Prawn Cocktail usually confuses Americans, as they expect the prawn taste. The flavour is actually of the "Marie rose sauce" that you serve on a prawn cocktail, which is basically a mix of tomato sauce , mayo, Worcestershire sauce, lemon juice and a pinch of cayenne. So a few sharp flavours in there, so prawn cocktail crisp are usually tangy
I make my PC sauce with Ketchup, Mayo, Salt, Pepper and a kick of Jalapeno peppers, never seen the original recipe so nice to know I wasn't far from it lol.
All I do is just mix Heinz tomato sauce and Heinz salad cream and leave it there. Why? Because that's what a Fish and Chip shop used to make their prawn cocktail sauce and they shared it with us. So been making it this way ever since. Will have to make the traditional recipe at some point.
I don`t normally go for PC i like skips but those have a good texture, but....those Mcoys PC are devine as i suprisingly found out once, when i was starving.
Might taste a fair bit different in America as their Bread is a lot different, would still be worth trying though as such a quick and easy tasty snack!
Yeah, someone needs to send them a loaf of Brennan's bread and Kerrygold butter for the true experience (on a chartered private jet to keep them fresh).
This has been so much fun to watch. Lindsay’s wrinkly face when she tastes something she does not like and Steve having multiple dips into the bag of flavours he does like.
As others point out, Prawn cocktail are just Marie Rose Sauce flavour with no actual Prawn/Shrimp flavour at all, but in your unpacking videos I'm sure I noticed you received some Scampi Fries, they do taste like actual seafood and are freaking delicious! Loving the flat cap btw!
Oh god I love scampi fries and bacon fries. When I fancy a really unhealthy snack I'll have a bag of each with some chunks of cheddar and eat one of each crisp and a bit of cheese in each mouthful, delicious!
I kind of find it odd that Americans have such an aversion to the taste of vinegar. It might be because the British have a long history of pickling just about every vegetable possible. While the American tradition is more for heat treating, and canning everything. 🤔 Even today, many people in the UK buy and pickle their own small silver skin onions.
I think you might be right about that one 🤔 I have a real taste for vinegar , like they say in this video we all have the flavours we go for preference.. ...my dad was a fan too, but one which my French/ Italian mum does not have.. In France vinegar is obviously used for dressing, appears on the salad at just about every meal , very similar in Italy, but mum and I have a difference in taste as to how much vinegar to put in the dressing 😂 Interestingly my mum's sister is the same as me, as a couple of my cousins... my mum's eyes water at the thought of how much vinegar we all use 🤣 French people don't usually put vinegar on chips or crisps either! (Except my Aunt and Cousins lol) People in Northern and Eastern Europe must have developed a taste for it over the millennia in the ways as you have said.. pickled cabbage, onions, cucumber, beetroot.. mmmmmm yum ! Definitely a flavour taste thing because I hate corn syrup and anything made with it. I can't eat US choc , sweets or drink the soda, I like sugar cane and sugar beet !
@@grrrrbabyverygrrr8165 Yeh ! I think it is safe to say that any countries and continents who have spent hundreds and even thousands of years trying to make alcohol have a taste for vinegar. 😋🤣After all that is where our English word comes from, the French vin aigre, sour wine
Tayto N.Ireland was founded in 1956 in Tandragee, County Armagh and operates as a separate company from Tayto Republic of Ireland which was formed in 1954. They have a similar range of products. One of the biggest differences is in the packaging - in N.Ireland the legendary cheese & onion crips come in a bright yellow packet whereas the ROI version is red & blue. Fun facts : the N.Ireland Tayto factory is actually inside Tandragee Castle which is over 500 years old. Also Tandragee, when translated from the Irish, means "backside to the wind"
Tayto NI was founded by the Hutchinson family in 1956. The Tayto name and logo is used under a licencing agreement with Tayto in the Rep of Ireland. The companies sell similar products but are two different entities . The founder of Tayto was a man named Joe "spud" Murphy who first produced the crisps from a small plant in Moore Street in Dublin in 1954.
In the UK, "Spicy" doesn't always mean hot spices (due to US influence it is increasingly used that way though) and often refers to a combination of multiple mild aromatic spices, sometimes including chilis but not as the dominant flavour/sensation.
