Wagon Wheels

This article is about the snack food. For the 1934 film, see Wagon Wheels (1934 film). For the song, see Wagon Wheels (song).
Wagon Wheels

Wagon Wheel circa. 2012 (smaller than its predecessor by a lot to scale)
Type snack food
Place of origin Australia, Canada, United Kingdom
Creator Arnott's Biscuits, Burton's Foods
Main ingredients marshmallow, chocolate flavoured coating
Variations Jammie, Toffee, Double Choc, Caramel, Banoffee
Cookbook: Wagon Wheels  Media: Wagon Wheels

Wagon Wheels are a snack food sold in Australia, Canada, Ireland, the Isle of Man, Malta, Spain, Russia, Dominican Republic, The Middle East[1] and the United Kingdom. They consist of two biscuits with marshmallow sandwich filling, covered in a chocolate flavoured coating.[2]

Wagon Wheels were created by Garry Weston, son of W. Garfield Weston.[2] Garry Weston worked for his father's business in Australia before taking over his family's business in England. The biscuits were launched at the 1948 Olympia Food Fair.[2] The name (originally "Weston Wagon Wheels") relates to the shape of the biscuits and capitalized on the Wild West, which was popular in mass media at the time.

Production and size

In the United Kingdom Wagon Wheels are produced and distributed by Burton's Foods who separated from the Weston family connection when they were sold out of Associated British Foods in 2000.[3] The original factory which produced the biscuit was in Slough but during the early 1980s production was transferred to an updated and modern factory in Llantarnam in South Wales.[2] Weston had been producing biscuits on the Slough site since 1934[4] and the Llantarnam site since 1938.[5]

In Canada, Wagon Wheels were originally produced by McCormick's however, they are now under the Dare Foods Limited name.[2] They come in Original, Fudge, Choco Cherry, and Raspberry flavours.

In Australia, Wagon Wheels are produced by Arnott's Biscuits. George Weston Foods Limited sold the brand to Arnott's in August 2003.[6]

There have been many debates amongst fans of the biscuit about its size. Wagon Wheels have supposedly shrunk in size over time, but Burton's Foods Ltd has denied this. It has been suggested that the supposed shrinkage is due to an adult's childhood memory of eating a Wagon Wheel held in a much smaller hand; this argument is perhaps moot, as it does not explain why the modern Wagon Wheel appears to be fatter than the original. Furthermore, in Australia, Arnott's has stated that tray packs of Wagon Wheels were in fact Mini Wagon Wheels and have re-released the original 48g Wagon Wheels.[7]

The original factory in Slough produced the biscuit with crinkled edges and corn cobbs rather than the updated smoother edges. This caused the overall diameter of the biscuit to shrink slightly, but not as much as fans of the biscuit believe.

Also, although the UK Wagon Wheel has barely shrunk, it is still noticeably smaller than the Australian equivalent. As of 2006 the diameter of the Australian version is measured at 88 mm which is 14 mm larger than the UK version, while the UK Wagon Wheel is notably thicker by 4 mm.[2]

Advertising

Interest in Wagon Wheels was at an all-time peak when the British comedians French and Saunders made a sketch with Jennifer Saunders dressed as a schoolgirl stuffing a Wagon Wheel into her mouth.

British comedians Hale and Pace used Wagon Wheels in their recurring "Curly & Nige" sketches, as the Curly and Nige characters won Wagon Wheels from each other by doing self-mutilating and dangerous bets.

Wagon Wheels are thrown into the audience by Berwick Kaler during the popular annual York Theatre Royal pantomime.[8]

Wagon Wheels were "re-launched" in 2002.

Previous slogans for the product have been:

The current slogan is "You've got to grin to get it in".

Flavours

The original wagon wheel which is now called "chocolate" had a marshmallow centre and not a jam centre.

See also

References

  1. I live in Jordan and my parents just bought some here
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Wagon Wheels". Practically Edible. 4 September 2010. Retrieved 2 February 2011. External link in |work= (help)
  3. Benjamin Wootliff (31 Oct 2000). "Wagon Wheels roll west as ABF sells Burton's". Daily Telegraph.
  4. "1900 - 1945". Slough History. Retrieved 2 February 2011.
  5. "Cwmbran: Llantarnam - The Biscuit Factory and Brickworks". Industrial Monmouthshire - The Leftovers. Phil Jenkins. Retrieved 2 February 2011.
  6. GWF Media Announcement 29 August 2006
  7. Arnotts Wagon Wheels
  8. "Old Mother Goose, York Theatre Royal, review". www.independent.co.uk. 18 Dec 2014. Retrieved 18 June 2016.
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