Dubai Telegraph - Traditional UK sweet factory enjoys global sugar rush

EUR -
AED 3.829254
AFN 77.120333
ALL 98.45362
AMD 415.961005
ANG 1.868834
AOA 953.40854
ARS 1090.759395
AUD 1.661058
AWG 1.876584
AZN 1.741646
BAM 1.958866
BBD 2.093787
BDT 126.247593
BGN 1.957762
BHD 0.392953
BIF 3068.004532
BMD 1.042547
BND 1.410325
BOB 7.165387
BRL 6.293018
BSD 1.036913
BTN 89.749761
BWP 14.432658
BYN 3.393528
BYR 20433.915623
BZD 2.08297
CAD 1.493495
CDF 2955.62016
CHF 0.944156
CLF 0.037926
CLP 1046.48727
CNY 7.580826
CNH 7.587341
COP 4493.84549
CRC 520.912795
CUC 1.042547
CUP 27.627488
CVE 110.440501
CZK 25.147477
DJF 184.65724
DKK 7.461126
DOP 63.619267
DZD 140.421798
EGP 52.455529
ERN 15.638201
ETB 130.010506
FJD 2.41115
FKP 0.858628
GBP 0.84452
GEL 2.971838
GGP 0.858628
GHS 15.690943
GIP 0.858628
GMD 75.584486
GNF 8962.867397
GTQ 8.002717
GYD 216.954764
HKD 8.119943
HNL 26.395058
HRK 7.693524
HTG 135.362508
HUF 412.446066
IDR 16890.716356
ILS 3.694958
IMP 0.858628
INR 90.092196
IQD 1358.445682
IRR 43878.181978
ISK 145.904613
JEP 0.858628
JMD 163.436582
JOD 0.739475
JPY 162.399065
KES 134.74924
KGS 91.170523
KHR 4177.558435
KMF 499.536277
KPW 938.29216
KRW 1495.095454
KWD 0.321333
KYD 0.864165
KZT 543.348225
LAK 22634.751871
LBP 92860.283264
LKR 308.387101
LRD 204.282667
LSL 19.33235
LTL 3.078369
LVL 0.630626
LYD 5.106944
MAD 10.409942
MDL 19.422492
MGA 4860.630804
MKD 61.549011
MMK 3386.151065
MNT 3542.573851
MOP 8.317037
MRU 41.084105
MUR 48.44704
MVR 16.060448
MWK 1798.12291
MXN 21.458478
MYR 4.62943
MZN 66.61549
NAD 19.332536
NGN 1616.353874
NIO 38.154776
NOK 11.751988
NPR 143.596369
NZD 1.837978
OMR 0.401314
PAB 1.036948
PEN 3.873663
PGK 4.222589
PHP 60.886838
PKR 289.103196
PLN 4.249787
PYG 8219.786146
QAR 3.780207
RON 4.97649
RSD 117.131189
RUB 102.733201
RWF 1453.782323
SAR 3.911301
SBD 8.828294
SCR 15.236944
SDG 626.57045
SEK 11.447882
SGD 1.410706
SHP 0.858628
SLE 23.717701
SLL 21861.683267
SOS 592.630383
SRD 36.598613
STD 21578.612117
SVC 9.073331
SYP 13555.192379
SZL 19.328158
THB 35.260491
TJS 11.303053
TMT 3.648914
TND 3.315368
TOP 2.441747
TRY 37.170338
TTD 7.042123
TWD 34.132833
TZS 2614.187134
UAH 43.695098
UGX 3831.578073
USD 1.042547
UYU 45.592013
UZS 13464.39633
VES 57.580505
VND 26246.113562
VUV 123.773239
WST 2.919993
XAF 656.98842
XAG 0.033781
XAU 0.000378
XCD 2.817534
XDR 0.798954
XOF 656.978952
XPF 119.331742
YER 259.594228
ZAR 19.262119
ZMK 9384.17324
ZMW 28.853297
ZWL 335.699617
  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    7.3