I didn’t realise that Tayto did so many flavours. Crisp Butties big here in the UK, but not for me, it’s like biting into a lovely soft sandwich to find it full of eggshells! Great to see the product names the correct way around 👍🏴
Hi Guys, just a quick piece of info for all your American viewers. ‘Prawn cocktail’ crisps or any other snack come to that does not contain ANY seafood (Prawns/Shrimp etc). The flavor refers to the sauce that’s used for a Shrimp cocktail ( as you would call it) which is basically Mayo mixed with Tomato ketchup & may have a hint of lemon and cayenne, that’s why they are marketed as suitable for vegetarians
I haven't had tayto crisps for years happy childhood memories eating tayto crisps, drinking pink lemonade and the smell of turf burning and playing with the local kids from kilmihill.42 now but these crisps take me back
Turf burning??? You mean tar burning? For roofing? Or perhaps the smell of grass when you skid a bike on it? One of my favourite kind of burning ish type smells, is the generators at a fair. That smell always takes me back to childhood. 😊😊😊
@tamielizabethallaway2413 I mean turf the bungalow we stayed in had a raeburn that heated the place, hot water and you cook on it. On dartmoor people burn turf aswell
@@chucky2316 ahhh ok! I've not seen that! I think my Nan had a Raeburn when I was very little...? I vaguely remember my parents talking about it...that was a fuzzy blast from the past memory! 😊 I love the Dartmoor ponies 😁
I have come to the conclusion that Americans have a very bland food palate. My favourite are Walkers plain crisps, but I do quite like Walkers Sensations Sweet Chilli. Prawns are what Americans call Shrimp. however the crisps are Prawn Cocktail which is a whole different ball game. A prawn Cocktail is made with shredded lettuce, finely diced tomato and sometimes what you call English Cucumber, topped with cooked peeled prawns and a Marie Rose sauce.
When my friend came over from Spain for a holiday, we had fish and chips. He was uncertain about Vinegar on the fish, but I insisted he try. A few days later, he asked if we could have fish and chips again, and really surprised me when he asked the server to add more Vinegar. I do not like Prawn Cocktail flavour either.
Its personal taste. I cannot stand anything pickled or vinegar on my fish n chips. Someone else would love pickled anything & like vinegar on their chippy tea. 🇬🇧
Just as a point of interest, you might notice people in the comments referring to plain crisps as "ready salted". This term came about to differentiate them from "Salt 'n' Shake" crisps that are made by Smiths, where the salt comes separately in a little blue packet and you add as little or as much salt to the plain crisps as you want (or none at all, if that's what you're in to!). You then shake the bag to distribute the salt around the crisps. "Ready salted" crisps have the salt already added.
Yes love them, I was going to get them the other day but got pawn cocktail instead, I will definitely get some next time , they bring back memories of when I was little.
@@reactingtomyroots The separate bag of salt is a very old concept here in the UK. In fact the earliest types of salt them yourself crisps had the salt in a small twist of blue paper instead of a sealed paper bag, consequently many times the salt was already loose inside the main bag of crisps. The crisps were always available as unsalted or plain, then they started to sell them as ready salted followed by cheese and onion and only later did the makers add the little twist of salt. The reason for the cheese and onion flavour choice is down to the British pub culture, because originally the only locations that most crisps were easily available from were the public bars , which started putting out bowls of salty snacks to encourage people to drink. The patrons would purchase a bag of crisps but would crave more flavour and since the only other foods that were available were things like pickled onions and eggs and sometimes an odd cheese sandwich, the customers would take a small pickled onion or a piece of cheese and slide it still covered in the pickling vinegar into their bags of plain crisps then close the neck of the bag as tightly as possible, then proceed to partly crush some of the contents to obtain sharp flakes of the crisps that would pierce the skin of the onion releasing more of the taste into the crisps, making them stronger tasting and the same kind of result was achieved with the crisps getting stuck in the cheese giving it a different texture. Modern day flavours have expanded into many other dishes from many global flavour profiles.
Thanks that was interesting to watch. I think you hit the nail on the head when you mentioned taste profiles and what we are used to eating and in a way what you were showing us in your preference/leaning towards for cheese and onion and sour cream and reaction to some of the different textures proved this. With the vast range of flavours of crisps available here IMO cheese and onion while popular is somewhat muted compared to other flavours we have.
