I was recently sent some gluten free baked crisps by an
entirely gluten free brand called Veronica’s. All their crisps are gluten free,
and come in a range of interesting flavours. No plain or salt & vinegar standard
flavours here. I was really pleased about this as it’s always nice to discover
brands offering more exciting flavour combos that are suitable for those of us
on a gluten free diet. ‘Normal’ crisps often have the flavours combined with
wheat flour, so I’m often left with a limited range I can choose from. Not that
‘normal’ people wouldn’t happily devour bags of these crisps too. They are also
60% lower in fat than regular crisps, mostly because they are baked rather than
fried and they also claim to be lower in salt. Bonus. I was sent three big
sharing bags and one smaller bag aimed at children.
Baked Potato Sour Cream, Herb & Onion Crisps
I was initially surprised when opening the bag to find
perfectly uniform shaped crinkle crisps. I was expected slices of actual potato
but they turned out to be reformed potato flakes with corn rather than potato
slices. After the initial surprise I suppose this makes sense as this is how
they are able to make them lighter and ‘healthier’ than normal crisps. They crisps
were very light in both weight and texture. Crisp and almost airy in texture,
and when bitten into you could see all the tiny air bubbles inside. I liked how you could see the specks of herbs. Thicker
than a normal crisp but much lighter. A cross between a crisp and those corn
crispbreads you see in the cracker aisle. They had a very clean aroma, nothing artificial
smelling. You could really taste the sour cream flavour with just a subtle hint
of onion giving a garlicky flavour. I liked the ridged shape and this also
added texture.
Baked Potato Barbeque Crisps
These had a lovely smoky BBQ aroma on opening the bag. They
were quite a bright orange-red colour which turned out to be from paprika. This
gave them a subtle sweetness and great smoky earthy flavour. Again they were
nicely light and crisp with the characteristic ridges. The aroma was stronger
than the actual taste of paprika. It was quite subtle at first although did
build up as you ate. The flavour lingered nicely after eating them too, giving
a wonderful smoky woodsy paprika flavour. There was also a hint of onion. I’m
not sure it was quite BBQ, I think smoked paprika might have been a better
name, but very tasty all the same. Of the two baked potato crisps, this was the
flavour I kept going back to.
Baked Veggie Crisps – Roast Tomato & Spanish Paprika
These were a mix of potato flakes combined with carrot, beetroot,
broccoli and spinach in a tomato, garlic and paprika seasoning. Another paprika
offering, this time with veggies. I was expecting either slices of the actual
vegetable or shaped crisps combining all of the veggie ingredients in one, but
I was again surprised, in a good way, on opening the bag to find there were 3
different shades of crinkle crisps within the bag. I think there was a carrot
one, a beetroot one and broccoli & spinach all on a potato base. I liked
how you got a range of veggie flavours within the same bag, rather than them
all being mingled into one crisp. It made them much more fun to eat, as well as
looking quite attractive. It was a sort of crisp lucky dip.
The plainer looking one I suspect was carrot; it had a
subtle sweetness and a slight smokiness form the paprika seasoning. The darker orange
one I think was beetroot. This too was faintly sweet with a lingering flavour
that reminded me of something I couldn’t quite remember. The mild green hued
one was my favourite. It had a definite broccoli ‘green’ flavour to it. I was
surprised, and loved, how strongly the flavour came through. It was subtle, but
you could definitely detect a hint of green about it. I suspect this one had
the spinach mixed in too, which probably helped the green element.
I loved the mix of flavours but did find the crisps to be a
little too salty for me. I know they are crisps but I only ate a few and did go
hunting for water afterwards.
Crunchy Creatures – Cheese
Unlike the other bags this one was a single serve bag and definitely
aimed at children with its bright yellow packet and fun bubble writing. The
pack had a cartoon dinosaur on the front and I was delighted to open the bag
and find the corn puffs were all dinosaur shaped too. Not just cut outs either, but
whole puffed almost 3D dinosaurs and all of them where whole – no broken limbs
or crumbled away tails to be seen. I was impressed.
The bag had a pleasant cheese aroma and a mix of light and
well coated cheesy powdered dino’s. I found the flavour to be almost that of a
toned down wotsit (those cheesy brightly orange coloured puffed corn snacks).
Not too strongly flavoured with a lovely crisp initial bite and texture that somehow
seemed to dissolved, soften and disappeared within seconds of biting, almost
like magic. Bite, huge crunch and then poof…gone. I can imagine little children
loving these, and what a fun shape! My only gripe with these was that again I
found them overly salty. I was also surprised to find they had the same salt
level as all the other crisps. I would have expected crisps directly aimed at
children to have a much lower salt level compared to the adult orientated ones.
Overall I enjoyed all the crisps. It was nice to see some
different, interesting flavours being offered to the gluten free market. I
found them all to be a little too salty for my tastes, despite the packs saying
they are lower in salt than regular crisps. I feel the children’s ones in particular
could do with being less salty. I don’t think it would affect the quality.
Despite the saltiness, I enjoyed the smoky BBQ flavour and loved the veggie
ones. So unique both in flavour and texture, I’d buy the veggie ones again. I
was also impressed that practically all of the crisps were intact, despite
being sent through the post. They have got the balance of lightness, crispness
and texture just right. It’s great to see some more tasty and original gluten
free choices enter the gluten free market.
After tasting them myself I then took the bags into work to
see what my colleagues thought. All the crisps disappeared very quickly, but
the veggie ones, were the ones that disappeared first.
Note: I was sent the samples for free, but all the opinions
expressed here are my own.
I am 40 years old and I need those dinosaur crisps. At what age do you think adulthood might hit me?
ReplyDeleteI think the veggie ones would be my favourite too. They are a very 'synthetic ' shape...... I'm sure they taste good though.
ReplyDeleteHi Caked Crusader,
ReplyDeleteI think the dino crisps are suitable for young at heart adults too :)