Actually Pepsi acquired Walkers in 1989, under the subsidiary of Lays or Frito-Lays. Lays itself was founded 8 years before Walkers in 1940. So the U.S. is right 🤫
In the UK it's Walker's, in South Africa Lays is sold under the Simba brand as well as Fritos, in Australia Lays is sold under the Smith's brand, Chipsy in Egypt and the West Balkans, Tapuchips in Israel, Margarita in Colombia, and Sabritas in Mexico. Walls the Ice Cream brand in the UK is called Ola in South Africa. Just to mention a few. It's hardly wrong buddy, to get a foothold in a market you have to promote your products through a brand people trust.
Yeah no surprise pepsi owns it overall. Bloody capitalism at its finest. Think you have a drink and a packet of crisps of different brands. Yet lining the same rich pockets with every sip and bite
They are highly seasonal and a little bit niche in the US. You can definitely get them around Christmas, but they don't get much advertising and you need to go to a store like a corporate pharmacy or a super market to find them. Convenience stores don't quite have a large enough footprint to stock them, even in season.
Daveeee, shrimp (prawn) cocktail in a glass is suuuuuper popular in America. You can buy it in almost any grocery store as well, or make it separately. I have frozen shrimp in my freezer and spicy cocktail sauce in my fridge.
@@coyotelong4349 Never had them as chips, seems weird. But I'd definitely try them. Way cheaper than was 4 jump shrimps cost in cocktail sauce as an appetizer!
Mars company was created by Frank C. Mars here in the US. His son left and established a Mars company in England. When his father died he returned home and merged the two companies. So both are actually Mars Products and the Mars family still owns the company and their private fortune is $126 billion. The company is privately owned by the family so no stock can be bought. They have ultimate control.
From what I know, walkers was (obviously) already a thing, but then Lays acquired it, and they kept the name (Walkers) in the UK for brand loyalty+recognition (but changed the walkers logo to the lays style)
You can buy the chocolate oranges in the U.S. My parents bought us those for our Christmas stockings every year when we were kids. . Now I buy them every Christmas for my family/grown grandchildren, co-workers and friends who like that flavor combination. Have bought them at supermarkets, drugstores, Amazon, Walmart, Target, World Market and numerous dollar stores. I'm surprised not one of these kids has ever seen or eaten at least a slice of one.
terms of history, Walkers was founded in Leicester, England, in 1948 by Henry Walker, while Lays originated from Nashville, Tennessee, in 1932 by Herman W Lay
Walker's, which is owned by Lay's and has been for more than 30 years, is a Lay's product that just kept the Walker's name. So when you're eating Walker's, you're actually eating Lay's.
Lays owns Walkers (purchased in 1989). Lays was made in 1940, while Walkers was first made in 1948. Lays is slightly older. Pepsi is the parent company to both though. Monster Munch came out in 1977.
@@bigbake132 I can’t argue with that, but I’ve had both on many occasions and, when it comes down to it, they look and taste the same when they’re cooked and out of the shell.
@@barrykeleher2659 Prawns are larger than shrimp and are usually caught in fresh water while shrimp are smaller and caught in salt water. As far as taste goes, I can't tell a huge difference.
When I was in England 40 years ago it seemed like there was a pub on every block. people just turned their house into a pub. Three tables and a 6 foot bar. I missed dinner at the training center. (Club soccer team training and playing in England for the summer; from CA.) Only had £.50. They hooked me up with a plate of shepherds pie and a pint of dark ale but I will never forget.
You guys should put Amazon links in the description when u do videos like these. I just ordered some Terry's orange chocolate and I wish u had put links and gotten an commission.
I lived with a British Guy for a while and he introduced me to Chocolate Orange. We have them here in Aus to, but I had no idea what it was before i met him. They are amazing.
Actually the British/English didn't "invent" develop The English language. English is a West Germanic language that originated from Ingvaeonic languages brought to Britain in the mid-5th to 7th centuries AD by Anglo-Saxon migrants.