My favourite crisps are Pipers, the business started when 3 farmers in North Lincolnshire got together, they use really flavoursome, quality potatoes & , to me, you can tell ! I first tried them when I had to travel by train backwards and forwards Newcastle to London for a number of years when I'd had 6 ops on my ankle/s &, feeling sorry for myself & partly out of needing extra space, I travelled 1st class where all food and drinks were free ...I was hooked from then on , didn't realise they'd been in business less than 5 or 6 years then &, consequently, their crisps were hard to find, now though, Sainsbury's and Waitrose sell them...they are THE best mmh !
We love our vinegar here in England we pickle alot of our food so that's probably why , and salt and vinegar with fish and chips is the best. With the prawn cocktail crips it's the cocktail sauce your tasting not the prawns hence the name , it's called Marie Rose sauce and is delicious, again we love those sorts of things , we also have tartar sauce and fresh lemon juice with fish and chips , I suppose its what your use to and what your pallets are use to .
The first one that you ate, the cheese and onion one, that's the one we'd generally consider the plain, default one. What you do is, you put it in a sandwich. White bread, butter, cheese and onion crisps. Amazing.
I have my own rules re: crisps that go with which sandwiches in my packing up... Cheese Sandwich - ready salted or salt & vinegar Cheese and Pickle - ready salted only Ham - ready salted or salt & vinegar Chicken/Turkey - salt & vinegar Beef - cheese & onion That's the gist of it...and Prawn Cocktail can stay on the shelf in the shop. Meat flavours i.e. steak, beef and onion, smoky bacon whenever, but not with sandwiches and roast chicken can stay in the shop along with the prawn cocktail.
As others have said Tayto produced the world’s first flavour added crisp, and it was cheese and onion. Although I live in the UK have spent a lot of time in Ireland. I remember going into an Irish supermarket a few years ago trying to find plain (salted) crisps, a young assistant saw me looking and asked me if he could help. I said I was looking for plain crisps, he pointed out a section of cheese and onion, I said no and am looking for plain crisps. He said “well they are plain”. I don’t think Tayto make salted only crisps.
Sampled one crisp from a Walker’s “Festive king prawn & Marie Rose sauce” packet as I was laying a buffet for “his family rellies” …..it was a lush crisp moment! So much so, I only put a handful of them in a bowl on the table and hid the rest for me to eat ALLLL ON MY OWNNNNNNN! might write to Walker’s and ask if they will keep this “deluxe” version of a prawn cocktail crisp for all year!
@@catherineturner2839 😱😱😱 nooooooooooooo !!!!!! ohhhhhh I’ve missed out there!! 😥😥😥 I’m now sobbing silent tears into my deluxe prawn cocktail flavour crisps! - mustn’t make them soggy! 😳😂😂 (checking online to see if Sainsy are still selling them ….) I tried the festive “pigs in blankets” ones - didn’t go much on them really 🤷🏽♀️
seeing some of the comments below, while a lot of brits would hesitate to admit it in public, in private a lot like the flavour and crunch that a good crisp butty (sandwich or roll) gives. my favourite is cheese and onion.
Brits love -prawn cocktail, cheese and onion, salt and vinegar & roast chicken flavoured crisps. Not everyone loves all those flavours but they are some of the most popular flavours in uk.
Do we? There’s processed sugar and all sorts of rubbish in there. I wouldn’t personally call skips a food a young child should nourish their growing body with. I feed my young kids bananas or avocados. This mentality is why obesity is becoming common in the UK.
I'm going from the time especially coming from a lower class background and raised in the 70s and 80s. Obviously that probably isn't the case now and I did state it as a treat.
@@amandathatcares1277you don’t need to defend yourself. Every family I know have given skips to their children. Literally everyone I know. I think it’s because of the way they melt in the mouth making them easy to eat and start chewing.
