I think Beefy's Own is a fine name for a potato chip. Something right out of The Simpsons.
These chips are from New Hampshire and do not have a backstory involving children who cannot eat normal snacks fried in seed oils. Instead the family behind the brand just didn't want to eat seed oils.
What is it with all the negative press for seed oils? It seems like whenever Americans adopt some kind of dietary prohibition, there are cultures without it that have people living to 100 routinely.
This the second beef tallow chip I've encountered and I found it, like the first, at Woodman's. However, these were in a clearance cart. Perhaps people are supporting local tallow chips more than those from the Granite State.
I give Beefy's Own high marks for packaging as A) the bag has a flat bottom so it stands upright and B) the bag is resealable.
While I am on the subject of packaging, why is it that salt & vinegar chips come in bags that have a lot of blue on them? If a small section of the labeling is given over to the flavor while the rest of the bag is the same for all flavors, salt & vinegar is blue. The vast majority of salt & vinegar chips are denoted via blueness. How did blue become the color of vinegar? Where is Uncle Cecil when you need him?
The first thing I noticed when opening the bag and peering inside was that these are some large diameter chips. I don't think I ran across a small one my whole tasting. These are some manly chips! They were also thicker than normal. Extra manly! As color goes, these chips were a lovely light tan with some occasional brown spotting. As with Teddy's tallow chips, bubbles were not prominent. At least not large ones.
Beefyness was first to be smelled. That smell, that tallow smell. The potato aroma was on the sweet side and the vinegar was rather faint and required some deep inhalation to be noticed.
Given their thickness, the chips had crunch but it was slightly soggy. It starts off well but my bite got bogged down rather than finishing with a snap. They had a nice tallowy taste but Beefy went very easy on the salt. Not only was there no extra, these seemed to not even have your average dose. Weird. The vinegar tanginess was rather mellow and the spud tasted sweet.
Aside from some smart packaging, I give Beefy's Own credit for a snack that doesn't read like a chemistry textbook. Just spuds, tallow, salt, and white distilled vinegar.
But these chips needed more salt and more vinegar. They were fine, just a bit uninspired.





