You guys are the kindest and the most best people, wish we had all people like you! three of you are so lovely love you guys, Please don't let idiots who have negative to say change you
What are Lay's potato chips called in England? Frito-Lay bought the British snack manufacturer Walkers in 1989. They did not rebrand them, and they are still sold as Walkers. The logos are the same though.
We have chocolate oranges in the US. Not Terry’s brand but usually they appear in stores like CVS around Christmas. I personally like them because they don’t taste like chocolate.
"H.W. Lay & Company didn't begin making Lay's chips until 1944. 1948, a local butcher named Henry Walker began to sell hand-sliced potato crisps to the lucky people of Leicester.
Fritos and Lay's. Frito-Lay, Inc. is an American subsidiary of PepsiCo that manufactures, markets, and sells corn chips, potato chips, and other snack foods. The primary snack food brands produced under the Frito-Lay name include Fritos corn chips, Cheetos cheese-flavored snacks, Doritos and Tostitos tortilla chips, Lay's and Ruffles potato chips, Rold Gold pretzels, and Walkers potato crisps (in the UK and Ireland). Each brand generated annual worldwide sales over $1 billion in 2009.[3]
As an American, I've been eating the Terry's Orange Chocolate my entire life. They are everywhere in the US. You just have to look around abit Also Walkers is definitely waaay younger than Lays.
No. Saying English restaurant implies you’ll be eating English cuisine just like when someone says Chinese restaurant, French restaurant, Mexican restaurant, etc. I live in Canada and when people go to restaurants they don’t say “it’s Canadian,” that’s pretty dumb honestly and I’ve never heard anyone share the same logic as what you’re saying, it just makes everything super confusing
@MM-jc7uv ppl have referred to restaurants in America as American restaurants numerous times in videos no matter the cuisine so yeah ppl think that way. They are talking about WHERE the restaurant is located not the food. Then get more specific on the type of cuisine served. "I went to an American restaurant they served Mexican food" I hear it put like that all the time in reaction videos.
@@BeboRulz why not just say Mexican restaurant if that’s the food they serve… 🤦♂️ I don’t know where you’re from but I’ve never heard anyone with that logic anywhere I’ve been
@@MM-jc7uv Not true at all. When I hear Brits defend English food, they immediately bring up Indian restaurants which I hear aren't too great either from third parties.
@@notechb0ss2.05 English people bring up Indian cuisine when talking about English food… that doesn’t sound stupid to you? England has good Indian food, that doesn’t make it English, the food is still Indian. English food is it’s own thing
The chocolate oranges slap hard. I brought them as a gift for my famuily after travelling to the UK, so now each time someone from my family comes across them somewhere they buy them. We do have good chocolate in Germany, but those Oranges became somehow special, probably also because they are not always accessible.
In regards to Dazs comments about the food in the UK, I think what happens is even if it’s not a culturally English est, many restaurants have adapted their flavors to survive with the rubbish British palate (eg Mike). 😂😂 It’s happened here in the US as well. Lots of food that doesn’t come from the US has been altered some or greatly to fit. Not talking about the authentic establishments, of course.
you got me with the Easter eggs, when growing up there was family tradition of each having an egg, and go around the dinner table before dinner to each other, one person holds still, the other can tap onto the eg with the other egg, who ever breaks, loses.. winner just got braggin rights for the night. And if the guy you said Daz went to English places to eat, is from the States, a pub would be a restaurant for us. Looking forward to the next Competition of trying crisps!
My father used to get lozenges called Fisherman's Friend and they were DISGUSTING! They came in little white sacks (bags) with a reddish logo with like a ship or something on them and they would clear your sinuses, clear your tear ducts, get you breathing clear, remove all body hair (including the cilia inside your nose), strip the paint off your car, and bug bomb your house for the next 5 years. 🤮 *Same thing?*
According to Google Lay's came first! We would buy certain items for our kids stockings at Xmas. The chocolate orange was something they would get every year. Now that they are adults, they still get them but after Xmas they become stupid cheap and my kids will hunt down all the stores and looking for them and the different flavours. 👍🏼😆😁🇨🇦
I’ve heard that prawn cocktail flavor in UK is based on UK prawn cocktail sauce and not US prawn cocktail sauce which is tomato based. So when we hear prawn cocktail we think of a ketchup flavor but it’s actually more mayo flavored.