@@WatermelonPlayzzRoblox-lol Ok here you go Mum of the year! 🏅🏆 Feel better now someone has honoured your greatness? That *WAS* the sole purpose of your comment right...? To place yourself on a higher platform than others and claim to be a better Mother...? Well there you go, I've acknowledged that fragile ego of yours. I take it you're NOT a speech and language therapist? No, didn't think so. Teaching a child about different foods is essential so they learn to swallow safely...an essential skill in learning to speak so they don't aspirate. Skips are a perfect example of a food that changes texture in the mouth, and so are perfect to teach the child to learn to control their chew and swallow rate. Banana and avocado are not. Sorry to burst your inflated opinion of yourself as Mother Theresa, but there you go. There is more to teaching children about food and associated pleasure than serving up boredom on a plate. A little of everything in moderation is how to raise mentally and physically healthy children, and a packet of Skips every so often is absolutely NOT going to make anyone obese! There is far more to teaching children about food than making sure they get certain nutrients, too much of ANY food is bad for you. Obesity comes mainly from children playing with gadgets these days, rather than whole neighbourhoods of kids running round outside, riding their bikes or skipping like they used to! Food is not an enemy, it is fuel for the body, and as long as you burn that fuel, then you won't get fat! One of the main causes of childhood obesity is the parent's unstable relationship to food. "Sweet" foods being withheld until whole meals are eaten first, or given as a reward for good behaviour. Whilst we think it is the best way to bribe them to finish their main meal, it creates a reward association with food, they are being taught they get certain foods when they've "done well" and oops there's a comfort eater in the making! Only feeding super foods like you've kindly shared with the group that you do, your Highness, teaches children an association between food and guilt. So when your little cherubs seem to spend a long time throwing up after meals, or so thin and frail their heart gives out, then you can give yourself a big pat on the shoulder for creating an eating disorder! 😁 I think your New Year resolution should be working on that good old fashioned saying, "if you don't have anything nice to say, then kindly shut the fuck up, alright?" Yes I ad-libbed the last part to give the sentence more weight! It's an obese version of the saying, you could say...? Actually I think it would be better if you didn't say....anything at all! Oh except an apology to Amanda would be nice, for being an absolutely unnecessary bitch! 😠
My favourite crisps are pickled onion, beef and onion, salt and vinegar and roast chicken. But only the Walkers crisp brand. I do like prawn cocktail, Worcestershire sauce flavour, cheese and onion as well. I’m from the UK. Happy New Year.
Omg, you're the right way around, amazing! That's a lot of Tayto. We are an Island, fishing and sea food are bread and butter, or used to be. Ironically, potatoes feature strongly too!
Most crisps are vegetarian unless stated on the packet. Unless they are near the expiry date, when they start to taste slightly off, they are gorgeous - each and every flavour!
Hi steve & lindsay , my fave flavour has to be plain old ready salted in any variety of crisp but kettle crisps are very good and least favourite cheese and onion . 😊
When we used buy a big multipack of crisps with different flavours of individual packs inside in my house every flavour would get eaten with the exception of salt and vinegar. We had to give those to my partner's son when he visited because he's the only one in the family who will eat them. In the end we gave up and just bought multipacks with all one flavour inside to make sure we got the flavour we specifically wanted.
Cheese and onion is my favorite I will even eat a crisp sandwich but we mainly have Walker's Crisps, I'm with you I'm not a fan of salt and vinegar but most people love them, good on you for trying them all just for the experience 👍👍 children love skips because of the melt in the mouth texture, Cheesy Wotsits is another melt in the mouth crisp that children love Love the flat cap, it really suits you
The Tayto cheese and Onion are the default crisp in Ireland, everyone seems to enjoy them eg if I was asked to get someone some crisps my first thought is the tayto cheese and onion
I’m with you both I hate salt & vinegar & prawn cocktail crisps. I love plain, cheese & onion & chicken crisps. Happy new year to you both & Sophia. Xxx🎄☃️🎄☃️🎄Xxx
I am from northern Ireland and love both the Republic and Northern Ireland tayto. if you were to go in the larger store they can't sell the Republic of Ireland tatyo in Northern Ireland UK Tesco and the same for the Tesco Ireland (eire) they can't sell the Northern Ireland version but small shops in Northern Ireland will sell the Republic ones in Catholic areas. Which I always grap a bag as a treat if I see them. Same with Cadburys chocolate made in Republic of Ireland is far better than the Cadburys chocolate made in England . It's hard to believe on till you taste test them side by side. Ps just googled it cadburys in Dublin still make the chocolate the original way as the cadburys in Birmingham UK changed the recipe when they where taken over.
My mum also used to slice up thin circles of cucumber, then put loads of vinegar over them and add salt and pepper, all in a little dish. I eat more salt and vinegar crisps now than as a child. My favourite is Marmite flavoured crisps then cheese and onion!.
