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Batchelors Beans In Tomato Sauce - 420g

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Original price $4.99 - Original price $4.99
Original price
$4.99
$4.99 - $4.99
Current price $4.99
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Rated 4.9/5 from 427 reviews
 
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Rated 4.9/5 from 427 reviews
About Batchelors Beans In Tomato Sauce

About Batchelors Beans In Tomato Sauce

Baked beans in Canada are not hard to find. The specific ones you grew up eating in the UK, however, are a different matter entirely. Batchelors Beans in Tomato Sauce are the version that sat in the cupboard at home, went on toast after school, and appeared reliably at every cooked breakfast without anyone thinking twice about it.

This is a 420g tin of haricot beans in tomato sauce, made in the United Kingdom and imported as the genuine article. The format is exactly what it sounds like: straightforward, familiar, and built for the kind of meal that does not require much thought but somehow still feels like the right call.

For British expats in Canada, there is something quietly reassuring about a tin that looks and tastes exactly as expected. The Great British Shop stocks Batchelors Beans so you are not relying on a suitcase, a care parcel, or a vague international aisle that may or may not come through for you on a given week.

Batchelors Beans in Tomato Sauce are suitable for vegetarians and gluten-free, which makes them a useful staple for a fairly wide range of households. On toast, alongside eggs, or stirred into something slightly more ambitious on a Tuesday evening, they hold up the same way they always have.

Shop more Batchelors in Canada or browse the wider range of British pantry favourites available to ship across Canada.

Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage

Ingredients

Beans (56%), Tomatoes (34%), Water, Sugar, Salt, Modified Cornflour, Seasoning, Acetic Acid, Yeast Extract, Natural Tomato Flavouring

Frequently asked questions about Batchelors Beans In Tomato Sauce

Q: What do Batchelors Beans in Tomato Sauce taste like?

A: Batchelors Beans in Tomato Sauce are built around tender haricot beans in a rich, classic tomato sauce with a savoury depth that comes from yeast extract and natural tomato flavouring. The sauce is neither too sweet nor too sharp, which is exactly what you want when you are eating them on toast at half past seven in the morning and expecting them to behave.

Q: Are Batchelors Beans in Tomato Sauce suitable for vegetarians, and do they contain gluten?

A: Yes, Batchelors Beans in Tomato Sauce are suitable for vegetarians and are gluten-free. The ingredients include beans, tomatoes, modified cornflour, yeast extract and natural tomato flavouring, with no meat-derived or gluten-containing ingredients in the formulation. For anyone in Canada managing a gluten-free diet or cooking for vegetarians, that makes them a straightforward pantry option.

Q: Is this the UK version of Batchelors Beans, and why does that matter to British shoppers in Canada?

A: Yes, this is the UK-produced version, imported directly from Britain. Batchelors is a British brand, and the recipe, sauce consistency and seasoning are specific to the UK product. For British expats in Canada, baked beans on toast is less a meal and more a small act of cultural maintenance, and the Batchelors version is the one that tastes like the tin from home rather than a reasonable approximation of it.

More about Batchelors Beans In Tomato Sauce

Batchelors Beans in Tomato Sauce sit firmly in the British canned goods tradition: haricot beans in a tomato sauce, shelf-stable, ready in minutes, and the kind of thing that holds a cupboard together on a Tuesday evening when nobody has planned anything. In the UK, baked beans on toast is less a recipe than a default setting, and Batchelors is one of the names that has always been part of that category.

For British expats and Anglophiles across Canada, finding the right tin of beans matters more than it might seem. The flavour profile of British-style beans in tomato sauce is distinct enough that swapping in a local substitute rarely feels quite right, and people who grew up eating them tend to know the difference immediately.

This 420g tin is a generous single-serving size or a modest two-person portion, depending on what else is on the plate. It is gluten-free and suitable for vegetarians, which makes it a straightforward cupboard staple for households with mixed dietary needs. No preparation beyond heating is required.

Batchelors produces a range of British pantry staples beyond beans; you can browse the wider Batchelors in Canada range or explore other British pantry favourites if you are stocking up on more than one item.

The tin ships from within Canada, so whether you are in Fredericton, Burlington, or Edmonton, there is no waiting on an overseas parcel. It stores well, travels sensibly, and asks very little of you in return.