Lays didn’t buy Walkers, Pepsi did. They also bought Lays, but these are two distinct brands of crisps/chips. I believe the logo was originally Lays clear back to 1940s. Google and see images. Walkers label was static in the 1940s (google it) so the labels were merged but not the name. Walkers was popular in its own right so they kept the name. Much like in the US when Hellmanns bought Best Foods people in the West kept the Best foods mayo label and the East coast kept Hellmanns mayo label.
I want to try some snacks when go to the UK. We’ve had a few things but I want to try more. I know they won’t be great but just for the experience. The only thing I really liked was a chip butty and it was super plain. Lol
Language barrier on English resteraunt? Or perhaps I don't understand what cafe means when Dave says it? Where I grew up if it's local eating establishment it's good. Where I live I didn't understand the concept of a Taqueria at first (means taco place but is only meant for people not wanting to cook and isn't meant to be great).
Lays started before walkers and then Pepsi purchased lays and then later purchased walkers …. Both lays and walkers changed their logo in 1997 to what it is now just obviously with the text in the middle of the red ribbon as the only difference
To be fair these are High School kids so I don't expect their paladar to be that adventurous unless their parents are rich(which by the look of their school it looks like your typical public high school in the US) and take them to 5 star restaurants or they have the means to. So like in the other HS kids try comfort British food video I don't expect them to be adventurous when it comes to food.
20 bags of skips 20 bags of monster chips you are limited to that amount of chips on one order. I have spent $315 and it's expected to be come to my house this Friday sherbet #3 and one packet of pie cake they didn't have any Everton mints in stock😢😢 my dad was very upset I usually order 10 packs of those mints at a time. Because he loves them the most but my mom got into his stash😂😂 that was his Christmas gift. I usually spend more at 3 to 400 every 6 months all my family here in states. In other words whenever I go to England I pick up an extra luggage with sweets lol it's best to go to Costco. I can get Mars bars and bounty and other candies for $2.49 not cheap but my mom gets her digestive biscuits for discount. Lion bars are 2.99 each 🤬 concentrated ribena is around 5:39 bottle no looking fish and chips they don't know how to make fish and chips. USA Definition is something Frozen for the past two months
I dont like viegar on its own. I gag when I get too much of a whiff. However, I do enjoy salt and vinegar flavored chips. In fact, they have a brand here called “Rap Snacks” w different flavors assigned to different rapper names and images on the bags. They have one thats called “All In”. It has salt and vinegar, bbq, garlic, onion and more. They are 🔥🔥🔥🔥💯👍👍
Actually Pepsi acquired Walkers in 1989, under the subsidiary of Lays or Frito-Lays. Lays itself was founded 8 years before Walkers in 1940. So the U.S. is right 🤫
In the UK it's Walker's, in South Africa Lays is sold under the Simba brand as well as Fritos, in Australia Lays is sold under the Smith's brand,
Chipsy in Egypt and the West Balkans, Tapuchips in Israel, Margarita in Colombia, and Sabritas in Mexico. Walls the Ice Cream brand in the UK is called Ola in South Africa. Just to mention a few. It's hardly wrong buddy, to get a foothold in a market you have to promote your products through a brand people trust.
Simba was founded in 1957 shortly after Walkers and Lays, and Smith's was founded in 1931 before all of the others
We win again! It's football 🏈 season
@@bzilla-d4ithe point is that all of those are owned by an American company
@@Miamora909 ugh, yes lady we know. Do you think we're idiots or something?
Lays is older than Walkers. Just Googled it. 😂
Lol was just coming her to say this. Lays bought walkers
I wish reaction channels would google things more during the reaction
Lays also bought walkers, so they own it and that's probably why the logos are basically the same.
Smiths is older than both, and that's what Lays are branded as in Australia, they're all under the same umbrella though, PepsiCo
Yeah no surprise pepsi owns it overall. Bloody capitalism at its finest. Think you have a drink and a packet of crisps of different brands. Yet lining the same rich pockets with every sip and bite
OB Daz : "Bit dramatic"
Also OB Daz: *almost gags trying to eat beef jerky* 🤣
The United States have had the chocolate oranges for years. They're quite common.
i was going to say ive had those all 31 years of my life, didnt know it was a UK thing lol
@@ZDF_BTW Same! They're all over grocery stores in the US around Christmas.
