About Batchelors Cup A Soup Tomato
About Batchelors Cup A Soup Tomato
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: milk.
May contain: celery, gluten, wheat, soya.
Contient : Lait.
Peut contenir : CΓ©leri, Gluten, BlΓ©, Soya.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Batchelors Cup A Soup Tomato
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Additional Information
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The story of Batchelors Cup A Soup Tomato
A sachet for the difficult sort of lunchtime
Batchelors Cup A Soup Tomato is not trying to be a grand bowl of soup with a ladle, a farmhouse table and someone pretending they always make stock. It is a sachet, a mug and a kettle, which is often far more useful. Tomato is one of the plain-speaking flavours in the Cup A Soup world: familiar, warm, slightly school-lunch adjacent, and very good at appearing when the weather is damp or the office fridge contains only regret.
Read the full story
Where Cup-a-Soup fits in the Batchelors story
Cup-a-Soup was launched by Batchelors in 1972, and it became one of the names most closely tied to the brandβs move into dried, convenient foods. In the UK it is sold under the Batchelors name, while the brand itself is now owned by Premier Foods. Before that, the ownership trail did a little shuffle: Unilever sold Batchelors and Oxo to the UK subsidiary of Campbell Soup Company in 2001, and in 2006 Campbellβs withdrew from the UK market and sold assets including Batchelors to Premier Foods. That explains the modern packet lineage without pretending the sachet was born in a boardroom, which would be a bleak origin story even by instant soup standards.
Before the mug, there were peas
Batchelors began in Sheffield in 1895, founded by William Batchelor. The early business was built around canned vegetables, especially processed peas, after Batchelor developed a way to preserve them. It is quite a leap from tins of peas in industrial Sheffield to tomato soup powder in a paper sachet, but the family resemblance is there: practical food, made to keep, aimed at people who need the cupboard to behave itself. By the time William Batchelor died in 1913, the firm had grown to around 50 employees, which suggests the idea had legs, or at least a very steady market for peas.
Sheffield, cans and a proper industrial turn
After Williamβs death, his daughter Ella Hudson Gasking took over as managing director and became a notable figure in Sheffield industry. Under her leadership, Batchelors opened a large canning factory at Wadsley Bridge in 1937. Sheffield is usually filed in the national memory under steel, cutlery and hard work, so a major food manufacturer in the city feels slightly unexpected, but very British in its practicality. Batchelors later moved beyond canned goods, selling its first dried soup in 1949. That step matters here because Cup A Soup belongs to that same tradition of dried food that sits quietly in the cupboard until needed.
Tomato, but make it British cupboard logic
Tomato Cup A Soup has the sort of flavour profile that does not require a speech. It is the mug soup people know from work drawers, student kitchens, chilly kitchens and those cupboards where every British household seems to keep one emergency packet of something. The appeal is not ceremony. It is speed, warmth and the small satisfaction of making lunch with boiling water while looking as though you had a plan all along. Four sachets in a box feels sensible, though experience suggests they disappear faster than expected once the week starts misbehaving.
Why it follows people to Canada
For British expats in Canada, Batchelors Cup A Soup Tomato is less about novelty and more about recognition. It belongs to the same mental shelf as tea bags, gravy granules, squash and biscuits kept for βjust in caseβ, a phrase that has done heroic work in British kitchens. It is the taste of school days, office kettles, grandparentsβ cupboards and quick lunches before heading back out into rain that may now be Canadian snow. A small box of tomato sachets will not solve homesickness, obviously, but it can make a grey afternoon feel more familiar. The Great British Shop knows that sometimes a mug of instant soup is not just a mug of instant soup, though we should probably not get too dramatic about it.