Firstly I will declare that I think Vitner's Salt & Sour chips are the Platonic ideal of a salt and vinegar potato chip. Or were, at least. It's been a while since I've had them. And I'd swear that they were called "Salt & Vinegar" in the past and not "Salt & Sour". Heck, maybe I am misremebering that. But I don't feel that my memory fails me when I recall my roommate and I eating them by the bagful 20 years ago. They were something of an extreme food in that they were really salty and very tangy. When you got to the bottom of the bad, you'd encounter a layer of salt and acetic acid dust and then realize that your tongue had gone numb. Vitner's chips had a fragile crispness that perfectly complemented all of the oil they absorbed which made them ever so tasty.
At first blush the humble potato chip is a simple food. It's a deep fried slice of potato not some fancy French ragout with an ingredients list a mile long. But there are 200+ varieties of potatoes to be sliced and at what thickness? Plus you've got an arsenal of frying oils at your disposal. In addition, there's your salt & vinegar dust. What are each in proportion to the other? How much do you put on each chip? Perhaps there's a little sumpin sumpin extra in the dust...
I'm no expert in this area and ingredient labels generally aren't very helpful in trying to pin things down. Indeed, the Zapp's label says that the potatoes were fried in peanut oil. Unless there was a little canola oil thrown in as well. Or maybe it was simply corn oil. Or sunflower. But I carry on.
I've always associated Zapp's with New Orleans because of all the fleur-de-lis and Mardi Gras references in their chip names and on their bags. But apparently they originate a bit west of Nawlins. Close enough, for this Yankee, at least.
A couple things stand out looking at the bag. A) I have no idea what "New Orleans Kettle Style" is supposed to mean. Sounds like marketing BS. B) why would one have to resort to artificially flavoring a salt & vinegar chip? Don't you just need salt and powdered acetic acid? Maybe it's a quirk of FDA regulations.
Anyway, here they are:
I thought they were thicker than your average chip. Mind you, I didn't bust out my calipers but they looked and felt so on my tongue. Were they sliced more thickly than your average Frito Lay chip? Or perhaps there was something in the cooking process that made them absorb more oil. Do those bubbles on the chip's surface distort my sense of thickness?
They have a taste/mouthfeel that is a bit mealy, kind of pasty. For me, Old Dutch chips have this in abundance so, if you're familiar with them, you know what I mean. (I hope.) Kettle chips are those cooked at a lower temperature initially and gradually increased. This apparently allows starch molecules to inject, um, well, starch into the cell walls which reinforces them. (I am envisioning a scene from Bruce Conner's A Movie here.) And so you get a crunchier potato chip. These, however, did not seem to be particularly rigid chips despite being New Orleans Kettle Style.
But they did have a nice medium sourness and saltiness to them. My tongue emerged largely unscathed but there was enough tanginess to satisfy. And - I realize this sounds odd - I liked the potato flavor. A nice mellow earthiness underneath the salt and sour. A worthy companion to your next crawfish boil. Or just bust open a bag next week for Fat Tuesday.
I wonder if you read | learned this; but Vitner was bought by Utz Brands back in January.
ReplyDeleteAs a regular surfer of the L T H Forum, I was surprised this did not get much commentary from its members. Because Vitner was considered the heir to the throne of Chicago snack foods after Jays was bought. Have I bought Vitner's snacks since it sold? No, but that is more because my snack purchases have been going to the Brim's brand sold at Dollar Tree stores. Despite the complimentary(?) Bible scripture on each bag. (Zapp's products turn up at Dollar Tree as well.)
No, I didn't see that Vitner was bought out. I've never heard of Brim's. I wonder if they have salt & vinegar and if they distribute here.
ReplyDeleteHoping I do not seem snarky, have you gone into a Dollar Tree store there?
ReplyDeleteI've seen the Brim products in Illinois, and as far east as Cleveland, OH. (a Dollar Tree in the same shopping center as a Heinen's where I typically buy the beer I consume during Cinema Wasteland), so I suspect they're in stores in Madtown. As are some Zapp's products.
Nope, I have not yet gone to a Dollar Tree.
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