They are highly seasonal and a little bit niche in the US. You can definitely get them around Christmas, but they don't get much advertising and you need to go to a store like a corporate pharmacy or a super market to find them. Convenience stores don't quite have a large enough footprint to stock them, even in season.
@@jasonthegreat49103In California and Nevada, I can always find them in stock year-round
@@williamelenoand in Texas I can’t
*Nope. **_Lays(1932)_** were out BEFORE **_Walkers(1948)_** and they own **_Walkers_** as well.*
Daveeee, shrimp (prawn) cocktail in a glass is suuuuuper popular in America. You can buy it in almost any grocery store as well, or make it separately. I have frozen shrimp in my freezer and spicy cocktail sauce in my fridge.
Ya I was gonna say my mom loves them and I’ve seen them in tons of menu’s
It is, but just not as a flavor of chips
@@coyotelong4349I didn’t understand the flavors of chips in Ireland and the UK (there’s even a tomato flavor). I also refuse to call them crisps!
@@coyotelong4349 Never had them as chips, seems weird. But I'd definitely try them. Way cheaper than was 4 jump shrimps cost in cocktail sauce as an appetizer!
Vegas used to have 0.99 cent shrimp cocktail
years ago.
Lays originated in 38 & Walkers originated in 48. Then Lays bought Walkers in 89. Now both are owned by Pepsi LOL
We have chocolate oranges here, they sell around Easter time and Christmas I think
Those things are fuckin delicious
Mars company was created by Frank C. Mars here in the US. His son left and established a Mars company in England. When his father died he returned home and merged the two companies. So both are actually Mars Products and the Mars family still owns the company and their private fortune is $126 billion. The company is privately owned by the family so no stock can be bought. They have ultimate control.
From what I know, walkers was (obviously) already a thing, but then Lays acquired it, and they kept the name (Walkers) in the UK for brand loyalty+recognition (but changed the walkers logo to the lays style)
Lays was from the 30s and I think walkers came out in the 50s. Walkers was starting to go under when lays bought it.
@@nullakjg767 Yeah, i just meant walkers existed when lays existed. It wasnt created before/by them.
Always funny when the British says they invented English, which is from German. And biscuit is from French, cookie from Dutch.
We used to have the flying saucers in the 60s & 70s. Not sure about now. They remind me of the eucharist in church!
You can buy the chocolate oranges in the U.S. My parents bought us those for our Christmas stockings every year when we were kids. . Now I buy them every Christmas for my family/grown grandchildren, co-workers and friends who like that flavor combination. Have bought them at supermarkets, drugstores, Amazon, Walmart, Target, World Market and numerous dollar stores. I'm surprised not one of these kids has ever seen or eaten at least a slice of one.
terms of history, Walkers was founded in Leicester, England, in 1948 by Henry Walker, while Lays originated from Nashville, Tennessee, in 1932 by Herman W Lay
Lays came around in 1932 and Walker's in 1948. Lays acquired Walkers in 1989.
Walker's, which is owned by Lay's and has been for more than 30 years, is a Lay's product that just kept the Walker's name. So when you're eating Walker's, you're actually eating Lay's.
Lays owns Walkers (purchased in 1989). Lays was made in 1940, while Walkers was first made in 1948. Lays is slightly older. Pepsi is the parent company to both though. Monster Munch came out in 1977.
Lays was founded in 1940, Walkers 1947.
We have Terry's chocolate oranges in the US. We have for at least 25 years.
Dave, you call them prawn cocktails, we call them shrimp cocktails. And yeah, they are a thing over here in the US.
Prawns and shrimp are different species though.
@@bigbake132 I can’t argue with that, but I’ve had both on many occasions and, when it comes down to it, they look and taste the same when they’re cooked and out of the shell.
@@barrykeleher2659 Prawns are larger than shrimp and are usually caught in fresh water while shrimp are smaller and caught in salt water. As far as taste goes, I can't tell a huge difference.
