About Homepride Wine and Cream Cooking Sauce
About Homepride Wine and Cream Cooking Sauce
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrédients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: barley, egg, milk, rye, sulphites, wheat.
Contient : barley, egg, milk, rye, sulphites, wheat.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Homepride Wine and Cream Cooking Sauce
More about Homepride Wine and Cream Cooking Sauce
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 Homepride Wine and Cream Cooking Sauce
A jar for the chicken that needs a plan
Homepride Wine and Cream Cooking Sauce is very much from the British school of cupboard problem-solving. There is chicken. There is probably rice, pasta, or a slightly tired bag of potatoes. There is a need for dinner to become respectable without anyone pretending they have spent the afternoon reducing stock. A 400g jar like this belongs to that familiar category of British pantry help: not fancy, not shouty, just there when the day has got ahead of you.
Read the full story
The sauce story begins after the flour
For this particular jar, the most honest heritage is not a neat origin tale about wine and cream sauce being invented in a picturesque kitchen somewhere. The sourced story is wider than that. In 1974, Homepride moved beyond flour and launched a range of prepared cooking sauces. Then the brand history became properly British-business complicated. In October 1979, Spillers, the parent company behind Homepride, was acquired by Dalgety plc after a hostile takeover. Dalgety kept the rights for prepared cooking sauces, while the bakery business was sold to Allied Bakeries. Later, in January 2000, Allied Bakeries sold the Homepride flour brand to Kerry Group, which continues to produce Homepride flour under licence from Premier Foods. If that sounds like the contents of a filing cabinet rather than a family recipe, well, grocery brands often do.
Before the jars, there was flour
Homepride began life with Spillers, a British flour milling company whose roots go back to Joel Spiller establishing a flour mill in Bridgwater, Somerset, in 1829. The Homepride name itself arrived much later, in 1963, when Spillers launched a flour product linked to a production advance that meant home bakers no longer needed to sift their flour. That is a very specific kind of mid-century domestic promise: fewer lumps, less faffing, and a kitchen that felt a little more modern. The prepared sauces came afterwards, but they carried the same basic idea into savoury cooking. Make the everyday meal easier, preferably without making a speech about it.
Fred and the funny little hat
Homepride is also tied to one of the more recognisable British grocery mascots: Fred the Flour Grader. He was created in 1964 by the Geers Gross advertising agency, originally for Spillers Homepride flour. From 1965, the brand used the slogan “Because graded grains make finer flour”, with voices over the years including John Le Mesurier and Richard Briers. Fred is not really a sauce origin story, but he matters because he explains why the name Homepride feels so lodged in British heads. Some brands are remembered through flavour. Some through packaging. Some through a small cartoon man who looks as if he might politely inspect your Yorkshire pudding and say nothing unkind.
Why the modern packet feels split in two
The modern Homepride name can be a little confusing because the flour and sauce sides of the family no longer sit together in the simple way shoppers might assume. The cooking sauces range is associated with Premier Foods, while the flour is produced by Kerry Group under licence. That split is the result of the brand moving through different owners and business arrangements over time. For a shopper, the important part is simpler: the Homepride name on a cooking sauce connects back to the prepared sauce range first launched in the 1970s, not to a newly invented sauce pretending to have Victorian roots. A little untidy, but more believable for it.
Why it still lands with British shoppers in Canada
Wine and cream sauce is the sort of jar people remember from practical kitchens, not grand occasions. It belongs with weekday chicken bakes, student flats, parents trying to feed everyone before Scouts, and cupboards where there was always one emergency jar behind the beans. For British expats in Canada, that familiarity can be oddly specific. It is not just the flavour, it is the whole arrangement: jar lid, label, oven dish, rice on the side, and someone saying dinner will be ready in twenty minutes when everyone knows that is ambitious. The Great British Shop understands that some groceries are not glamorous, they are simply part of the furniture, and sometimes that is exactly what you miss.