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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4.9 from 427 Google Reviews
I work close-by in Bayer’s Lake and love to pop in for a healthy and delicious lunch when I don’t bring one from home! I’ve had over 10 flavours of the pies, and tried almost every sweet they make. I adore this place, from the amazing food, to the nostalgic candies and British goods they carry, and especially the wonderful staff who always greet me by name and ask how Im doing every time I come in. My Papa was born and raised in England and loved to share tastes of home with his whole family, I wish he was able to see this place, he would’ve been delighted ❀️❀️❀️
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The story of Batchelors Beans In Tomato Sauce

A tin that knows its job

Batchelors Beans In Tomato Sauce - 420g sits in that very British category of food which is not glamorous, does not ask for applause, and still manages to rescue a meal at short notice. Beans on toast, beans with chips, beans beside sausages, beans poured over a jacket potato when the evening has got away from you. It is a pantry tin with a clear sense of purpose. For British shoppers in Canada, the appeal is often less about novelty and more about recognition. The right sort of beans, the right sort of sauce, the right sort of tin in the cupboard for when dinner needs to stop being theoretical.

Read the full story

The Batchelors name behind the tin

Cup-a-Soup was launched by Batchelors in 1972 and became one of the brand's most enduring products. In 2001, Unilever sold Batchelors and Oxo to the UK subsidiary of the Campbell Soup Company, and in 2006 Campbell's withdrew from the UK market and sold its assets, including Batchelors, to Premier Foods, where the brand has remained. That later history explains why Batchelors now feels like a broad British cupboard name rather than just one narrow line of tins. It appears across soups, noodles, pasta and rice dishes, and still carries a long association with convenient British food. Corporate ownership, as ever, has moved around more than anyone's shopping list would suggest.

Before all that, there were vegetables

The older Batchelors story begins in Sheffield in 1895, when William Batchelor founded the company. The best-supported accounts describe him as a tea packer and produce merchant who developed a way of canning vegetables, especially processed peas. That matters here, because while there is no supplied product-level origin story for these beans in tomato sauce, Batchelors as a name grew from the world of canned vegetables rather than being a random label placed on tins much later. By the time William Batchelor died in 1913, the firm had grown into a small but substantial operation, employing around 50 people. It was practical food from the beginning, which is very much the spirit of a tin of beans.

Sheffield, peas and a serious canning business

Batchelors is an interesting Sheffield story because the city is more often remembered for steel, cutlery and heavy industry than for pantry staples. After William Batchelor's death, his daughter Ella Hudson Gasking took charge of the business and became a significant figure in Sheffield manufacturing. Under her leadership, a new canning factory opened at Wadsley Bridge in 1937. Contemporary accounts describe it as the largest canning plant in Britain at the time, covering 12 acres. That is a long way from a modest vegetable business, and it gives the Batchelors name a proper industrial food background. Not romantic exactly, unless your idea of romance involves peas, tins and efficient storage, but solidly British all the same.

From canned goods to the modern cupboard

During the Second World War, Batchelors was acquired by James Van den Bergh of Unilever, in a period shaped by staffing pressures, rationing and the demands of wartime food supply. The company later moved beyond canned goods into dried soups, instant meals and other convenience foods. Its first dried soup was sold in 1949, the Vesta instant curry range appeared in 1961, and Cup-a-Soup followed in 1972. Those products belong to a different chapter from a tin of beans, but they show how Batchelors became part of everyday British cooking: quick, cupboard-based, and not requiring anyone to behave like they are on a cookery programme at half past six on a Tuesday.

Why it still lands with British shoppers

Beans in tomato sauce are one of those foods that carry more memory than they have any right to. They belong to student kitchens, grandparents' cupboards, caravan holidays, school holiday lunches and plates assembled with more urgency than planning. In Canada, where the bean aisle may not always speak with the accent you were expecting, a familiar British tin can feel oddly grounding. Batchelors Beans In Tomato Sauce - 420g is not backed here by a neat, product-specific origin tale, but it is part of a brand family with real roots in British canned food. A quiet cupboard standby, then, and a small nod from The Great British Shop to anyone who believes beans on toast is a perfectly respectable meal.