About Werther's Original Sugar Free Butter Candy
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrédients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: Milk (Butter), Milk (Cream), Soya (Lecithin).
Contient : Milk (Butter), Milk (Cream), Soya (Lecithin).
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Werther's Original Sugar Free Butter Candy
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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 Werther's Original Sugar Free Butter Candy
A sugar free sweet with very old-fashioned manners
Werther's Original Sugar Free Butter Candy is not the loud sort of sweet. It does not arrive covered in neon dust or shaped like something from a chemistry lesson. It is a small wrapped butter candy, made for slow unwrapping, pocket keeping, and that very British habit of offering someone a sweet as if it might solve most of the afternoon. This 65g bag is the sugar free version of a familiar caramel and butter sweet, so the memory is doing half the work before the wrapper is even off.
Read the full story
The brand story, rather than a made-up packet origin
There is no need to pretend this particular sugar free bag has a grand origin tale of its own. The better story is the Werther's one behind it. August Oberwelland, born August Storck, lived from 1859 to 1924, and the confectionery business connected with his name grew into August Storck KG. Werther's Original is a caramel and butter confectionery brand owned by August Storck, the German company based in Berlin. The parent company was founded in 1903 by August Storck, who later changed his name to August Oberwelland. That is the solid bit of the family tree, before marketing departments began polishing everything until it shone.
Werther, Westphalia, and the sweet name on the wrapper
The name Werther's comes from Werther in Westphalia, where the company began in 1903. The early business was a small candy factory on the Oberwellandhof estate, reportedly starting with only three employees and supplying local retailers. It is a pleasingly modest beginning for a sweet that later became familiar on shelves far beyond Germany. Werther itself is in North Rhine-Westphalia, near the Teutoburg Forest and not far from Bielefeld, which gives the name a proper place rather than the slightly dreamy village suggested by the adverts.
From Werthers Echte to Werther's Original
The caramel hard candy now known internationally as Werther's Original was first marketed in 1969 under the German name Werthers Echte. The international name Werther's Original was adopted in the 1990s, which is why the packet looks so at home in British shops despite the brand being German in origin. Later versions expanded beyond the original hard caramel sweet into formats such as chewy toffees and softer butterscotch-style sweets. Sugar free butter candy belongs to that wider modern family, carrying the same butter-caramel character without being the original 1969 sweet itself.
Why Britain took to it so thoroughly
Werther's is not British confectionery, but Britain rather adopted it. The flavour sits comfortably beside boiled sweets, toffees, barley sugars, and all the other things found in handbags, glove boxes, and tins that once held sewing bits. The television adverts from the late 1980s helped too, especially the kindly older man offering Werther's butterscotch to a boy. In the UK, Arnold Peters appeared in those well-known ads. They were sentimental, certainly, but effective. A whole generation can still hear the general tone of them, whether they asked to or not.
The modern packet and the memory it carries
Today, Werther's sweets are associated with August Storck and are manufactured near the original founding area, in Halle. That continuity of place is useful, though the real pull for many shoppers is simpler: the gold wrapper, the buttery smell, the cupboard familiarity. For British expats in Canada, Werther's Original Sugar Free Butter Candy often sits in that category of things people do not think they miss until they see the bag. Then suddenly it is grandparents, car journeys, newsagent counters, and someone producing a sweet from a coat pocket with the seriousness of a public service.
A quiet sweet for a long way from home
This sugar free version keeps the familiar Werther's character in a smaller, practical bag, the sort that can live in a desk drawer without causing too much drama. It is not trying to be fashionable, which is probably part of the appeal. Some sweets are bought because they are exciting. Others are bought because they know exactly what they are and have no interest in explaining themselves. For a taste that British shoppers in Canada recognise with slightly embarrassing speed, The Great British Shop is happy to leave the wrapper-rustling to you.