Product and category
Harvest Best Wok Mix is a frozen vegetable ‘wok mix’ (typically a 500 g frozen vegetable mix marketed for stir‑fry/wok dishes) commonly sold in Scandinavian discount retailers. The product appears in Nordic product listings and nutrition databases as a frozen wok mix with ingredients such as carrots, onion, spinach, celery, beans, red/yellow pepper, bean sprouts, water chestnuts, sugar snap peas and fungus. (taenk.dk)
Manufacturing and origin
Public retailer and test listings for this specific Wok Mix do not list a single clear country‑of‑manufacture on the consumer pages; packaging/origin information is often omitted in the tested product notes. Because the Harvest Best name is used by multiple suppliers and retailers across Europe, the item is likely produced in multiple countries or via third‑party co‑packers for retailer private labels rather than by a single centralized factory. For these reasons the manufacturing origin is reported as "Multiple countries." (taenk.dk)
Brand and ownership summary
- Brand name: Harvest Best. The label is widely encountered as a value/private‑label on frozen and canned produce lines sold by discount retailers (notably Netto in Denmark) and appears in retail promotional listings. (tilbudsaviseronline.dk)
- There is no single publicly documented global owner for the Harvest Best retail label in Scandinavia; it functions as a private‑label/retailer brand. Separately, a U.S. company called Harvest Best Inc. (San Antonio, TX) operates under the HARVESTBEST name in North America and holds related U.S. trademarks. Both uses of the name coexist in different markets. (harvestbestinc.com)
Practical notes and data confidence
- Nutrition and package weight references for the Harvest Best Wok Mix are available in public food/nutrition databases and retailer listings (common reference size 500 g). (fatsecret.dk)
- Where exact manufacturer or factory origin is required (country of manufacture, specific co‑packer), check the physical product packaging (small print near barcode/producer code) or request provenance from the retailer (Netto/Salling Group or the specific shop that sold the product), since public listings and test summaries commonly omit those on‑pack origin details. (taenk.dk)