About Goldenfry Chicken Gravy
About Goldenfry Chicken Gravy
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrédients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: Wheat (Gluten), Soya.
Contient : Wheat (Gluten), Soya.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Goldenfry Chicken Gravy
More about Goldenfry Chicken Gravy
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 Goldenfry Chicken Gravy
A tub of chicken gravy with Yorkshire manners
Goldenfry Chicken Gravy - 300g is one of those cupboard tubs that does not ask for much attention until tea is nearly ready and the plate suddenly looks a bit under-dressed. Roast chicken, chips, leftover veg, a pie that needs a helping hand, it knows its role. British gravy has always had a practical streak. It is not there to perform. It is there to make the meal feel finished, preferably without requiring a roasting tin, a jug of pan juices, and someone in the kitchen pretending they enjoy whisking under pressure.
Read the full story
From a Wetherby chip shop to a gravy name
The story behind the modern Goldenfry packet is a brand story rather than a specifically documented origin tale for this chicken gravy tub. Goldenfry began as a small independent fish and chip shop in Wetherby, West Yorkshire, before growing into a gravy and food products manufacturer. In the 1960s, the business began developing a factory on the Sandbeck Industrial Estate in Wetherby, expanding there until the site reached capacity by the 1990s. In 1999, Goldenfry rebuilt its Wetherby factory, replacing a rather less glamorous collection of older sheds with a modern steel structure and glass-fronted entrances. Very gravy, in other words: plain beginnings, useful growth, and no need to get carried away.
Ken Herridge and the useful idea
Goldenfry traces its beginnings to Ken Herridge, who, according to the company’s own account, had served as an RAF pilot during the Second World War before returning home and opening that Wetherby fish and chip shop. The batter was apparently popular enough that customers asked for the recipe, which led him to produce a retail batter mix for local grocers and fishmongers. From there, the range moved into other practical kitchen helpers, including a gravy mix said by the company to have avoided the need for added meat juices. That detail matters because it gets at what Goldenfry has long been about: making the sort of things British kitchens use all the time, in a form that does not turn Tuesday tea into a catering exam.
Why Wetherby fits the packet
Wetherby is a West Yorkshire market town, and Goldenfry’s roots there make sense for a range built around batter, gravy, dumpling mixes and other sturdy cupboard goods. Yorkshire food culture has never been shy about proper meal accompaniments. Gravy is not a garnish in that world. It is infrastructure. The Goldenfry name sits comfortably in that tradition, especially for shoppers who grew up with tubs and packets that were bought because they worked, not because anyone expected them to have a lifestyle attached. Corporate histories often polish these things smooth, but the chip shop beginning is the bit worth keeping: a local food business finding a way into ordinary home kitchens.
The modern tub and the familiar job
Today, Goldenfry Chicken Gravy sits in the same practical category as the brand’s wider gravy and savoury mixes. The company is still associated with Wetherby and its Sandbeck Way site, and its manufacturing work has included both own-brand supermarket products and its own retail lines. That background helps explain why the packet feels familiar even if you first met it under a different supermarket roof. British gravy aisles have always been a bit tangled like that. What matters to most people is simpler: does it make a roast chicken dinner feel right, does it work with chips, and can it be made without fuss when everyone is already hungry and hovering?
For the cupboard in Canada
For British shoppers in Canada, Goldenfry Chicken Gravy - 300g is the sort of thing that can make a kitchen feel briefly less far from home. Not in a grand flag-waving way, just in the small domestic sense of pouring gravy over potatoes and thinking, yes, that is more like it. It belongs with the Sunday roast, the quick midweek chicken, the chips that were meant to be a side but have become dinner, and the family parcel logic of “you can’t get the right one over there, can you?” Quietly useful, deeply recognisable, and exactly the sort of British cupboard item The Great British Shop is pleased to send on its way.