About Baxters Favourite French Onion Soup
About Baxters Favourite French Onion Soup
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: milk, celery.
Contient : Lait, CΓ©leri.
StorageConservation
More about Baxters Favourite French Onion Soup
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 Baxters Favourite French Onion Soup
A Tin With a Very Particular Mood
Baxters Favourite French Onion Soup is not the loudest tin in the cupboard, which is probably part of its charm. It suggests dark evenings, toast that has gone slightly too far, and the sort of lunch that feels more civilised than the effort involved. French onion soup has always had a faint air of restaurant about it, but in a 400g tin it becomes much more British: practical, shelf-stable, and ready when the weather has turned against you.
Read the full story
The Brand Story Behind the Label
The story we can source here is the Baxters story rather than a neat origin tale for this particular French onion soup. The company was known as W.A. Baxter and Sons Ltd. before becoming Baxters Food Group Limited in December 2006. In 2011, Baxters acquired the Fray Bentos range from Princes Ltd, with production transferred to Fochabers by early 2013. Its main manufacturing site remains in Fochabers, Moray, Scotland, while the corporate headquarters are in Edinburgh. Corporate reshuffling is rarely romantic, but it does help explain why Baxters now sits in that broad British cupboard category of soups, preserves, beetroot, condiments, and assorted tins that people recognise on sight.
Fochabers, Fruit, Soup, and a Sensible Amount of History
Baxters began in 1868, when George Baxter borrowed Β£100 from family members and opened a grocery shop in Fochabers. Before that, he had worked as a gardener on the Gordon Estate. His wife Margaret made jams and jellies with local fruit in the back of the shop, and those early preserves helped give the family business its first proper footing. It is a nicely grounded origin: not a boardroom vision statement, just a small shop, local produce, and someone in the back making things people wanted to buy.
How Soup Became Part of the Baxters Name
The soup side of Baxters came later. In 1916, William Baxter and his wife Ethel built a factory beside the River Spey, east of Fochabers. Ethel hired a canning machine in 1923 for local fruit in syrup, and in 1929 began making soups from local produce, with Royal Game often cited as the first Baxters soup. Later, Ena and Gordon Baxter joined the company in 1952, and Ena helped expand the soup range with traditional Scottish recipes such as Cock-a-leekie and Scotch Broth. That does not make French onion soup a Speyside invention, obviously. It does, however, place this tin within a company whose reputation became strongly tied to canned soup.
Why French Onion Makes Sense in a British Cupboard
French onion soup is one of those flavours that sounds a little grand until you remember how British people actually use tins of soup. It is there for lunch when the fridge contains half an onion and a moral crisis. It is there when toast, a roll, or a bit of cheese needs a partner. Baxtersβ βFavouriteβ wording does not need much decoding either. This is the familiar range language of British supermarket shelves, the kind you scan quickly when doing the weekly shop, trying to remember whether there is already soup at home. There probably is. You buy another anyway.
For the Homesick Cupboard in Canada
For British shoppers in Canada, a tin like this often matters less because of some grand culinary claim and more because it looks right. The weight, the label, the flavour name, the quiet promise of a hot bowl without much ceremony: all of it belongs to the old rhythm of UK cupboards. It is the sort of thing parents might send in a parcel, or that turns up in a kitchen cupboard next to tea bags, pickle, gravy granules, and biscuits being rationed with absolutely no success. A small, ordinary tin can do a surprising amount of emotional work, which is faintly ridiculous and also completely true. The Great British Shop knows that some groceries are not just groceries, especially when soup weather has followed you across the Atlantic.