About Goldenfry Dumpling Mix
About Goldenfry Dumpling Mix
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: wheat, milk.
Contient : BlΓ©, Lait.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Goldenfry Dumpling Mix
More about Goldenfry Dumpling Mix
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 Goldenfry Dumpling Mix
A packet for proper stew weather
Goldenfry Dumpling Mix is one of those cupboard packets that knows exactly what sort of day it has been. The stew is bubbling, the kitchen windows have gone a bit misty, and someone has decided that what the whole thing needs is dumplings. Not garnish. Not a flourish. Dumplings. Soft, plain, comforting, and very much part of the British understanding that a meal should sometimes arrive with a bit of heft.
Read the full story
The Wetherby factory behind the packet
There is no neatly sourced origin tale for this specific dumpling mix, so the honest story here is the Goldenfry story behind the modern packet. In the 1960s, Goldenfry began developing a factory on the Sandbeck Industrial Estate in Wetherby, West Yorkshire, and the site grew over the years until it reached capacity in the 1990s. In 1999 the company rebuilt its Wetherby factory, replacing older shed-like premises with a modern steel structure and glass-fronted entrances. Further work on the site followed in 2010 and 2011. That may sound like the sort of thing only a planning committee could love, but it matters because Goldenfryβs identity has stayed closely tied to Wetherby rather than drifting into vague corporate nowhere.
From chip shop batter to gravy weather
Goldenfry traces its beginnings to Ken Herridge, who had served as an RAF pilot during the Second World War and later opened a fish and chip shop in Wetherby. According to the companyβs own account, customers asked after his batter recipe often enough that he developed a retail batter mix, selling it through local independent grocers and fishmongers. From there, the business moved into other practical cooking products, including gravy mixes. The companyβs own heritage points especially to a gravy mix that did not require meat juices, which tells you quite a lot about the Goldenfry lane: useful packets for British dinners, especially the ones involving gravy boats, roasting tins, and people asking if there is any more.
Why Yorkshire makes sense here
Wetherby sits in West Yorkshire, which is not a bad place for a brand built around batter, gravy, and dumpling-style comfort food to come from. Yorkshire cooking has long had a reputation for being economical, filling, and sensible, sometimes all three before breakfast. Dumplings belong naturally in that world. They stretch a stew, soak up gravy, and make a pan of meat and vegetables feel more complete. Goldenfry did not invent the British dumpling, and it would be silly to pretend otherwise. What it does represent is the packet-mix version of a familiar habit: taking something homely and making it easier to get right on a cold evening.
The British pantry logic
Packets like this are not glamorous, which is rather the point. A dumpling mix sits in the cupboard waiting for the moment when dinner needs turning from βthere is a casseroleβ into βthere is a proper mealβ. It belongs with gravy granules, suet memories, stock cubes, batter mix, and all the other small British pantry items that look unassuming until you move abroad and suddenly realise you miss them. In Canada, where a winter stew is not exactly a rare concept, the British dumpling still has its own particular feel. It is not a biscuit, not a scone, and not something that needs explaining to anyone who grew up with a saucepan on the hob and a tea towel over one shoulder.
For the people who know
Goldenfry Dumpling Mix will make immediate sense to anyone who remembers family stews, grandparentsβ cupboards, or the sort of corner shop shelf where gravy, custard powder, and packet mixes all stood shoulder to shoulder like a tiny edible civil service. It is practical food, not performance food. The kind of thing you buy because you know exactly what it is for, and because the Canadian supermarket version, if there even is one, will probably require too much explanation. For British shoppers in Canada, it is a small packet with a very specific job, and The Great British Shop is happy to let it do that job without making a speech about it.