As an Irish person; I was interested to hear your opinion on those snacks & in PARTICULAR, the "Tayto" branded crisps. It probably won't surprise you to learn that the "Cheese & Onion" flavoured crisps are a BIG seller, here & will often be found accompanying a toasted sandwich in bars & restaurants/diners in Ireland. We have also been known to make a Tayto sandwich & so popular is that idea, that some restaurants/diners in Dublin, sell pre-packwd Tayto sandwiches! Now; to settle something you were curious about: Prawn Cocktail flavour is EXACTLY the SAME as shrimp: in FACT, what you know as shrimp, we refer to them as prawns. Anyway; Happy New Year to you & your family!! 👍🙂🎉🎉🥂🍾🇮🇪❤🇺🇸
I’m loving these tasting videos. You are both very entertaining the way you throw yourselves into trying the different flavours! When I was younger I loved the prawn cocktail variety but find them too sweet today. Sour cream and chives are my go to crisps now.
That was brave guys! I used to eat some of those flavours when I was younger but now just the smell puts me off! Just ready salted for me now! these tastings are fun keep them up, x
We also have roast chicken, steak and also beef and onion flavour crisps and then also all the different flavours that come out for holidays etc like turkey and stuffing 🙂
FWIW here in New Zealand you can get salt and balsamic vinegar flavour, which is a strong flavour but the vinegar is much more subtle (and it's my favourite flavour)
Steve, May I say that I much prefer the flat cap (that you received from a viewer) than the baseball cap. The flat cap suits you, I hope you continue to wear it. Happy New Year from Annie in Australia.
the ridge cut (or ripple cut ) are supposed to hold more flavour as they have a larger surface area, a lot of the healthy substitutes to crisps are baked rather than fried and use other staples- eg the maize or lentil rather than a fried potato. you can also get crisps that are air fried that contain less fat too.
Prawn cocktail is super popular in the UK. That's shrimps in a ketchup. mayo and worcestershire sauce. The sauce is the flavour of those crisps. It's usually served as a starter or in sandwiches.
I cannot _stand_ _prawn_ _cocktail_ crisps. I don't like "Skips". I don't care for "cheese & onion" I do enjoy "salt & vinegar"... But then I really like malt vinegar (& mint sauce).
Almost everyone I know calls them plain crisps. Hardly ever hear ready salted, that's what 'posh' people say. Must be a regional thing. Don't assume the whole country is the same as where you're from 😊
@@faithpearlgenied-a5517 That's literally what they are called on the bag I'm not being posh (I'm from Grimsby) you are just using the American term for them
😮 Watching you devour Irish crisps in so many different flavours, just makes me want a nice 'chunky chip butty' with some 'Flora' (sunflower) spread (as I _dont_ like butter) with salt & _plenty_ of vinegar on them!!😊❤🏴😏🇬🇧🙂🖖
In northern ireland we have a crusty bap called a belfast bap and a big favourite is belfast bap butter and tayto cheese & onion crisps delicious .we also have a Tayto factory in Northern ireland
Love the video guys. The chipsticks, skips and onion rings are usually eaten more by kids, The prawn cocktail flavour is maire rose sauce that is a mix of tomato ketchup and mayonnaise. You really need to try a tayo sandwich which is a kids and sone adults favourite sandwich. You got a white sliced pan bread with loads of butter on both slices. Then crush the cheese and onion crisps in bag and pour on to bread and make sandwich
Good morning my favourite UA-cam family! ❤ My favourite crisps are not "crisps" ... I prefer "snacks" (maize and corn) to "crisps" (potato) I love... Prawn cocktail Skips (other flavours available) Beef Hula Hoops Cheesy Wotsits (I think they're like your Cheetos) No, prawn cocktail flavour tastes NOTHING like prawn cocktail. Prawns are basically slightly meatier shrimps, but less concentrated "fishy" flavour and smell to them. Prawn Cocktail is a starter course (I think you call it an entrée???) It is generally served in a stemmed glass sundae dish stood on a tea plate. (Side plate not dinner plate) It has a base bed of lettuce, usually round leaves or shredded iceberg lettuce, covered in cooked cold prawns, topped with Marie Rose sauce that is lightly sprinkled with paprika and served with a wedge of lemon on top. Usually accompanied by a buttered slice of bread with the crusts cut off, cut into 4 triangles, sitting on the edge of the plate. Marie Rose sauce is what prawn cocktail flavouring tastes most like...vinegary, tomatoey and sweet. Marie Rose sauce is similar to a seafood sauce (mayonnaise mixed with tomato sauce) and is pale pink in colour. Basically it was the height of fashion during '70's & '80's dinner parties and considered a posh choice back then 😂. It became popular for that reason and so the flavour became a crisps flavour too. But like I said, the flavour mostly resembles the sauce itself rather than the actual prawn cocktail. Lindsay said she thought it was sweet and vinegary, and she's right!.... but missed the tomato. 