About Batchelors Cup A Soup Leek And Potato
About Batchelors Cup A Soup Leek And Potato
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: milk.
May contain: Celery, Cereals containing Gluten (Wheat), Soya.
Contient : Lait.
Peut contenir : Celery, Cereals containing Gluten (Wheat), Soya.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Batchelors Cup A Soup Leek And Potato
More about Batchelors Cup A Soup Leek And Potato
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 Cup A Soup Leek And Potato
A sachet for when lunch has gone sideways
Batchelors Cup A Soup Leek And Potato is not trying to be grand, and that is rather the point. It is the sort of thing that lives in a kitchen cupboard, desk drawer or slightly chaotic work locker until the moment arrives: rain on the window, meetings overrunning, sandwich plans abandoned. Leek and potato has a very British sort of calm to it, soft, savoury and familiar, with none of the drama of a pan, a blender or someone asking where the stock cubes have gone.
Read the full story
The Cup-a-Soup line, not a made-up old village tale
Cup-a-Soup was launched by Batchelors in 1972 and became one of the brandβs most enduring products; in the UK it is sold under the Batchelors name and is now owned by Premier Foods. The ownership path is not quite as cosy as the mug suggests. In 2001, Unilever sold Batchelors and Oxo to the UK subsidiary of the Campbell Soup Company, following regulatory conditions around Unileverβs takeover of Bestfoods. Then, in 2006, Campbellβs withdrew from the UK market and sold its assets, including Batchelors, to Premier Foods, where the brand has remained. Corporate soup has clearly had more paperwork than anyone eating it at their desk would ever suspect.
Before the mug, there were peas
The Batchelors story goes back much further than instant soup. The company was founded in Sheffield in 1895 by William Batchelor, who initially specialised in canned vegetables, particularly peas. He had been born in Lincolnshire and worked in Sheffield as a tea packer and produce merchant before building a business around preserving vegetables. That matters because Batchelors did not begin as a shiny convenience-food idea. It began with practical food for ordinary households, which is a very British foundation: useful, shelf-stable, and unlikely to require a speech before serving.
Sheffield, cans and a formidable daughter
After William Batchelor died in 1913, his daughter Ella Hudson Gasking took over as managing director. She became one of Sheffieldβs notable industrial figures, which is worth remembering, because food history has a habit of tidying women into the margins and then acting surprised when they ran the place. Under her leadership, Batchelors opened a large canning factory at Wadsley Bridge in 1937, described at the time as the largest canning plant in Britain. Sheffield may be better known for steel, but Batchelors gave the city a sizeable place in British grocery history too.
From tins to dried soup
Batchelors moved into dried soup after the war years, with its first dried soup sold in 1949. That shift helps explain how a business rooted in canned peas eventually became known for packets, sachets and quick cupboard meals. Later ranges such as Vesta, Pasta βnβ Sauce, Super Rice, Super Noodles and Cup-a-Soup all sit in that same practical tradition. They are foods designed for real life rather than ideal life: late shifts, student kitchens, cold offices, elderly relatives who keep a sensible pantry, and families who believe a kettle can solve more than it reasonably should.
Why leek and potato still earns its place
Leek and potato is one of those flavours that feels quietly domestic. It recalls school lunch flasks, grandparentsβ cupboards, caravan holidays, and the slightly stern comfort of a British kitchen in February. For British expats in Canada, the pull is not just the soup itself, but the format: the little sachets, the quick stir, the mug warming your hands while the weather outside behaves like it has a personal grievance. It is not a feast. It is a small, recognisable bit of home that asks very little and sorts you out. The Great British Shop understands that sometimes the most missed groceries are the ones that never made a fuss in the first place.