About Batchelors Cup A Soup Broccoli & Cauliflower
About Batchelors Cup A Soup Broccoli & Cauliflower
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: milk.
May contain: celery, gluten, soya.
Contient : Lait.
Peut contenir : CΓ©leri, Gluten, Soya.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Batchelors Cup A Soup Broccoli & Cauliflower
More about Batchelors Cup A Soup Broccoli & Cauliflower
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.
Customers also add
Based on baskets that include this product.
Shop our most popular products
A handy shortcut to the British favourites flying out the door.
View most popular

Values are typical and may vary. Always check the pack on delivery for the most accurate information.
The story of Batchelors Cup A Soup Broccoli & Cauliflower
A sachet with office-kettle authority
Batchelors Cup A Soup Broccoli & Cauliflower is not trying to be Sunday lunch, and that is probably why people trust it. It belongs to the grand British tradition of making something hot with a kettle, a mug, and a level of optimism that may or may not match the weather. Broccoli and cauliflower is a very particular sort of flavour: green enough to feel sensible, creamy enough to feel comforting, and familiar enough that nobody has to stand there reading the front of the packet as though it were a contract.
Read the full story
The Cup-a-Soup bit of the Batchelors story
Cup-a-Soup was launched by Batchelors in 1972 and went on to become one of the brandβs most recognisable long-running products. In the UK it is sold under the Batchelors name, and the brand is now owned by Premier Foods. Before that, the ownership trail took a couple of turns: in 2001, Unilever sold Batchelors and Oxo to the UK arm of Campbell Soup Company, and in 2006 Campbellβs withdrew from the UK market and sold assets including Batchelors to Premier Foods. That is the tidy version. The less tidy truth is that British cupboard brands often pass through several hands while the public mostly notices whether the packet still looks right and the mug still tastes familiar.
Before the mug, there were peas
The Batchelors name goes back much further than instant soup. The company was founded in Sheffield in 1895 by William Batchelor, who had worked as a tea packer and produce merchant and became associated with preserving vegetables, especially peas, by canning. That matters because Batchelors did not begin as a whimsical convenience brand invented in a meeting room. It started with vegetables in tins, in an industrial city better known for steel than supper. By the time William Batchelor died in 1913, the business had grown into a small but established concern, and his daughter Ella Hudson Gasking later became a major figure in its development.
Sheffield, tins, and the rise of quick food
Under Ella Gasking, Batchelors grew into a much larger food manufacturer, including a major canning factory at Wadsley Bridge in Sheffield opened in 1937. The company later moved beyond tins into dried foods, with its first dried soup sold in 1949. That is the useful bridge between the early Batchelors world of canned vegetables and the later world of sachets, packets and things you could make in minutes. Cup-a-Soup belongs to that postwar British appetite for convenience: not fancy, not showy, just quick food that could be kept in a cupboard, desk drawer, or slightly chaotic staff-room shelf.
Why broccoli and cauliflower feels so British
Broccoli and cauliflower soup has a very British air about it, partly because both vegetables have spent generations being boiled, steamed, roasted, ignored, rescued with cheese sauce, and brought back again. In Cup A Soup form, they become something practical and gentle: a hot mug when lunch is thin, when the office microwave queue is grim, or when you want something that reminds you of home without turning the kitchen upside down. It is the kind of thing that might have sat beside tea bags, instant coffee, and a suspiciously old packet of biscuits in a workplace cupboard.
A small taste of home, without ceremony
For British shoppers in Canada, Batchelors Cup A Soup Broccoli & Cauliflower can carry more memory than a sachet really ought to. It recalls lunchboxes, newsagent meal deals, student cupboards, grandparents who believed in keeping βsomething inβ, and cold afternoons when the kettle did most of the heavy lifting. It is not grand heritage in a velvet rope sort of way. It is everyday heritage, which is often the stickier kind. The Great British Shop keeps that sort of memory within reach, quietly, and preferably with a mug that is bigger than strictly necessary.