When I was in England 40 years ago it seemed like there was a pub on every block.
people just turned their house into a pub.
Three tables and a 6 foot bar.
I missed dinner at the training center.
(Club soccer team training and playing in England for the summer; from CA.)
Only had £.50. They hooked me up with a plate of shepherds pie and a pint of dark ale but I will never forget.
A Black American man named George Speck created what we know today as crisps or chips here in the US. Interesting story on how he created it too.
You guys should put Amazon links in the description when u do videos like these. I just ordered some Terry's orange chocolate and I wish u had put links and gotten an commission.
I lived with a British Guy for a while and he introduced me to Chocolate Orange. We have them here in Aus to, but I had no idea what it was before i met him. They are amazing.
Actually the British/English didn't "invent" develop The English language. English is a West Germanic language that originated from Ingvaeonic languages brought to Britain in the mid-5th to 7th centuries AD by Anglo-Saxon migrants.
I remember having the flying sauces growing up in NYC in the 1970s.
You guys are the kindest and the most best people, wish we had all people like you! three of you are so lovely love you guys, Please don't let idiots who have negative to say change you
What are Lay's potato chips called in England?
Frito-Lay bought the British snack manufacturer
Walkers in 1989. They did not rebrand them, and they are still sold as Walkers. The logos are the same though.
We have chocolate oranges in the US. Not Terry’s brand but usually they appear in stores like CVS around Christmas. I personally like them because they don’t taste like chocolate.
I think the ones we get (at least in California) are the Canadian brand ones.
Twiglets remind me how greatful I am George Washington existed.
We've actually had those chocolate oranges here in the southern United States for decades now. I was eating these twenty years ago.
Yes, I was actually surprised that they've never had Orange Chocolate before.
they’re a christmas thing where i live but yeah ive had at least one of these every year for as long as i can remember
@@siriusblack8475got them in my stockings almost 40 years ago
THe ones we had for Christmas were Canadian ones.
Walkers was acquired by Lay's owner, Frito-Lay, a division of PepsiCo.
8:32 I like how dave and daz both look at the camera. I know in their minds they were gonna say something but held their tongue 😂😂
"H.W. Lay & Company didn't begin making Lay's chips until 1944.
1948, a local butcher named Henry Walker began to sell hand-sliced potato crisps to the lucky people of Leicester.
Fritos and Lay's.
Frito-Lay, Inc. is an American subsidiary of PepsiCo that manufactures, markets, and sells corn chips, potato chips, and other snack foods. The primary snack food brands produced under the Frito-Lay name include Fritos corn chips, Cheetos cheese-flavored snacks, Doritos and Tostitos tortilla chips, Lay's and Ruffles potato chips, Rold Gold pretzels, and Walkers potato crisps (in the UK and Ireland). Each brand generated annual worldwide sales over $1 billion in 2009.[3]
Bro why is Dave always wrong 😂 Lays was out before Walkers pretty sure they bought em out
Because he’s dave. Thats what he does
Yea but we still love him lol
As an American, I've been eating the Terry's Orange Chocolate my entire life. They are everywhere in the US. You just have to look around abit
Also Walkers is definitely waaay younger than Lays.
When someone says "English restaurant" they mean restaurants in England not English ONLY food 😂
No. Saying English restaurant implies you’ll be eating English cuisine just like when someone says Chinese restaurant, French restaurant, Mexican restaurant, etc. I live in Canada and when people go to restaurants they don’t say “it’s Canadian,” that’s pretty dumb honestly and I’ve never heard anyone share the same logic as what you’re saying, it just makes everything super confusing
@MM-jc7uv ppl have referred to restaurants in America as American restaurants numerous times in videos no matter the cuisine so yeah ppl think that way. They are talking about WHERE the restaurant is located not the food. Then get more specific on the type of cuisine served.
"I went to an American restaurant they served Mexican food"
I hear it put like that all the time in reaction videos.