😊 Yes we use malt vinegar on our fish and chips...top tip, if you buy fish and chips here, make sure to tell them not to add salt and vinegar if you don't want it, as it's usually added without thinking!!! I personally choose battered Cod because it's thick and meaty and the flakes just fall apart in your mouth....rather than haddock, hake, or plaice. But to be fair I like them all. It's not greasy, it's more steamed inside, because the oil is so hot it sears the batter instantly into a crispy coating, which prevents the oil oozing into the fish inside. Remember I mentioned Hastings the other day...? 2 videos ago I believe...? Well beneath the cliff that the castle, 1066 story and smugglers caves are on, sits Hastings Old Town fishing village and it doesn't get any fresher than THAT! Out the sea and served within hours. Yum! I love shellfish too, prawns, shrimps, fresh crab, cockles, winkles, mussels, lobster....and I love anchovies too! hmm hmm! 😁 Love to you 3! 😘😘😘 xxxxx
No there is a factory in my home town of Corby, Northamptonshire, England, also golden wonder and pombears are made there too, plus a lot of the flavourings are made in corby.
I’m thinking “our vinegar” flavouring processes is comparable to the USA slapping chilli or salsa sauce on almost anything and everything! Give me vinegar all the time!
I absolutely love❤ crisps i could eat everyone😂 even though ive never had tayto. Also hope someone sends them McCoys crisps sooo good like thai sweet chilli chicken 🤤 and many other different flavours than ur average cheese n onion or salt n vinegar
Just so you know, we dont really have plain crisps in Ireland. Cheese and Onion Tayto are the basic standard crisps, with Salt and Vinegar being the second standard. When people say they like crisps, or are having a packet of crisps, they more than likely are talking about cheese and onion Tayto. We have Doritos Cool Original, buts thats not really that popular, its more a specialty or novelty brand. Something thats very popular as a lunch snack is a crisp sandwich. 2 slices of white bread, salted butter (Kerrygold) and a bag of cheese and onion Tayto as the filling. In supermarkets you can get a 6 pack of either cheese and onion Tayto, salt and vinegar Tayto or mixed. These are popular with families and many people, both children and adults have a packet of crisps for lunch. Pubs also sell crisps so its very normal when out for a drink that people will have a packet of either cheese and onion Tayto or salt and vinegar Tayto with a round of drinks.
HI GUYS DEBRA HERE FROM SOUTH WALES UK The prawn cocktail flavour crisps are mainly flavoured by the marie rose sauce not the actual prawns themselves. MARIE ROSE SAUCE INGREDIENTS 200ml mayonnaise 2-3 tbsp tomato ketchup ½ tsp hot sauce ¼ tsp Worcestershire sauce ¼-½ tsp lemon, juiced pinch of cayenne pepper, to serve We then pour this over a bowl of lettuce tomatoes cucumber and prawns (shrimp). What we in the UK call PLAIN crisps are called READY SALTED so they are only flavoured by salt and no other flavouring. My own personal favourite flavour of crisps is salt and vinegar. We also have barbeque fjavour crisps are well mainly barbecomue beef flavour If you want to try really plain crisps with no actual flavour on them you should try SMITHS SALT AND SHAKE as with these crisps you get a little blue sachet of salt to add to the crisps yourself as the crisps are just unflavoured fried potatoes. HAPPY NEW YEAR TO STEVE LIBDSAY AND SOPHIA
Prawn Cocktail usually confuses Americans, as they expect the prawn taste. The flavour is actually of the "Marie rose sauce" that you serve on a prawn cocktail, which is basically a mix of tomato sauce , mayo, Worcestershire sauce, lemon juice and a pinch of cayenne. So a few sharp flavours in there, so prawn cocktail crisp are usually tangy
I make my PC sauce with Ketchup, Mayo, Salt, Pepper and a kick of Jalapeno peppers, never seen the original recipe so nice to know I wasn't far from it lol.
