About Colman's Chilli Con Carne Mix
About Colman's Chilli Con Carne Mix
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: gluten, wheat.
May contain: rye, barley, oat, egg, soya, milk, celery, mustard.
Contient : Gluten, BlΓ©.
Peut contenir : rye, barley, oat, egg, soya, milk, celery, mustard.
StorageConservation
More about Colman's Chilli Con Carne Mix
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 Colman's Chilli Con Carne Mix
The packet that sorts out chilli night
Colman's Chilli Con Carne Mix is not pretending to be an ancient family recipe from a dusty border town, and thank goodness for that. It is a British cupboard sachet, which is a different and very recognisable thing. You brown the mince, add the tomatoes and kidney beans, tip in the mix, and dinner begins to look as if someone had a plan. In many British kitchens, that is the entire point of a packet like this: not drama, not ceremony, just a reliable nudge towards a proper tea when the day has already used up most of your patience.
Read the full story
A Colman's story, rather than a chilli origin myth
There is no strongly sourced product-origin tale for this particular chilli con carne mix, so the honest heritage here belongs to the Colman's name on the front. Colman's began by selling mustard powder in its trademark yellow tin, introduced in 1814. From 1855, the firm introduced the distinctive yellow packaging and bull's-head logo that became part of the British grocery landscape. In 1866, Colman's was granted the Royal Warrant as manufacturers of mustard to Queen Victoria, and the Royal Household has continued to use Colman's. That is quite a journey for something that often sits next to the gravy granules and gets taken for granted.
Norfolk, mustard seed, and the long shadow of yellow packaging
The company began with Jeremiah Colman, a Norfolk-born miller who bought the mustard business of Edward Ames in 1814 and moved it to Stoke Holy Cross, a mill on the River Tas a few miles south of Norwich. Colman's became closely tied to Norwich and Norfolk, first through mustard milling and later through the larger Carrow Works site in the city. The original fame came from mustard, especially the sharp English blend associated with brown and white mustard seeds, but the brand eventually spread across condiments, sauces and recipe mixes. So when a chilli con carne sachet carries the Colman's name, it is borrowing from a long British habit of trusting that yellow packet to do something useful at mealtimes.
From mustard mill to recipe mix shelf
Colman's history has had the usual food-company complications, because British grocery brands rarely move in a straight line. Jeremiah Colman brought his nephew James into the business in 1823, creating J. & J. Colman. The firm later grew at Carrow Works, merged with Reckitt and Sons in 1938, and the Colman's food business became part of Unilever in 1995. Those ownership changes help explain why a brand born in mustard now appears on sachets for casseroles, pasta sauces, shepherd's pie and chilli con carne. It does not mean the chilli mix dates back to 1814. It means the modern packet sits inside a much older British pantry family, with all the odd continuity that implies.
Why British shoppers recognise it instantly
For a lot of people, Colman's recipe mixes are not really about showing off. They are about the cupboard above the kettle, the emergency tea plan, and the small comfort of seeing a familiar packet when the fridge contains mince, half an onion, and a worrying amount of optimism. Chilli con carne became a standard British home-dinner dish in its own way, often served with rice, sometimes with a jacket potato, and very often adjusted according to what was actually in the house. Colman's version belongs to that practical school of cooking: measured seasoning, familiar instructions, and no requirement to become a different person before six o'clock.
A small yellow reminder of home
In Canada, this sort of packet can feel oddly specific. There are plenty of seasoning mixes on shelves, but they do not always scratch the same itch as the one you remember from a British supermarket run, or from a parcel sent by family with tea bags, gravy, and something sweet tucked in around the edges. Colman's Chilli Con Carne Mix carries a bit of that everyday British logic with it: supper should be warm, filling, reasonably straightforward, and preferably not involve three saucepans unless someone else is washing up. For British shoppers abroad, that is often enough. A quiet sign-off from The Great British Shop, and a reminder that even chilli can be homesick.