About Colman's Chicken Chasseur Mix
About Colman's Chicken Chasseur Mix
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: wheat, barley, gluten.
May contain: celery, egg, milk, mustard, soya.
Contient : BlΓ©, Orge, Gluten.
Peut contenir : CΓ©leri, Εufs, Lait, Moutarde, Soya.
StorageConservation
More about Colman's Chicken Chasseur Mix
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 Colman's Chicken Chasseur Mix
The Packet That Makes Dinner Look Planned
Colman's Chicken Chasseur Mix sits in that very British corner of the cupboard where practical things live. Not glamorous, not fussy, just a small sachet that can turn chicken, mushrooms, onion and a bit of tomato into something that feels like a proper cooked supper. Chicken chasseur itself has French roots, of course, but the British packet mix version belongs to a different tradition altogether: the weeknight rescue mission. It is the sort of thing people remember from kitchen drawers, student flats, first homes, and parents who could make dinner appear while also asking whether anyone had put the bins out.
Read the full story
A Colman's Story, Not a Chasseur Origin Myth
There is not a neat, well-sourced origin story for this particular Chicken Chasseur Mix, so it would be daft to pretend Jeremiah Colman stood in Norfolk in 1814 pondering mushroom sauce for chicken. What we can say is that the modern packet sits inside the long Colman's food family. In 1938, J. & J. Colman merged with Reckitt and Sons of Hull to form Reckitt & Colman, one of those large British household-products arrangements that sounds as if it should have its own filing cabinet. In 1995, the Colman's food business was separated from Reckitt & Colman and became part of Unilever UK Ltd. And, in a nicely British twist, Colman's is also credited with creating what the UK knows as French mustard in 1936, a dark, mild, tangy mustard that is not quite what France meant. Brands, like families, do accumulate odd relatives.
Before the Sachets, There Was Mustard
The Colman's name began with mustard, and that is still the spine of the story. Jeremiah Colman, a Norfolk-born miller, bought the mustard business of Edward Ames in 1814 and moved it to Stoke Holy Cross, near Norwich, on the River Tas. He became known for blending brown and white mustard seeds to make the sharp English mustard associated with the brand. In 1823 he brought his nephew James into the business, creating J. & J. Colman. From there, the company grew from milling mustard seed to becoming one of the most recognisable food names in Britain. That leap from a Norfolk mustard mill to modern recipe mixes is not a straight line, but British grocery history rarely is. It tends to take the scenic route past mergers, new packaging, changing kitchens and several generations of people asking what is for tea.
Norwich, Yellow Tins and the Habit of Being Recognisable
Colman's became closely tied to Norwich and Norfolk, helped by its long association with the Carrow Works site, where production was based for many decades. The brand's yellow packaging and bull's-head logo became part of its identity in the nineteenth century, long before the modern sachets arrived. That matters because Colman's products have always relied on being easy to spot. Whether it was mustard powder in a tin, a jar on the table, or a recipe mix in a supermarket aisle, the point was familiarity. You knew what shelf it belonged on and roughly what job it was there to do. Chicken Chasseur Mix carries that same domestic usefulness. It does not need to explain itself at length. It just waits in the cupboard until someone has chicken and no clear plan.
Why British Shoppers Still Reach for It
For British expats in Canada, products like this can be oddly specific comfort. Not dramatic comfort, not violins and misty-eyed speeches, but the small relief of seeing the exact sort of packet you used to buy without thinking. It belongs with the roast gravy granules, casserole mixes, mint sauce, mustard, stuffing and other cupboard stalwarts that made British cooking possible on tired evenings. There is also something pleasingly honest about a packet mix. It does not ask you to perform rustic authenticity. It simply says: add the ingredients, put the oven on, and stop pretending Tuesday needs a philosophy. For anyone who grew up with British supermarkets, corner shops, or parents keeping three emergency sachets behind the flour, that tone is immediately understood.
A Small Sachet With a Long Shadow
Colman's Chicken Chasseur Mix is not the beginning of the Colman's story, but it is part of what the brand became: a name attached to dependable British pantry shortcuts, from mustard to sauces to recipe mixes. Its heritage is less about one famous invention and more about how a very old food brand kept finding its way into ordinary meals. That is often where grocery memories live anyway, not in grand moments, but in cupboards, handwritten shopping lists, and dinners that turned out better than expected. For shoppers far from home, that little sachet can feel remarkably familiar. A quiet nod from The Great British Shop, and dinner is back on speaking terms.