About Batchelors Pasta'N'Sauce Chicken & Mushroom
About Batchelors Pasta'N'Sauce Chicken & Mushroom
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrédients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: Wheat, Milk.
May contain: Celery, Eggs, Soya.
Contient : Blé, Lait.
Peut contenir : Céleri, Œufs, Soya.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Batchelors Pasta'N'Sauce Chicken & Mushroom
More about Batchelors Pasta'N'Sauce Chicken & Mushroom
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 Batchelors Pasta'N'Sauce Chicken & Mushroom
The packet that sorts out lunch
Batchelors Pasta'N'Sauce Chicken & Mushroom is not pretending to be Sunday lunch, and that is part of its charm. It is the familiar little 99g packet that sits in the cupboard waiting for a day when you need something warm, savoury and unlikely to ask difficult questions. Chicken and mushroom has long been one of those flavours Britain understands without a committee meeting. It says quick lunch, student kitchen, late tea, or the thing you make when everyone else has mysteriously left you to fend for yourself.
Read the full story
A brand built on convenient food
There is not a well-sourced origin tale for Pasta'N'Sauce itself in the material here, so the honest story is the Batchelors story behind the modern packet. Batchelors launched Cup-a-Soup in 1972, and it became one of the name’s enduring products. Later, in 2001, Unilever sold Batchelors and Oxo to the UK subsidiary of the Campbell Soup Company, following regulatory conditions around Unilever’s takeover of Bestfoods. Then, in 2006, Campbell’s withdrew from the UK market and sold assets including Batchelors to Premier Foods, where the brand has remained. That is the tidy version. The cupboard version is simpler: Batchelors became one of the names British shoppers associated with food that could be made quickly, preferably using one pan and not much optimism.
Before the pasta, there were peas
The Batchelors name goes back to Sheffield in 1895, when William Batchelor founded the business. The early specialism was canned vegetables, especially processed peas, which feels wonderfully British in its modesty. William had worked as a tea packer and produce merchant, and the business grew from that practical world of preserving, packing and feeding households. By the time he died in 1913, Batchelor’s Peas Ltd had become a firm of around 50 employees. It was not glamorous, but then neither are most useful things in a British kitchen. Peas, tins, packets and dependable pantry food have always done more for domestic peace than people like to admit.
Sheffield, cans and a capable daughter
After William Batchelor’s death, his daughter Ella Hudson Gasking took over as managing director. That matters because it gives the brand a more interesting backbone than a standard boardroom tale. Under her leadership, Batchelors opened a new canning factory at Wadsley Bridge in Sheffield in 1937, described at the time as the largest canning plant in Britain. Sheffield is better known for steel than sauce mixes, so Batchelors stands slightly sideways in the city’s industrial story. There is something pleasingly no-nonsense about that: a city of metalwork also producing tins of peas and later the kind of dried foods that would end up in millions of cupboards.
From tins to dried dinners
Batchelors moved beyond canned vegetables in the postwar years. Its first dried soup, chicken noodle flavour, was sold in 1949, and the Vesta instant dried curry range followed in 1961. Cup-a-Soup arrived in 1972. Those developments help explain why Pasta'N'Sauce feels so at home under the Batchelors name, even without a neat birth certificate for this particular packet. It belongs to the same British tradition of shelf-stable meals that do not require elaborate planning. Boil, stir, simmer, wait slightly impatiently. If the sauce thickens properly and the fork stands half a chance, you have done enough.
Why it follows people across the Atlantic
For British shoppers in Canada, Batchelors Pasta'N'Sauce Chicken & Mushroom is often less about novelty and more about recognition. It is the sort of packet people remember from shared houses, office drawers, cupboards at their parents’ place, or quick teas before going out. The flavour is mild, creamy and familiar in that very British way, where comfort often arrives in beige and nobody needs to apologise for it. A Canadian supermarket may have pasta sides, certainly, but it is rarely quite the same as seeing the Batchelors name and knowing exactly what kind of small, practical meal is about to happen.
A quiet cupboard sign-off
There are foods that shout about heritage, and then there are foods that simply keep turning up when life is busy. This is the latter. Batchelors Pasta'N'Sauce Chicken & Mushroom carries the weight of a brand that began with canned peas in Sheffield and grew into one of Britain’s familiar convenience-food names. It is not grand, and it does not need to be. Sometimes the taste of home is a pan on the hob, a fork on standby and a packet that knows its job. The Great British Shop keeps that sort of memory within reach, which is useful when the cupboard is being asked to do emotional work again.