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Pot Noodle

Brand of instant noodle snack foods

Pot Noodle

Summary

Brand of instant noodle snack foods

FieldValue
namePot Noodle
logoFile:Pot Noodle logo.webp
imagePot Noodle after water etc added (King size Chicken & Mushroom).jpg
image_size170px
captionChicken and mushroom flavour Pot Noodle made up according to instructions
producttypeInstant noodles
currentownerUnilever
producedbyCroespenmaen, near Crumlin, Caerphilly, Wales
countryUnited Kingdom
introduced
previousownersGolden Wonder
website
module
module1
Chicken and mushroom flavour "King" (large) Pot Noodle before boiling water and [[soy sauce]] sachet added

Pot Noodle is a brand of instant noodle snack foods from the United Kingdom, available in a selection of flavours and varieties. This dehydrated food consists of noodles, assorted dried vegetables and flavouring powder. It is prepared by adding boiling water, which rapidly softens the noodles and dissolves the powdered sauce.

The product is packaged in a paper pot, from which the prepared noodles can be eaten. Many pots contain a sachet of sauce, such as soy sauce.

Certain flavours of Pot Noodle have "King" variants, which are large versions of the same flavour.

History

Instant noodles were originally invented in 1958 by Momofuku Ando, and Cup Noodles developed by his company Nissin Food Products in 1971.

Golden Wonder launched the Pot Noodle brand in the United Kingdom in 1977. In July 1995, Best Foods, which produces Hellmanns mayonnaise, paid then owner Dalgety plc $280 million for its Golden Wonder Pot Noodle instant hot snacks manufacturing business.

Bestfoods, known as CPC international before 1997, was itself acquired by Unilever in June 2000. Unilever kept the Pot Noodle brand and its sole production factory, after it sold the rest of the Golden Wonder business in January 2006 to Tayto. In the same year, Unilever relaunched the brand, introduced three new varieties and reduced salt levels by 50 per cent. Golden Wonder later established another line of pot noodles called The Nation's Noodle (renamed Noodle Pot in 2016) in direct competition with their former brand.

Production

Pot Noodle harvest festival offerings, [[St Andrew's Southgate]], London

Pot Noodles are manufactured in Croespenmaen, near Crumlin, Caerphilly, Wales, which became the topic of an advertising campaign of 2006, showing fictitious Pot Noodle mines in Wales. The factory typically produces 175 million pots annually.

Around 2006, Pot Noodle's recipe was changed to make the product healthier. This mostly involved cutting down on the amount of salt in the product. A "GTi" variant, prepared in a microwave instead of adding boiling water, was introduced at the end of the 2000s and was the first Pot Noodle to contain real meat. In 2007, 2014, and 2023, the brand changed their logo.

Pot Noodle has often given promotional gifts away, including a 'horn' and a 'spinning fork.' During the 2008 Edinburgh Festival Fringe, Unilever sponsored a musical directed by David Sant, and created by advertising agency Mother, set in a Pot Noodle factory.

As part of a sustainability commitment by Pot Noodle's parent company, Unilever, half of the Pot Noodle range and roughly 80% of the most popular flavours will switch to paper pots rather than plastic pots.{{Cite web|date=2023-07-12|title=Pot Noodle trials new paper-based packaging in the UK

Controversies

The Pot Noodle brand has been involved in a number of controversial advertising campaigns.

In 1993, the Computer Graphic advertisement was banned after reports it caused epileptic seizures in viewers.

In January 2002, Irish politician Michael Ring TD, branded a Pot Noodle animated television advertisement as glorifying child neglect and demanded it be banned. The advertisement featured a young boy whose tongue was stuck to a frozen climbing frame. A supervisor went to get a sponge and boil a kettle of water to help free the child's tongue but was distracted and instead used the hot water to make a Pot Noodle. Ring said "the manufacturers have a responsibility to the public not to encourage youngsters to lick frozen pipes or suggest that adults should neglect a suffering child".

In August 2002, a series of television adverts that described Pot Noodle as "the slag of all snacks" was withdrawn after complaints to the Independent Television Commission. The related poster campaign, revolving around the "Hot Noodle" range with a tagline of "hurt me, you slag" was withdrawn by Unilever after the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) upheld complaints that "the tone could be interpreted as condoning violence".

In May 2005, the Advertising Standards Authority received 620 complaints, about a series of advertisements featuring a man with a large brass horn in his trousers, with the suggestive slogan "Have you got the Pot Noodle horn?" Some of the complaints described them as "tasteless and offensive." The three advertisements had been already approved for restricted times, primarily after the 9:00pm watershed. The ASA did not uphold the complaints. While it accepted the campaign was "a little crude," they deemed it harmless and said that "the timing restriction was appropriate."

In a September 2006 article headed "Teach Pot Noodle teens to cook" in Dublin's Sunday Independent newspaper, Cavan chef Nevin Maguire on a recent school visit was shocked "to see 60 per cent of Leaving Cert students had Pot Noodle for their lunch". Maguire, along with other celebrity chefs called for compulsory cookery lessons in Ireland's schools for a "new generation that thinks 'food comes in a box'".

Notes

References

References

  1. Elkins, Ruth. (2007-01-07). "Mr Pot Noodle dies, aged 96 | Asia | News". [[The Independent]].
  2. "Bestfoods -- Company History". fundinguniverse.com.
  3. Journal, Elizabeth Jensen Staff Reporter of The Wall Street. (1997-10-17). "CPC International Changes Company's Name to Bestfoods". Wall Street Journal.
  4. (25 August 2007). "Pots push health agenda: Pot Noodle and its competitors have made a concerted move away from the cheap and cheerful student image of old towards a healthier, more wholesome message". [[The Grocer]].
  5. Kemp, Ed. (2009-07-24). "Golden Wonder to take on Pot Noodle with 'The Nation's Noodle'". Marketing Magazine.
  6. (2006-05-09). "From Pot Noodle to pit for advert". [[BBC News]].
  7. Swaine, Jon. (2008-08-05). "Advertisers create Pot Noodle: The Musical". Telegraph.
  8. "Paper Pots- Background".
  9. (21 April 1993). "Flashing TV pot noodle advert banned after epilepsy attacks". The Guardian.
  10. (27 January 2002). "TD potty over 'child neglecting promoting' ad". [[Sunday World]].
  11. Jennifer Whitehead. "Pot Noodle banned from calling itself the "slag of all snacks"". Brand Republic.
  12. (2002-08-19). "UK | Pot Noodle advert 'caused offence'". BBC News.
  13. (2002-08-28). "UK | 'Irresponsible' Pot Noodle ad withdrawn". BBC News.
  14. (2005-05-18). "Pot Noodle's 'horn' ad off the hook". The Guardian.
  15. (18 May 2005). "Broadcast Report". Advertising Standards Authority.
  16. Bradley, Lara. (24 September 2006). "Teach Pot Noodle teens to cook". [[Sunday Independent (Ireland).
  17. "Our Story".
  18. Night Of The Trailers. (2015-05-16). "Golden Wonder Pot Sweet - 1985 TV Advert".
  19. "Lost the pot noodle {{!}} PotNoodle".
  20. "Pot Noodle launches 'adventurous' Asian-inspired Fusions range".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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