About Goldenfry Cheese Sauce
About Goldenfry Cheese Sauce
Frequently asked questions about Goldenfry Cheese Sauce
More about Goldenfry Cheese Sauce
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The story of Goldenfry Cheese Sauce
A cheese sauce mix with its feet on the lino
Goldenfry Cheese Sauce - 160g belongs to that very British corner of the cupboard where practical packets live. Not glamorous, not trying to reinvent supper, just there for cauliflower cheese, pasta, fish, vegetables, and the sort of midweek meal that needs a bit of help without anyone making a production of it. In Britain, sauce mixes have long had a perfectly respectable role: they turn odds and ends into something that looks planned. A packet of cheese sauce is especially good at this small domestic miracle. It is the difference between boiled cauliflower and cauliflower cheese, which is not a small difference if you have ever been served the first one without warning.
Read the full story
The Yorkshire brand behind the packet
Goldenfry Foods is a British food manufacturer based in Wetherby, West Yorkshire. The brand traces its story to 1958, a date the company uses in its own “Made in Yorkshire Since 1958” line. Its founder was Ken Herridge, who had served as a pilot in the RAF for six years during the Second World War. After the war, the story goes, he returned home and opened a fish and chip shop in Wetherby. That is a pleasingly grounded beginning for a company now associated with gravy, sauce mixes, batter mixes, and other cupboard stalwarts. It did not begin as a shiny food empire, but as a local food business built around the sort of things people actually ate.
From chip shop batter to cupboard mixes
The best-supported Goldenfry origin story centres on batter rather than cheese sauce, so it is worth keeping the facts tidy. Customers are said to have asked for Herridge’s batter recipe, which led him to develop a retail batter mix for sale through local independent grocers and fishmongers. From there, Goldenfry expanded into other convenience mixes, including gravy products. The company also says Herridge developed a gravy mix that did not require meat juices, which gives a useful clue to the brand’s place in British kitchens. Goldenfry was not selling fantasy cooking. It was selling shortcuts that made sense: packet mixes for people who had tea to get on the table and no interest in being judged by a sauce whisk.
Why Wetherby matters
Wetherby is not just a pin on a corporate map here. Goldenfry’s story is tied to the town, from the early chip shop days to the later manufacturing base on the Sandbeck Industrial Estate. West Yorkshire is good territory for this kind of food heritage: practical, filling, plain-spoken, and not especially interested in fuss. Gravy, batter, dumplings, sauces, and mixes sit naturally in that world. They are the support crew of British cooking, which sounds unromantic until you remember how much of home cooking depends on good support crew. A cheese sauce mix fits that tradition neatly. It is not the origin product in the Goldenfry story, but it belongs to the same family of sensible packet help.
The factory story, without polishing it too much
Goldenfry grew from its small Wetherby beginnings into a larger food manufacturer, developing factory premises at Sandbeck as the business expanded. The site was rebuilt in 1999, replacing older structures with a modern factory, with further development noted in 2010 and 2011. Those details matter mostly because they explain how a local chip shop story became a national grocery shelf name. Goldenfry also manufactures own-brand supermarket gravy products as well as its own retail range, which is a very British sort of fame: present in cupboards all over the place, sometimes without people even noticing the maker. Corporate histories like to make that sound sleek. Really, it is just the quiet machinery behind a lot of dinners.
Why it still earns cupboard space
For British shoppers in Canada, Goldenfry Cheese Sauce - 160g is the sort of thing that can feel oddly specific. You might not have thought you missed packet cheese sauce until you are trying to make cauliflower cheese in Halifax in February and realise the cupboard is not behaving like a British cupboard. These mixes carry the memory of quick teas, student kitchens, grandparents who always had “something in”, and the mysterious national belief that nearly any vegetable can be improved by a cheese-coloured sauce. The Great British Shop keeps that little bit of Wetherby practicality within reach, which is handy, because homesickness has been known to start with the wrong sauce.