About Batchelors Cup A Soup Oxtail
About Batchelors Cup A Soup Oxtail
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: barley, milk, gluten.
May contain: celery, soya.
Contient : Orge, Lait, Gluten.
Peut contenir : CΓ©leri, Soya.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Batchelors Cup A Soup Oxtail
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Additional Information
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The story of Batchelors Cup A Soup Oxtail
A Mug, A Kettle, A Very British Compromise
Batchelors Cup A Soup Oxtail - 4 Pack belongs to that grand British category of food which is less about ceremony and more about sorting yourself out. It is not asking for a saucepan, a chopping board, or optimism. It asks for a mug, a sachet, and a kettle that has probably been boiled twice because someone got distracted. Oxtail as a flavour carries its own old-fashioned pantry atmosphere: savoury, dark, warming, and faintly reminiscent of tins at the back of a cupboard that seemed to have been there since decimalisation. In Cup A Soup form, it becomes something quicker and more modern, but still recognisably from the same British comfort-food family.
Read the full story
Before The Sachets, There Were Peas
William Batchelor was born in Habrough, Lincolnshire, in 1860, into a farming family, and later made his name in Sheffield after finding a way to preserve vegetables, especially processed peas, by canning. Before the Batchelors name was attached to instant soups and cupboard shortcuts, William had worked as a tea packer and produce merchant in Sheffield, which feels pleasingly practical rather than glamorous. He opened a factory, and by the time he died in 1913, Batchelor's Peas Ltd had grown to employ 50 people. So the story behind this mug of instant oxtail soup begins not with powdered soup at all, but with peas, tins, trade, and a very Sheffield sort of usefulness.
Sheffield, Canning, And The Rise Of Convenience
Batchelors is a slightly odd fit for Sheffield if you only think of the city through steel, cutlery and heavy industry. Yet that is part of its charm. This was food manufacturing growing up in an industrial city, making everyday staples for everyday households. After William Batchelor's death, his daughter Ella Hudson Gasking took over the business and became one of Sheffield's notable industrial figures. Under her leadership, a major canning factory opened at Wadsley Bridge in 1937, described at the time as the largest canning plant in Britain. That sort of scale matters because Batchelors became associated with food that was reliable, storable and ready when needed. Not fancy, not fussy, just there.
From Tins To Dried Soup
The Batchelors business changed hands during the Second World War, when wartime pressures around staffing and rationing led to its acquisition by James Van den Bergh of Unilever in 1943. After that, the brand moved further into the world of dried foods. Batchelors sold its first dried soup in 1949, in chicken noodle flavour, which marked an important shift from the earlier world of canned vegetables. Cup-a-Soup itself was launched by Batchelors in 1972 and became one of the brand's most familiar lines in Britain. The oxtail flavour sits within that longer story of British convenience food: the moment when soup stopped needing a pan and started living quite happily in a desk drawer.
The Modern Packet Name
The modern Batchelors packet has passed through a few corporate cupboards of its own. Batchelors later moved from Unilever to the UK arm of Campbell Soup Company in 2001, then to Premier Foods in 2006, after Campbell's withdrew from the UK market. That ownership trail is not the romantic bit, obviously. Nobody gets misty-eyed about regulatory approval. But it does explain why the Batchelors name now appears across a broad range of British store-cupboard products, including Cup A Soup, Pasta 'n' Sauce, Super Rice and Super Noodles. The important part for shoppers is simpler: in the UK, Cup A Soup is still strongly tied to the Batchelors name, and that is the name people tend to look for.
Why Oxtail Still Makes Sense
Oxtail soup has long had a place in British cupboards as one of those sturdy, savoury flavours that feels more substantial than the effort involved. In instant form, it is especially tied to work lunches, cold afternoons, shared office kettles and the kind of kitchen cupboard where tea bags, gravy granules and emergency biscuits live together in uneasy harmony. For British expats in Canada, Batchelors Cup A Soup Oxtail is not really about novelty. It is about recognition. The sachet tears open, the kettle goes on, and suddenly a small part of the day behaves like it did back home. A quiet nod from The Great British Shop, for those who know that sometimes lunch only needs a mug and a bit of memory.