@@BeboRulz why not just say Mexican restaurant if that’s the food they serve… 🤦♂️ I don’t know where you’re from but I’ve never heard anyone with that logic anywhere I’ve been
@@MM-jc7uv Not true at all. When I hear Brits defend English food, they immediately bring up Indian restaurants which I hear aren't too great either from third parties.
@@notechb0ss2.05 English people bring up Indian cuisine when talking about English food… that doesn’t sound stupid to you? England has good Indian food, that doesn’t make it English, the food is still Indian. English food is it’s own thing
Walkers was founded in 1948. In 1989 The owner of Lay's acquired Walkers. In another video, these same kids did try chocolate digestives.
We have a product here called Fisherman's Friend that is a caught drop . They are very strong menthol flavor and the come in a small tin or small bag.
I love you guys so much keep up the hard work
We have those chocolate oranges over here also, I remember having them as a kid in the 90's. Different brand, but same thing.
The chocolate oranges slap hard. I brought them as a gift for my famuily after travelling to the UK, so now each time someone from my family comes across them somewhere they buy them. We do have good chocolate in Germany, but those Oranges became somehow special, probably also because they are not always accessible.
Walkers is owned by PepsiCo since 1989 and lays is also owned by PepsiCo
Lay's owns Walkers and Smith's too
In regards to Dazs comments about the food in the UK, I think what happens is even if it’s not a culturally English est, many restaurants have adapted their flavors to survive with the rubbish British palate (eg Mike). 😂😂
It’s happened here in the US as well. Lots of food that doesn’t come from the US has been altered some or greatly to fit. Not talking about the authentic establishments, of course.
Terry's DARK CHOCOLATE Orange! That's the best!!!
We have those chocolate oranges in the U.S., had them around Christmas a lot when i was a kid
I remember the Choclate Orange commercials as a kid. I didn't know it was a British snack.
you got me with the Easter eggs, when growing up there was family tradition of each having an egg, and go around the dinner table before dinner to each other, one person holds still, the other can tap onto the eg with the other egg, who ever breaks, loses.. winner just got braggin rights for the night. And if the guy you said Daz went to English places to eat, is from the States, a pub would be a restaurant for us. Looking forward to the next Competition of trying crisps!
Terry's chocolate orange are made in France and we have them here in the US. I love them!
Dave tries his best to make England look halfway good about food.
My father used to get lozenges called Fisherman's Friend and they were DISGUSTING! They came in little white sacks (bags) with a reddish logo with like a ship or something on them and they would clear your sinuses, clear your tear ducts, get you breathing clear, remove all body hair (including the cilia inside your nose), strip the paint off your car, and bug bomb your house for the next 5 years. 🤮 *Same thing?*
OMG, I am dying..."You and your bloody texture!"
We do have chocolate oranges here in the USA, and I love them. We've had them so many years here.
I get Mike and foods/texture.
I can't get past texture.
I feel you Mike ❤
We had those in the 80’s in America, maybe even the 70’s
Both Walkers and Lays are owned by Pepsi Co.
According to Google Lay's came first! We would buy certain items for our kids stockings at Xmas. The chocolate orange was something they would get every year. Now that they are adults, they still get them but after Xmas they become stupid cheap and my kids will hunt down all the stores and looking for them and the different flavours. 👍🏼😆😁🇨🇦
We have Terry's chocolate orange In Canada and we always get them at Christmas! They are the best
I’ve heard that prawn cocktail flavor in UK is based on UK prawn cocktail sauce and not US prawn cocktail sauce which is tomato based. So when we hear prawn cocktail we think of a ketchup flavor but it’s actually more mayo flavored.
Lays didn’t buy Walkers, Pepsi did. They also bought Lays, but these are two distinct brands of crisps/chips. I believe the logo was originally Lays clear back to 1940s. Google and see images. Walkers label was static in the 1940s (google it) so the labels were merged but not the name. Walkers was popular in its own right so they kept the name. Much like in the US when Hellmanns bought Best Foods people in the West kept the Best foods mayo label and the East coast kept Hellmanns mayo label.
“How could you eat this with a straight face?” 😂
Walker's owned by Lay's since 1989
Lays is an American company...they also make Walkers for England
We have flying saucers in US. My stepfather loves them.
Walker's has been owned by Lay's since 1989.
