About Aunt Bessie's Hearty Dumpling Mix
About Aunt Bessie's Hearty Dumpling Mix
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: wheat.
Contient : BlΓ©.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Aunt Bessie's Hearty Dumpling Mix
More about Aunt Bessie's Hearty 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.
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The story of Aunt Bessie's Hearty Dumpling Mix
Dumplings, or How Stew Learnt to Behave
Aunt Bessie's Hearty Dumpling Mix is not the glamorous end of British cooking, which is exactly why people miss it. Dumplings belong to the useful, weather-resistant side of the kitchen: beef stew, casserole, broth, anything bubbling away with enough gravy to justify a second helping. They sit on top, puff up, soak in the savoury business underneath, and make the whole pot feel more like dinner. In Canada, where winter is not exactly shy, that sort of pantry packet makes a great deal of sense.
Read the full story
A Brand Built Around the Sunday Dinner Orbit
The story we can source here is not a neat origin tale for this particular dumpling mix, so it is best not to pretend otherwise. The clearer heritage is Aunt Bessie's as a brand built around British meal accompaniments. Sales of Aunt Bessie's Homestyle mashed potato doubled in early 2008 after it appeared on Delia Smith's television programme How to Cheat at Cooking, used in a shepherd's pie recipe. By 2014, the brand had reportedly reached a value of Β£110 million with a consumer recognition score of 70%. The Grocer ranked Aunt Bessie's 50th among Britain's biggest brands in 2016 and 55th in 2017. Not bad for a name most people associate with roast dinners and freezer drawers.
Hull, Yorkshire, and the Aunt Who Was Market Researched
Aunt Bessie's roots sit with the William Jackson Food Group of Hull, a business that began in 1851 when William Jackson opened a shop in Scale Lane, trading as a grocer and tea dealer. Much later, the group developed commercial Yorkshire pudding production, and its frozen Yorkshire puddings were originally made for Butlin's Holiday Camps in the 1970s. The Aunt Bessie's name came along in the 1990s, after research apparently found the working name Triton made people think of bathrooms, showers or missiles. Quite reasonably, nobody wants their Yorkshire puddings to sound like military plumbing.
From Yorkshire Puddings to the Wider Roast Dinner Cupboard
The brand became known first for frozen Yorkshire puddings, then widened into the sort of things that gather around a British roast or a homely midweek meal: potatoes, mash, stuffing-style accompaniments, batters and mixes. Aunt Bessie's was once tied to Tryton Foods, the manufacturing business set up to supply supermarket chains, and the legal entity was later renamed Aunt Bessie's Ltd. In 2018, the brand was acquired by Nomad Foods, the group behind names such as Birds Eye. That explains some of the modern packet lineage, but not the emotional attachment. That part belongs to the dinner table.
Why a Dumpling Mix Feels So Specific
Dumplings have a very particular place in British cooking. They are not fancy, and they know it. They are the thing you add when a stew looks a bit thin, when the slow cooker has done its shift, or when someone has said, with unnecessary optimism, that there is plenty for everyone. A packet mix keeps the ritual simple: make the dough, divide it up, put the dumplings on top, and let the casserole do the rest. There is comfort in the lack of drama. British cooking has always had a talent for making flour and fat seem emotionally significant.
For British Kitchens a Long Way from Home
For British expats in Canada, Aunt Bessie's Hearty Dumpling Mix is the sort of thing that turns up in a parcel from home or gets added to an online basket because a normal supermarket shelf has failed to understand the assignment. It belongs with dark evenings, grandparents' cupboards, school-night stews, and the smell of something simmering while the windows steam up. It is not trying to reinvent dinner. It is just helping it land properly, which is often all anyone wanted in the first place. A quiet nod from The Great British Shop, and pass the gravy.