Every fibre of my body repulses this flavour but I LOVE pure salt chips.
In Spain I was betrayed when I wanted “normal” salted ones and was confronted with the most disgusting taste a chip can possibly hold.
Never again…
TIL: I’m a freak and pervert
Neuroatypical person when confronted with the existence of people with different opinions
It’s one of the best
I had it once.
It’s disgusting. But I have to say… It grows on you.
I ate the whole bag including the crumbs.
I started to angrily disagree but on reflection it’s true, at least in my case.
Do you realize you just insulted my entire race of people?!
But yes
Some of the UK
potato chipcrisp flavors I’m learning about are really freakin’ weird to someone who comes from the land that invented them.Prawn cocktail? Beef? Pickled onion?
And then there’s this…
prawn cocktail fucking slaps though
For all I know, it is the greatest potato chip flavor in the world. America’s range of flavors is surprisingly limited.
You want weird? We also have fish flavored crisps.
I mentioned prawn cocktail, but this is also weird for sure. I don’t understand this one at all considering scampi is supposed to have a kind of subtle flavor to it, or at least in my experience, whereas potato chips are generally the opposite.
crisps probably don’t come from the US on the crisps wikipedia page in the history section it says
The earliest known recipe for something similar to today’s potato chips is in the English cook William Kitchiner’s book The Cook’s Oracle published in 1817, which was a bestseller in the United Kingdom and the United States. The 1822 edition’s recipe for “Potatoes fried in Slices or Shavings” reads “peel large potatoes… cut them in shavings round and round, as you would peel a lemon; dry them well in a clean cloth, and fry them in lard or dripping”.
…
Early recipes for potato chips in the US are found in Mary Randolph’s Virginia House-Wife (1824) and in N.K.M. Lee’s Cook’s Own Book (1832), both of which explicitly cite Kitchiner.
A legend associates the creation of potato chips with Saratoga Springs, New York, decades later than the first recorded recipe.
I skipped a bit with another early recorded version that was also from a british book but that’s it
I checked the book and it doesn’t claim to have invented it it just presents it with all the other recipes but that could just be the style of cookbooks at the time I dunno I’m not a historian but eh proof enough that there’s no evidence of them being american atleast and some evidence they’re maybe british
Fair enough, the Saratoga Springs story was what I had heard.
They sound fucking delicious. Mackie’s ice cream is top tier too.
I’m not saying they’re bad. Just weird.
I haven’t tried them.
I’m both of those things, so that checks out.
My home state has salt and vinegar chips that are so acidic that eating more than a handful will burn the inside of your mouth and the skin on the edge of your lips will fall off.
So anyway those are my favorite flavor ever and I eat so many every time I have the chance to eat them that I can’t taste for a week.
Edit: I hate autocorrect. Always have.
Here in NZ we have the regular salt and vinegar chips, but also the more intense vinegar and salt chips.
I like the stronger ones, but too many makes my mouth feel like it is about to fall out.
I suppose the fix is to find a basic drink to neutralize the acid before it burns your mouth?
I can’t think of any basic drinks…
EDIT: Apparently, milk, tea, and certain juices are basic/alkaline.
Pro tip: After vomiting, have a glass of milk (assuming you can keep it down). It’ll neutralize the stomach acid burning your throat
Surely water is better because the pH of your average fresh milk is between 6.5 to 6.9
Milk of magnesia is ph 10.5 though.
But that’s the good stuff.
Basically most food is at least a bit acidic (even milk and tea) because it keeps better.
Well, guess I’m either a freak or a pervert.
I’m both.
What’s your phone number? Asking for a friend.
What kind of friend?
…just a guy.
Not enjoying salt & vinegar is just a sign of weakness
*addiction to sugar ftfy
Huh. Guess I’ll have to try them.
Laughs in Canadian.