About Pot Noodle Original Curry
About Pot Noodle Original Curry
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: wheat, milk, gluten.
May contain: barley, celery, egg, mustard, oats, rye, soya.
Contient : BlΓ©, Lait, Gluten.
Peut contenir : barley, celery, egg, mustard, oats, rye, soya.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Pot Noodle Original Curry
More about Pot Noodle Original Curry
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 Pot Noodle Original Curry
The pot that knows what it is
Pot Noodle Original Curry is not here to pretend it came from a hand-thrown clay bowl in a mountain village. It is a 90g pot of dehydrated noodles, dried bits, flavouring powder and practical British impatience. Add boiling water, give it a stir, wait a few minutes, and there it is: thick, yellowish, curry-ish, and somehow exactly what you meant. The fork is important. This is not a delicate noodle soup. It is a semi-solid British cupboard event, eaten from the same pot it arrived in, ideally while standing near a kettle and wondering whether this counts as lunch.
Read the full story
A British answer to cup noodles
There is no fully sourced origin story for Original Curry as a separate flavour, so the honest story is the Pot Noodle story. The brand was launched in the United Kingdom in 1977 by Golden Wonder, the snack company better known for crisps. The wider idea of noodles prepared in their own cup had already been pioneered in Japan, with Nissin introducing Cup Noodles in 1971, but Pot Noodle became a very British interpretation of the format. Less broth, more heft. Less quiet elegance, more kettle-based rescue mission. By the late twentieth century, it had become one of those products that seemed to belong equally in student rooms, office drawers, garages, bedsits and cupboards where nobody admitted to buying it, yet it kept reappearing.
Golden Wonder, Wales and the great pot machinery
In 2006, Unilever relaunched the brand, introduced three new varieties, and reduced salt levels by 50 per cent. The Croespenmaen factory near Crumlin in South Wales has been described as typically producing around 175 million pots a year, which is the sort of number that makes you look at the humble kettle with renewed respect. Pot Noodle flavours generally rely on flavourings rather than the literal thing on the label, and the range has often been broadly suitable for vegetarians, though the packet should always have the final word. Behind that modern packet sits Golden Wonder, founded in 1947 by William Alexander, a baker in Stockbridge, Edinburgh. The company was named after a potato variety he considered good for crisps, which is a splendidly snack-based origin for a business that later gave Britain noodles in a pot.
The packet name is not the whole family tree
Pot Noodleβs ownership history is a reminder that British grocery shelves are full of products with more paperwork behind them than seems strictly necessary. Golden Wonder launched the brand, but by the mid-1990s the Pot Noodle business had been sold by Dalgety to Best Foods. Best Foods was later acquired by Unilever in 2000. When Unilever sold the rest of the Golden Wonder business to Tayto in 2006, it kept Pot Noodle and the Welsh factory. That is why the modern pot belongs to Unilever rather than to the crisp company that first put it in British hands. Corporate family trees are rarely tidy, however much the packaging would like you to think everyone sat calmly in a boardroom and planned this from the beginning.
Original Curry and the taste of low-effort Britain
Original Curry has the particular charm of being familiar without asking to be admired too solemnly. It belongs to the world of late trains, short lunch breaks, shared flats, corner shops, teenage bedrooms and cupboards stocked by people who said they were βjust getting a few basicsβ. For British shoppers in Canada, that matters more than it probably should. You can find plenty of instant noodles here, many of them very good, but Pot Noodle occupies a different emotional shelf. It is not only about curry flavour or convenience. It is about the specific British habit of making a meal out of a kettle, a plastic pot and a sachet, then acting as though this was a perfectly reasonable culinary plan all along.
A small pot with a long memory
There are grander foods to miss from home, certainly. Sunday roasts have better manners. Fish and chips get more ceremony. But Pot Noodle Original Curry has its own loyal place in the British memory cupboard. It is quick, recognisable and faintly ridiculous in a way that feels deeply familiar. For expats, students, former students, and anyone who once kept one hidden at the back of a work drawer, it carries a small hit of home with very little washing up. The Great British Shop sends it back into Canadian kitchens with the quiet understanding that sometimes nostalgia comes with a foil lid and a fork.