About Rowntree's Fruit Pastille Pouch
About Rowntree's Fruit Pastille Pouch
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
| Nutrition Facts Valeur nutritive | |
|---|---|
| Per 100g | |
| Energy / Énergie | 355.0 kcal |
| Fat / Lipides | g |
| Saturated / saturés | g |
| Carbohydrate / Glucides | g |
| Sugars / Sucres | 85.0 g |
| Fibre / Fibres | g |
| Protein / Protéines | g |
| Salt / Sel | 0.4 g |
IngredientsIngrédients
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Rowntree's Fruit Pastille Pouch
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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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| Nutrition Facts Valeur nutritive | |
|---|---|
| Per 100g pour 100g | |
| Energy / Énergie | 355.0 kcal |
| Fat / Lipides | g |
| Saturated / saturés | g |
| Carbohydrate / Glucides | g |
| Sugars / Sucres | 85.0 g |
| Fibre / Fibres | g |
| Protein / Protéines | g |
| Salt / Sel | 0.4 g |
Values are typical and may vary. Always check the pack on delivery for the most accurate information.
The story of Rowntree's Fruit Pastille Pouch
The little sugar-dusted argument for fruit sweets
Rowntree's Fruit Pastilles are not quiet sweets. They arrive with a dusting of sugar, a firm chew, and the sort of fruit flavour that seems designed to make people pick a favourite colour and then behave as though this is a matter of principle. The 114g pouch is the modern, shareable version, although “shareable” has always been more of a suggestion than a binding agreement. For many British shoppers, Fruit Pastilles sit somewhere between corner-shop pocket money and the sweet aisle at the end of a weekly shop, bright, chewy, and oddly hard to leave alone once the bag is open.
Read the full story
Fruit Pastilles before the pouch
Fruit Pastilles have a proper Rowntree's history behind them. The sweets were introduced in 1881, at a time when Rowntree's was competing with French imports and still building its reputation in British confectionery. They were an early success for the York business, reportedly making up a significant share of the company's output by the later 1880s. That matters because this is not just a modern brand name placed on a random jelly sweet. Fruit Pastilles are one of the old Rowntree's lines, with roots deep enough to explain why so many people remember them from childhood without quite remembering when they first appeared in the cupboard.
York, Quakers, and a rather serious sweet business
Rowntree's began in 1862 at Castlegate in York, when Henry Isaac Rowntree bought the chocolate, cocoa-making and chicory departments of the Tuke family business. He was a Quaker, as were several important British confectionery families, and the company grew in a city that became closely tied to its identity. Production moved to a former iron foundry at Tanner's Moat in 1864, and Henry's brother Joseph joined as a full partner in 1869 after the business ran into financial difficulty. Corporate histories often make that sort of thing sound tidy. It was probably less tidy at the time, but it did lead to one of Britain's best-known confectionery names.
From family firm to familiar packet
In 1969, Rowntree's merged with John Mackintosh and Sons Ltd. to form Rowntree Mackintosh plc, bringing names such as Rolo and Quality Street into the same wider family. In 1981, Rowntree's received the Queen's Award for Enterprise for its contribution to international trade. By the time Nestlé acquired Rowntree's in 1988, the company was described as the fourth-largest confectionery manufacturer in the world. That later ownership explains why the modern packet sits under the Rowntree's name while belonging to a much larger confectionery world. The sweet itself, though, still points back to York and to the Fruit Pastilles first introduced more than a century before the current pouch format.
The tube, the bag, and the British sweet shelf
Fruit Pastilles were long associated with the familiar tube packaging, which Rowntree's began using for pastilles from 1928, following Fruit Gums the year before. The pouch is a later, practical format, easier for car journeys, lunchboxes, cinema pockets and kitchen drawers that are pretending not to contain sweets. What has stayed recognisable is the basic ritual: choose a colour, chew for longer than expected, briefly consider saving the blackcurrant ones, then fail. British sweets have many strange loyalties, and Fruit Pastilles inspire a surprisingly firm one. People do not just remember the flavour. They remember the texture, the sugar on the fingers, and the negotiation over who gets the last red one.
A small taste of the sweet aisle back home
For British expats in Canada, Rowntree's Fruit Pastilles can feel less like a novelty and more like a small correction to the universe. They belong to newsagent shelves, grandparents' glove compartments, school trips, and those family parcels where someone has sensibly padded the tea bags with sweets. The pouch may be modern, but the memory is older and stickier. It is the sort of thing people add to a basket because they “haven't had those in ages”, which is usually true for about five minutes after opening. A quiet nod from The Great British Shop, where the homesick sweet tooth is treated as entirely understandable.