About Baxters Spicy Parsnip Soup
About Baxters Spicy Parsnip Soup
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: milk, wheat.
Contient : Lait, BlΓ©.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Baxters Spicy Parsnip Soup
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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 Baxters Spicy Parsnip Soup
A tin with a bit of winter in it
Baxters Spicy Parsnip Soup is the sort of 400g tin that makes immediate sense if you grew up with British cupboards. Parsnip is already a very British soup vegetable, sweet, earthy and quietly dependable. Add spice and it stops being the beige, worthy option and becomes something with a little more backbone. Not frighteningly hot, not trying to be clever, just warming in the way a proper soup should be when the weather has turned against you.
Read the full story
The Baxters name behind the label
Gordon Baxter died in 2013 aged 95, and Ena Baxter died in 2015 aged 90, which matters because their generation helped shape the Baxters soup range many people still recognise. The company had been known as W.A. Baxter and Sons Ltd. before becoming Baxters Food Group Limited in 2006, a tidy modern name for a business with a rather longer family story behind it. In 2011, Baxters also acquired the Fray Bentos range of canned pies and meat products from Princes Ltd, with production later transferred to Fochabers. That sort of corporate housekeeping explains why British tins can have surprisingly tangled family trees, though this soup sits firmly under the Baxters name.
From Fochabers to the soup shelf
The Baxters story began in 1868, when George Baxter borrowed money from family members and opened a grocery shop in Fochabers, Moray. Before that, he had worked as a gardener on the Gordon Estate, which gives the whole thing a pleasingly practical start. His wife Margaret made jams and jellies from local fruit in the back of the shop, and the business grew from there. Later, William and Ethel Baxter built a factory beside the River Spey in 1916. Ethel began canning local fruit in the 1920s, then moved into soups in 1929, using local produce. That is the important bit for a tin like this: Baxters did not arrive at soup by accident. Soup became part of the family business early, and it stuck.
Why Scotland is part of the flavour
Fochabers, on the River Spey in Moray, gives Baxters a setting that feels more convincing than most food-brand backstories. The region is associated with estates, game, soft fruit and a fairly serious attitude to the larder. Baxtersβ first soup was Royal Game, made with venison from Upper Speyside, and the company later became known for Scottish recipes such as Cock-a-leekie and Scotch Broth. Spicy Parsnip Soup is not being presented here as an ancient Highland recipe, because that would be stretching things. It is better understood as part of a Baxters tradition of turning familiar ingredients into tinned soups that feel at home in a British kitchen.
The comfort of a known tin
For British shoppers in Canada, this is often less about grand heritage and more about recognition. A Baxters tin has a particular place in the mental geography of UK food: supermarket soup aisle, rainy lunch, bread on the side, possibly eaten standing in the kitchen because sitting down would imply a plan. Parsnip soup has that school-dinner-adjacent familiarity, but the spicy version gives it a bit of adult dignity. It belongs in the same emotional cupboard as oatcakes, pickle, tea bags and biscuits sent in parcels by relatives who insist they are βjust sending a few bitsβ.
A quiet sign-off from the soup cupboard
Baxters Spicy Parsnip Soup does not need a dramatic origin myth to earn its place. Its story is really the Baxters soup story: a family grocery business from Fochabers, a move into canning, a long association with Scottish food, and generations of British shoppers who came to trust the tins without thinking too hard about why. That is usually how cupboard loyalty works. You open the tin, heat the soup, find some bread if standards are being observed, and carry on. For anyone missing that particular British rhythm in Canada, The Great British Shop keeps the familiar things within reach.