    +0.41%

  • CMSC

    0.3000

    23.55

    +1.27%

  • RBGPF

    0.1600

    62.36

    +0.26%

  • SCS

    0.1000

    11.8

    +0.85%

  • NGG

    2.0600

    61.59

    +3.34%

  • BTI

    0.4300

    36.73

    +1.17%

  • AZN

    1.3600

    67.96

    +2%

  • GSK

    0.3500

    33.78

    +1.04%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    8.55

    +0.82%

  • RIO

    0.6300

    61.73

    +1.02%

  • RELX

    1.3800

    49.55

    +2.79%

  • BCC

    1.1500

    129.12

    +0.89%

  • CMSD

    0.4100

    24

    +1.71%

  • BCE

    0.2400

    23.39

    +1.03%

  • JRI

    0.1900

    12.57

    +1.51%

  • BP

    -0.1700

    31.52

    -0.54%

Traditional UK sweet factory enjoys global sugar rush
Traditional UK sweet factory enjoys global sugar rush

Traditional UK sweet factory enjoys global sugar rush

Edward Gray sweet factory in central England evokes a bygone age where brass cauldrons steam with molten sugar and workers wrestle with huge chunks of gooey treacle, but its handmade produce now enjoys a global demand.

Text size:

The company -- also known as "Teddy Grays" -- dates back to 1826 when John Gray went house-to-house in a horse and cart buying homemade sweets, before selling them to retailers.

But it was his son Edward, an entrepreneur in the mould of Willy Wonka and Colonel Sanders, who built the business's name.

The small factory in Dudley now makes around five tonnes of boiled sweets a week, with products including rhubarb and custard, pineapple rock, strawberries and cream, pear drops, toffee and chocolate-coated coconut ice.

But the jewel in the crown is its "Herbal Tablet", a menthol sweet that it claims has provided relief from "cold nights and mornings" for more than 100 years.

"It's an acquired taste, but with Covid now, it relieves coughs and colds," explained Dave Healy, the company's marketing manager.

- Secret recipe -

The secret recipe is locked in a vault in a nearby bank. Two descendants of the founder are the only people alive aware of its contents.

"They wouldn't tell me because I talk in my sleep," joked Healy. "It's all down to the blending, if you don't get the blend correct, you get an oily taste."

The sweet was only really known in the surrounding area, known as the Black Country because of the smoke and soot of its industrial past.

But the fashion towards local and artisan produce, coupled with endorsements from celebrities such as actor and writer Stephen Fry, has seen its fame spread.

"When Covid kicked in we opened an online sweet shop... just to basically generate some sort of movement of the stock," said Healy.

"But we've had requests from America, Korea, Japan, Australia."

A lot of the interest comes from those who moved long ago out of Dudley, some 10 miles (16 kilometres) west of Birmingham, and who are yearning for a taste of nostalgia.

"They say in their emails they used to live in Dudley, used to love the smell of the factory," he said.

- Another fine mess -

Despite the incessant demand, the factory has no plans to expand, preferring to maintain its intimate feel and traditional ethos.

"Because the old-fashioned machines only go so fast, the only way you're speeding up is by putting on a smaller cog so it spins faster.

"But you can't expand the factory because it's in a residential street. It is a museum-status factory..., you couldn't develop it."

Healy warned that counterfeit herbal pills were on the market, and to look out instead for the logo of a Wirehaired Fox Terrier on the packet.

The logo harks back to Edward "Teddy" Gray, who was also a champion dog-breeder and once won the world-renowned Crufts dog show.

"In them days, the old Mr Gray was very much like a celebrity in his area," said Healy.

"They were proper well-to-do, mixing with the stars like Laurel and Hardy," he added.

"Apparently, the story goes that Laurel and Hardy actually stopped at the factory.

"There's a house in the middle of the factory. When Laurel and Hardy came to perform at the Hippodrome, Ted Gray offered them somewhere to stop for the night."

While having to sleep overnight in a sweet factory might sound like a preamble to one of their calamitous adventures, the pair reportedly had a pleasant time and "wrote to say thank you for being such a wonderful host".

- Soaring costs -

Although demand is soaring, the firm is suffering from the current supply chain issues and soaring inflation.

"We had terrible problems getting the sugar in October, then it went from sugar to glucose in December," explained Healy.

"Glucose is going up 50 percent. Their gas bill has gone up 300 percent, the glucose people.

"We couldn't put our stuff up 50 percent, they wouldn't stand it."

Whatever the supply constraints, it is unlikely he will go without his fix.

"I eat them all the time. Someone's got to test them, it's like a quality control. It's not a bad thing, though I wish it was a brewery."

A.El-Ahbaby--DT