That corporate trail explains why a very familiar British packet can have a rather international business card behind it. Still, shoppers generally do not stand in front of the biscuit shelf thinking about mergers. They recognise the red McVitie's name, the Penguin branding, and the promise of a biscuit bar that behaves exactly as expected. Quite right too. Life is complicated enough without making snack selection into a boardroom exercise.
Why it travels well for British shoppers in Canada
For British expats in Canada, McVitie's Penguin Orange is one of those products that brings back the small details rather than the grand occasions. A multipack in the cupboard. A bar slipped into a packed lunch. Someone reading the joke on the wrapper before the biscuit has even been properly unwrapped. It is not rarefied nostalgia. It is ordinary, which is why it works. The orange flavour may not be everyoneβs first Penguin memory, but the format is instantly familiar. For anyone building a parcel, restocking a British shelf, or just wanting a recognisable biscuit bar without explaining themselves, this is exactly the sort of thing that earns its place. A quiet nod from The Great British Shop, and the kettle can take it from there.