All I do is just mix Heinz tomato sauce and Heinz salad cream and leave it there. Why? Because that's what a Fish and Chip shop used to make their prawn cocktail sauce and they shared it with us. So been making it this way ever since. Will have to make the traditional recipe at some point.
Ah okay! That makes much more sense, and hence why it reminds us a bit of our barbecue flavor here.
I don`t normally go for PC i like skips but those have a good texture, but....those Mcoys PC are devine as i suprisingly found out once, when i was starving.
pc crisps are yummy in a tuna mayo sandwich! best way to have them@@reactingtomyroots
Tayto cheese and onion sandwich, crisps between buttered bread,. Mush it down a bit. Heaven.
So true!
Might taste a fair bit different in America as their Bread is a lot different, would still be worth trying though as such a quick and easy tasty snack!
Yeah, someone needs to send them a loaf of Brennan's bread and Kerrygold butter for the true experience (on a chartered private jet to keep them fresh).
And change the Tayto for king !!@@101RadioheadCovers
Ham and Tayto crisps sandwiches are the best ever
This has been so much fun to watch. Lindsay’s wrinkly face when she tastes something she does not like and Steve having multiple dips into the bag of flavours he does like.
As others point out, Prawn cocktail are just Marie Rose Sauce flavour with no actual Prawn/Shrimp flavour at all, but in your unpacking videos I'm sure I noticed you received some Scampi Fries, they do taste like actual seafood and are freaking delicious! Loving the flat cap btw!
Oh god I love scampi fries and bacon fries. When I fancy a really unhealthy snack I'll have a bag of each with some chunks of cheddar and eat one of each crisp and a bit of cheese in each mouthful, delicious!
Yeah, we're looking forward to trying the British crisps we've been sent as well! :) And thanks...I'm loving it, too!
I'm scampi tried are the best! And wheat crunchies !
To be quite honest, with some prawn cocktail crisps you do sometimes get abit of a fishy after taste, especially with Walkers
I kind of find it odd that Americans have such an aversion to the taste of vinegar. It might be because the British have a long history of pickling just about every vegetable possible. While the American tradition is more for heat treating, and canning everything. 🤔 Even today, many people in the UK buy and pickle their own small silver skin onions.
I think you might be right about that one 🤔 I have a real taste for vinegar , like they say in this video we all have the flavours we go for preference..
...my dad was a fan too, but one which my French/ Italian mum does not have.. In France vinegar is obviously used for dressing, appears on the salad at just about every meal , very similar in Italy, but mum and I have a difference in taste as to how much vinegar to put in the dressing 😂
Interestingly my mum's sister is the same as me, as a couple of my cousins... my mum's eyes water at the thought of how much vinegar we all use 🤣
French people don't usually put vinegar on chips or crisps either! (Except my Aunt and Cousins lol)
People in Northern and Eastern Europe must have developed a taste for it over the millennia in the ways as you have said.. pickled cabbage, onions, cucumber, beetroot.. mmmmmm yum !
Definitely a flavour taste thing because I hate corn syrup and anything made with it. I can't eat US choc , sweets or drink the soda, I like sugar cane and sugar beet !
Especially as they love pickled cucumber so much.
@@101steel4 Oh yeh ! I forgot about that.. obsessed with "pickles"... they haven't tried Branston Pickle and cheese sarnies yet !!
So does Eastern Europe, countries that don't pickle to preserve find it gross lol.
@@grrrrbabyverygrrr8165 Yeh ! I think it is safe to say that any countries and continents who have spent hundreds and even thousands of years trying to make alcohol have a taste for vinegar. 😋🤣After all that is where our English word comes from, the French vin aigre, sour wine
Tayto N.Ireland was founded in 1956 in Tandragee, County Armagh and operates as a separate company from Tayto Republic of Ireland which was formed in 1954. They have a similar range of products. One of the biggest differences is in the packaging - in N.Ireland the legendary cheese & onion crips come in a bright yellow packet whereas the ROI version is red & blue. Fun facts : the N.Ireland Tayto factory is actually inside Tandragee Castle which is over 500 years old. Also Tandragee, when translated from the Irish, means "backside to the wind"
Love the translation lol
Interesting! We didn't realize there were two different Tayto brands.
@@reactingtomyrootsSouthern (Irish) Tayto are a good 2nd best of course. Walkers (Lays) however in UK = Yuk
Yes irish not english
That's interesting. