Selfridges are celebrating that British sugary delight, Golden Syrup, in one of their Christmas windows this year.
Personally, I adore this gooey, golden treacle. Drizzle copiously over porridge for heaven on a winter morning, or simply squidge it on buttered toast at any time of day. It seems that the Royal Family like it too, for it was awarded a Royal Warrant in 1911.
Abram Lyle, a Scottish sugar producer based in Greenock opened a new sugar refinery at Plaistow in London in 1881. The story goes that they experienced supply problems that almost brought their work to a halt, upon which Lyle determined to find a new product to keep them going. As it happened, the sugar cane refining process already produced a treacle-like syrup that usually went to waste, but chemist Charles Eastick formulated a method of refining it to make a preserve and sweetener for cooking. Lyle’s golden syrup was the delicious result.
The green and golden tins are well known and much loved in Britain. Indeed, in 2006 Guinness World Records declared the mark to be Britain’s oldest brand. However, not many people would be able to tell you exactly what is on the tin. If you look closely at the photo above you’ll see that it features a lion. But what about the dots?
The picture is, in fact, the rotting carcass of a lion plagued by a swarm of bees. The slogan “Out of the strong came forth sweetness” is a reference to the Biblical story from the Book of Judges in which Samson was travelling to the land of the Philistines in search of a wife. During the journey he killed a lion, and when he passed the same spot on his return he noticed that a swarm of bees had formed a comb of honey in the carcass. Samson later turned this into a riddle at a wedding: “Out of the eater came forth meat and out of the strong came forth sweetness”.
In 1921 Lyle’s business merged with Tate, a sugar-refining firm created in Liverpool in 1859 by Sir Henry Tate (the man who founded the Tate Gallery) and with a factory in Silvertown, very close to Lyle’s Plaistow factory. The resulting company was Tate & Lyle.
Tate & Lyle was one of the most sought after factories to work at: they offered good wages and working conditions, plus a great social life. Many generations of the same family worked there and demonstrated a fierce loyalty to the company. To discover more about the company’s history and what it was like to work at these East End factories during and after World War II, read the 2012 book, Sugar Girls by Duncan Barrett and Nuala Calvi.
The Liverpool plant closed in 1981 and the Greenock plant closed during the 1990s, while the Plaistow and Silvertown plants were sold to American Sugar Refining in 2010. You can still see the two London factories at either end of the old Sugar Mile if you take a ride on the Docklands Light Railway:
Linked to Frizztext’s Tagged SSS Challenge, ABC Wednesday and Alphabe Thursday.
Very cool story on the history of syrup and sugar. Thanks for recommending the book too, will check it out!
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sweet story!
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LOL
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What an interesting story about the lion picture on the tin! I love the Selfridges display of the pouring syrup…. I watched a facinating PBS series about the beginnings of Selfridges and it’s now starting up for another season. Mr. Selfridge was certainly a very forward thinking man! His window displays were impressive and the first of their kind.
Great post and great photos!
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Lovely photos ~ very creative and great for S ~ sweet ^_^
artmusedog and carol
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We had this sweet treat out in South Africa when I was a child in the same tin. I probably thought then that it was made in South Africa! Connecting Lions and Sugar Cane which grows there abundantly in Natal. My favourite, yum yum! Liz
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How interesting!
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Love the Selfridges window display. (I watched about three episodes of Mr. Selfridge today.) We lived in England for four years (about 13 years ago), but I don’t remember Golden Syrup! I think maybe I missed out on something great!
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Oh you did. You need to come back!
On Thu, Mar 27, 2014 at 12:36 AM, Travel with Intent wrote:
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I love the Selfridges window display, the ‘train’ especially. Almost makes me want to add a tin in the weekly shop although its years since I bought any. It was an essential item in my hiking rucksack as a teenager, on a sandwich wrapped in foil, which crisped by the time I ate it. There may be more sophisticated energy boosts nowadays but none as delicious.
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Interesting they would use the story from the Bible of Samson and the riddle of the honey coming out of the Lion. How sweet it is!!!!
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I have always wondered what golden sugar was and now I know. thanks. I love the cans!
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Indeed a Sweet post.
I would prefer that Sweet Syrup any day!
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Great photos and interesting post! Thank you.
Wil, ABCW Team.
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SWEET! But the economics of it all is quite complex, I guess.
ROG, ABCW
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Love this sweet post! Those window decorations are splendid, too!
Leslie
abcw team
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The sugar sounds so delightful. I love the cans pouring out the gooeyness.
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All those years I used to eat Golden Syrup, its the first time I’ve taken any notice of the lion and the dots.
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Same here! I’m glad really – it might have put me off. Had it this morning for breakfast as writing this post suddenly gave me a sugar craving!
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What an interesting history. I also love the syrup-statues and cans. Wonder which material they used.
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thanks for sharing! as a sweet toothed scot i am afraid to admit i frequently had my spoon in the tin was i was small.
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Ah…I did so love lyle’s golden syrup when I was in Africa. Haven’t seen it in years!
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that’s a sweet story!
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