I picked up some Poppadums Mango Chili chips yesterday. Was awesome.
I want to try some snacks when go to the UK. We’ve had a few things but I want to try more. I know they won’t be great but just for the experience. The only thing I really liked was a chip butty and it was super plain. Lol
@nikkicox81 I once flew to America and ate a turd out of a Denny's toilet, so all American food is bad.
Goldfish are awesome. Kind of glad we don’t have some of these over here.
The company is called Frito-Lay, so I would think Walkers is owned by Frito-Lay.
16 Crates of Chocolate Orange? Sounds like Karl Pilkington and his Tic Tacs.
Lays was first. We win again 🤣 football season has begun everything is a competition 😂😂 now. Football 🏈
Hey Daz, show them the Jolly Terry Black's Beef BBQ video in Texas.
Literally my favorite chocolate! We have them in the US
Mexican style shrimp cocktail is great.
Language barrier on English resteraunt? Or perhaps I don't understand what cafe means when Dave says it? Where I grew up if it's local eating establishment it's good. Where I live I didn't understand the concept of a Taqueria at first (means taco place but is only meant for people not wanting to cook and isn't meant to be great).
No, Lays purchased Walkers but kept the name for the UK market. They changed it to Lays everywhere else. But Walkers is a Lays company.
Lays started before walkers and then Pepsi purchased lays and then later purchased walkers …. Both lays and walkers changed their logo in 1997 to what it is now just obviously with the text in the middle of the red ribbon as the only difference
fave crisps is salt and shake with no salt on
Lays were developed in the 1940s in the United States.
Hershey's chocolate is good, I love M&M's but if we wanna talk really good chocolate I go with LINDT.
What did we ever do to the UK where they keep committing atrocities against american high schoolers?
We have some of these snacks in a few of the New England states
Are Jaffe Cakes good? Never seen them in the US but thye look appealing.
Terry chocolate orange tastes like children’s chewable orange aspirins
We have the chocolate orange in the US.
Oh man those chocolate oranges❤❤❤❤❤❤ My favorites 24/7/365.
saying goldfish is gross is something coming from a country that loves bland....
Walkers is owned by Frito-Lay which is owned by PepsiCo
To be fair these are High School kids so I don't expect their paladar to be that adventurous unless their parents are rich(which by the look of their school it looks like your typical public high school in the US) and take them to 5 star restaurants or they have the means to. So like in the other HS kids try comfort British food video I don't expect them to be adventurous when it comes to food.
I think if you dipped Twiglets in a Dijon mustard sauce, it'd be alright.
Had Jewish snacks the other month for the first time.. those Jewish Doritos were fkng amazing 😍
pub food actually sounds kinda nice.
Daz, you aren't sharing the Jolly in Texas, etc. videos with Dave and Mike.
You should.
Orange candy we can find it here in USA
20 bags of skips 20 bags of monster chips you are limited to that amount of chips on one order. I have spent $315 and it's expected to be come to my house this Friday sherbet #3 and one packet of pie cake they didn't have any Everton mints in stock😢😢 my dad was very upset I usually order 10 packs of those mints at a time. Because he loves them the most but my mom got into his stash😂😂 that was his Christmas gift. I usually spend more at 3 to 400 every 6 months all my family here in states. In other words whenever I go to England I pick up an extra luggage with sweets lol it's best to go to Costco. I can get Mars bars and bounty and other candies for $2.49 not cheap but my mom gets her digestive biscuits for discount. Lion bars are 2.99 each 🤬 concentrated ribena is around 5:39 bottle no looking fish and chips they don't know how to make fish and chips. USA Definition is something Frozen for the past two months
I dont like viegar on its own. I gag when I get too much of a whiff. However, I do enjoy salt and vinegar flavored chips. In fact, they have a brand here called “Rap Snacks” w different flavors assigned to different rapper names and images on the bags. They have one thats called “All In”. It has salt and vinegar, bbq, garlic, onion and more. They are 🔥🔥🔥🔥💯👍👍
English is an Anglo-Saxon language, not British, they were Germans and not natives to Britain.
0:31 he just admitted to being under cover!