Hamish Thompson [runs] the Museum of Crisps, a website that’s so far logged just shy of 1,400 different bonafide flavours of chip.
“There’s brussels sprout, cappuccino, lamington, and whisky and haggis, to name a few of the weirder ones,”
In a grocer near the ABC Melbourne office, some of the far-out flavours are full meals, such as bolognese, cheeseburger and beef rendang … which taste uncannily like bolognese, cheeseburger, and beef rendang.
So how are these complex chip flavours made, and how do food chemists get them tasting so close to the real deal?
I mean, a lot of the time it’s just a dust of the particular food and/or flavor on the chip. Not like dehydrated cheeseburger, but some combo of dehydrated garlic, onion, tomato, and cheese?