About Morrisons Sandwich Pickle
About Morrisons Sandwich Pickle
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: Barley (Cereals containing gluten).
May contain: Sulphur Dioxide/Sulphites.
Contient : Barley (Cereals containing gluten).
Peut contenir : Sulphur Dioxide/Sulphites.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Morrisons Sandwich Pickle
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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 Morrisons Sandwich Pickle
A Jar Built for the Cheese Sandwich
Morrisons Sandwich Pickle is not a grand product, and that is largely the point. It belongs to the practical British cupboard, the one with teabags, stock cubes, a half-used jar of mustard, and something sharp enough to wake up a cheese sandwich that has otherwise given up trying. A 300g jar of sandwich pickle sits in that very British territory between condiment and emergency meal support. It is for cheddar, cold meats, pork pies, ploughman’s plates, jacket potatoes, and the sort of lunch made standing by the worktop while pretending that counts as sitting down.
Read the full story
The Brand Story, Not a Pickle Origin Myth
There is no tidy, well-sourced origin tale for this particular jar of Morrisons Sandwich Pickle, so we will not invent one and place it in a charming Victorian pantry with a kindly aunt and a brass spoon. What can be said is that it comes from the Morrisons own-label world, and Morrisons has long made a great deal of its connection to food supply rather than simply shop shelving. Unlike other major UK supermarkets, Morrisons operates a manufacturing arm that includes abattoirs, vegetable packing houses and fish processing plants. Its vertical supplier integration is often linked to Woodheads, a recognised name in the British meat industry. The 2004 acquisition of Safeway also changed the scale of the business, taking Morrisons well beyond its northern heartland into southern England, Wales and Scotland.
From Bradford Market Stall to Supermarket Cupboard
The Morrisons name began in Bradford in June 1899, when William Murdoch Morrison sold eggs and butter from a stall in Rawson Market. That is a useful fact for a jar like this, because it keeps the brand story grounded in everyday food rather than boardroom mist. Morrisons opened proper retail shops in the Bradford area in the 1920s, and later grew under Ken Morrison, whose early work in the business included market-stall jobs and checking eggs against lamps. It is hard to get more grocery than that. By 1958, Morrisons had opened a Bradford city-centre self-service store, and in 1961 its first supermarket opened in Girlington in a converted cinema. A supermarket in a cinema feels very British somehow, as if the interval snacks simply got ambitious.
Why Morrisons Still Feels Like a Food Shop
Morrisons has often leaned into the feeling of a market rather than a warehouse, most visibly through its Market Street idea with counters for butchers, fishmongers and bakers. That matters because own-label goods like sandwich pickle are bought less for glamour and more for trust. British shoppers tend to know what a supermarket pickle should do. It should be chunky enough to notice, sharp enough to cut through cheese, sweet enough to belong in a sandwich, and not so fancy that it starts asking questions about sourdough. The heritage here is not that this exact pickle changed the course of British food. It is that it comes from a supermarket tradition built around ordinary, recognisable, useful groceries.
The Proper Place for Sandwich Pickle
Sandwich pickle has a very specific job in British eating. It turns a plain cheese sandwich into a lunch. It gives cold ham a bit of backbone. It sits happily beside sausage rolls, Scotch eggs, leftover roast meat, and the packed lunch that was assembled at speed because the morning had already gone wrong. It is not polite in the way salad cream is polite, and it is not fiery in the way chutney can be. It is brown, tangy, sweet-sharp, vegetable-studded, and entirely aware that its natural habitat is next to a block of cheddar. There are more elegant condiments in the world, but few are so direct about their purpose.
For British Cupboards in Canada
For British expats in Canada, a jar like Morrisons Sandwich Pickle can be oddly specific nostalgia. It might bring back supermarket own-label shelves, school lunchboxes, grandparents’ cupboards, or the particular sound of a knife scraping pickle across bread before the cheese went on. These are not dramatic memories, which is exactly why they stick. In Halifax, Toronto, Calgary or Vancouver, the taste of home is often not a grand Sunday roast but a sandwich made properly, with pickle doing its quiet work. The Great British Shop keeps that sort of cupboard logic alive, one brown jar at a time.