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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Lifestyle
Rebecca Smithers

Posh flavoured crisps are new supermarket battleground

Flavoured crisps for Christmas.
Flavoured crisps have been growing in popularity, with manufacturers pulling out all the stops for Christmas.

Forget cheese footballs or Twiglets, retailers have raised their game this Christmas to tempt shoppers with an unprecedented range of upmarket flavours in the battle of posh festive crisps.

Crisps flavoured with pulled pork or with drinks such as prosecco or gin and tonic feature in retailers’ snack offerings. Cheese and onion or salt and vinegar have been elbowed aside in favour of camembert and caramelised onion from discount supermarket Aldi, or sea salt and chardonnay wine vinegar, on sale at the Co-op.

Marks & Spencer revealed its Christmas hand early with winter berries and prosecco hand-cooked crisps, made with blackcurrant and raspberry juice and M&S prosecco, scattered with edible gold stars. “There’s been a big trend for wacky flavoured crisps over the last few years,” said M&S snack developer Katy Patino. “At Christmas everyone loves a glass of prosecco and a salty snack, so we decided to combine the two.”

A cheaper alternative, but with a similar theme, are Tesco Finest’s prosecco and elderberry crisps. Aldi’s gin and tonic crisps have sold out as part of multipacks that include venison, red wine and thyme.

Another first for crisps this year has popped up in Lidl’s Deluxe range. It is selling pulled pork and wildflower honey crisps alongside its more conventional roast turkey and sage and onion stuffing offering. Lidl’s crisp buyer, Lukas Schmidlin, said: “In the last year we have noticed a real trend for trying to find the most interesting and unusual crisp flavours. Under the influence of our chef in residence, Kevin Love, we have taken classic British flavours like pulled pork, roast turkey and cheese and onion and transformed them using more unusual ingredients such as wild flower honey, stilton and thyme.”

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