About Batchelors Super Noodle Pot Chicken
About Batchelors Super Noodle Pot Chicken
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrédients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: Wheat/Gluten.
May contain: Celery, Crustaceans, Fish, Milk, Molluscs, Mustard, Sesame, Soya.
Contient : Wheat/Gluten.
Peut contenir : Céleri, Crustacés, Poisson, Lait, Mollusques, Moutarde, Sésame, Soya.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Batchelors Super Noodle Pot Chicken
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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 Super Noodle Pot Chicken
The pot that knows the kettle is doing most of the work
Batchelors Super Noodle Pot Chicken is not pretending to be Sunday lunch. It is a 75g pot of instant noodles with a chicken flavour, built for the moments when a saucepan feels like an unreasonable demand and the kettle is already standing there looking useful. For many British shoppers, Super Noodles belong to the practical end of the cupboard: student rooms, office drawers, late shifts, quick lunches, and those evenings when cooking has technically lost the argument. The pot format makes that even plainer. Add hot water, wait, stir, and lunch has happened with very little ceremony.
Read the full story
Before the noodles, there were peas
Batchelors did not begin with noodles at all, which is pleasingly untidy in the way proper food histories often are. William Batchelor was born in Habrough, Lincolnshire, in 1860, into a farming family. He later worked in Sheffield as a tea packer and produce merchant, and is associated with finding a way to preserve vegetables, especially peas, by canning. That led to the business that became Batchelors, founded in Sheffield in 1895. By the time William Batchelor died in 1913, Batchelor's Peas Ltd had grown to employ 50 people. Not exactly the origin story one expects for a chicken noodle pot, but there it is: from peas in tins to noodles in pots, Britain does enjoy taking the scenic route.
Sheffield, cans, and a food brand in steel country
Sheffield is better known for steel than for pantry shortcuts, which makes Batchelors a slightly unexpected local story. The company became one of the city’s notable food manufacturers, especially under William Batchelor’s daughter, Ella Hudson Gasking, who took over after his death. In 1937, under her leadership, a new canning factory opened at Wadsley Bridge in Sheffield. It was described at the time as the largest canning plant in Britain, covering 12 acres. That gives some useful context to the name on the pot: Batchelors was not a brand dreamt up for modern convenience food. It came from a business that had already spent decades making preserved food part of ordinary British life.
How dried food entered the cupboard
The move from canned vegetables to dried and instant products came later. Batchelors was bought by James Van den Bergh of Unilever in 1943, during wartime pressures around staffing and rationing. After the war, the brand expanded beyond tins. In 1949, Batchelors sold its first dried soup, in chicken noodle flavour. That is not the same thing as today’s Super Noodle Pot, and it should not be dressed up as a direct invention story for this product. Still, it shows the direction of travel: Batchelors became increasingly tied to the British habit of keeping quick, dry, shelf-stable food in the cupboard, ready for when time, money, or enthusiasm was in short supply.
The modern Batchelors packet family
Today, Batchelors sits in a family of products that many people recognise by instinct: Cup-a-Soup, Pasta 'n' Sauce, Super Rice, and Super Noodles among them. The brand passed from Unilever to Campbell’s UK business in 2001, and then to Premier Foods in 2006, after Campbell’s withdrew from the UK market. Those ownership changes matter mostly because they help explain why a very old British grocery name now appears across a modern range of soups, pasta, rice, and noodle products. Corporate reshuffling is rarely the bit anyone feels sentimental about, and fair enough. The useful part is that the Batchelors name stayed attached to quick cupboard food, where British households had already put it.
Why this pot still feels British
There is something very British about a chicken noodle pot being both unimpressive and completely welcome. It is not there for ceremony. It is there because you need something hot, salty, familiar, and fast, preferably before the next meeting, lecture, bus, or episode starts. For British expats in Canada, Batchelors Super Noodle Pot Chicken can bring back the humbler corners of home: corner shop shelves, shared kitchens, lunch breaks with a plastic fork, and cupboards where someone always kept “emergency food” that was not really for emergencies at all. Quietly, that is why The Great British Shop keeps products like this within reach.