About Aunt Bessie's Yorkshire Pudding Mix
About Aunt Bessie's Yorkshire Pudding Mix
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrédients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: wheat, milk, egg.
Contient : Blé, Lait, Œufs.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Aunt Bessie's Yorkshire Pudding Mix
More about Aunt Bessie's Yorkshire Pudding 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 Yorkshire Pudding Mix
The packet that stands between calm and Yorkshire pudding drama
Aunt Bessie's Yorkshire Pudding Mix is not trying to be glamorous, which is probably why it is useful. Yorkshire puddings have a way of turning otherwise sensible people into oven-door worriers, peering through the glass as if the batter might respond to moral encouragement. This 120g packet belongs to that very British world of roast dinner management: beef or chicken on the go, gravy being negotiated, vegetables steaming, and one small tray expected to rise magnificently on command.
Read the full story
A brand built around the roast dinner plate
Aunt Bessie's became known first and foremost through roast dinner accompaniments, and the brand grew well beyond Yorkshire puddings. Frozen roast potatoes were added to the range in 1999, with some potato products, including chips and croquettes, made under licence by Heinz in Norfolk until 2015. By 2001, the brand's retail value was reported at more than £50 million, enough to put it among Britain's top 100 brands. In 2008, the legal entity Tryton Foods Ltd was renamed Aunt Bessie's Ltd, which rather tidied up a name that had already become the one shoppers recognised on the packet.
Hull, Tryton, and a name that nearly went very wrong
The roots behind Aunt Bessie's sit with the William Jackson Food Group of Hull, a business tracing back to 1851, when William Jackson opened a shop in Scale Lane as a grocer and tea dealer. Much later, the group developed a way of commercially producing Yorkshire puddings, and its frozen versions were made for Butlin's Holiday Camps in the 1970s. The working name Tryton, or Triton, did not survive consumer research terribly well, as people apparently thought of showers, bathrooms, or even missiles. Aunt Bessie's, by comparison, sounded like someone who might actually know where the gravy boat was.
Yorkshire pudding without pretending the packet invented Yorkshire pudding
It is worth being clear: this mix is part of the Aunt Bessie's brand story, not the ancient origin of Yorkshire pudding itself. Yorkshire pudding is much older than any modern packet mix and belongs to the broader cooking tradition of baked batter served with roast meat and gravy. Aunt Bessie's did not create the idea of Yorkshire pudding, but the brand did help turn it into a freezer and cupboard staple for households that wanted the roast dinner result without starting every Sunday lunch as a technical exam.
Why the mix matters in a Canadian cupboard
For British shoppers in Canada, this is the sort of packet that makes sense immediately. It is not just flour and instructions, though it is partly that. It is the mental picture of a Sunday roast, the hot tin, the stern instruction not to open the oven, and the small relief when the puddings rise properly. In an expat cupboard, Aunt Bessie's Yorkshire Pudding Mix sits alongside gravy granules, stuffing mix, custard powder and the other quiet essentials that do not look emotional until you have been away from home for a while.
A small sign-off from the roast dinner department
There is something very British about caring this much whether batter becomes puffy at the right moment. Aunt Bessie's built its reputation around that domestic pressure point, and this mix keeps the same spirit in a shelf-stable, practical form. For anyone trying to assemble a proper roast dinner in Halifax, Toronto, Calgary or anywhere else with an oven and a homesick appetite, The Great British Shop is happy to help keep the Yorkshire pudding portion of the operation from becoming unnecessarily dramatic.