About Pot Noodle Beef & Tomato
About Pot Noodle Beef & Tomato
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: gluten, wheat, soya.
May contain: barley, celery, egg, milk, mustard, oats, rye.
Contient : Gluten, BlΓ©, Soya.
Peut contenir : barley, celery, egg, milk, mustard, oats, rye.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Pot Noodle Beef & Tomato
More about Pot Noodle Beef & Tomato
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.
Customers also add
Based on baskets that include this product.
Shop our most popular products
A handy shortcut to the British favourites flying out the door.
View most popular

Values are typical and may vary. Always check the pack on delivery for the most accurate information.
The story of Pot Noodle Beef & Tomato
The pot with no patience
Pot Noodle Beef & Tomato - 90g is not trying to be elegant, and that is probably why people remember it so clearly. It is dried noodles, flavouring, little bits in the mix, boiling water, a short wait, and then the familiar business of stirring it into something that looks slightly chaotic but entirely recognisable. Beef & Tomato is one of those flavours that sits firmly in the British cupboard imagination: student kitchens, late shifts, garages, office drawers, and that one family member who swore it counted as a meal because it came with a fork-shaped plan.
Read the full story
Golden Wonder and the British pot habit
Golden Wonder introduced Pot Rice at the beginning of the 1980s, a related convenience food built around dehydrated rice, wheat protein, vegetables and flavourings in a plastic pot. By then, the company already had Pot Noodle on the go, and the brand would later become known for advertising that was almost as unsubtle as the snack itself, including a 2002 campaign using the line βthe slag of all snacksβ, which was withdrawn after complaints. The core story begins a little earlier: Pot Noodle was launched in the United Kingdom in 1977 by Golden Wonder, the Scottish snack company that had grown from William Alexanderβs bakery in Stockbridge, Edinburgh, founded in 1947. Corporate history likes to make this sort of thing sound tidy. A crisp maker from Edinburgh helping Britain fall for noodles in a plastic pot is much more pleasingly odd.
A British answer to cup noodles
Pot Noodle belongs to the wider cup noodle family, a format pioneered in Japan by Nissin Food Products with Cup Noodles in 1971. The British version, though, found its own peculiar character. Rather than sitting neatly in the world of noodle soup, Pot Noodle became its own semi-solid, forkable thing: more snack than broth, more cupboard rescue than dinner ceremony. The basic idea is wonderfully plain. Dehydrated noodles, dried vegetables and flavouring powder go into the pot, boiling water goes in after them, and a few minutes later the whole arrangement is ready to eat straight from the container. Many pots have also included a sauce sachet, which adds the small thrill of feeling like you have participated in cooking.
South Wales in the background
Although Pot Noodle began under Golden Wonder, its manufacturing story became closely tied to South Wales. The brandβs own account places its home at Crumlin, and the site is generally identified with the Croespenmaen Industrial Estate near Crumlin in Caerphilly. That Welsh connection has remained important through the brandβs various changes of ownership. Pot Noodle moved from Golden Wonderβs world through Dalgety, then Best Foods, and later into Unilever after Best Foods was acquired in 2000. When Unilever sold the rest of Golden Wonder to Tayto in 2006, it retained Pot Noodle and the production factory. That is why the modern packet name is not simply a Golden Wonder story, even though Golden Wonder is where the Pot Noodle story properly starts.
Beef & Tomato and the cupboard of last resort
There is a reason Pot Noodle has never quite behaved like a normal pantry product. It is partly food, partly joke, partly emergency ration, and partly a memory of being sixteen and thinking boiling water was advanced kitchen work. Beef & Tomato has the sort of name that belongs on a corner shop shelf under buzzing strip lights, beside chocolate bars, chewing gum and whatever crisps were on offer. For British shoppers in Canada, the attraction is not only the flavour. It is the whole ritual: peel back the lid, fill to the line, wait impatiently, stir harder than seems necessary, then eat from the pot because washing up was never part of the deal.
Still gloriously ungrand
Some foods travel because they are refined. Pot Noodle travels because it is instantly understood. It says student halls, late buses, lunch breaks, teenage bedrooms, and cupboards where someone has clearly planned for a minor domestic crisis. Beef & Tomato is not pretending to be a family recipe from a village kitchen, and thank goodness for that. Its heritage is more modern, messier and very British: convenience, bright packaging, questionable adverts, and a national willingness to call this lunch. For anyone missing that particular sort of home, The Great British Shop offers a quiet nod from Halifax, with the kettle doing most of the work.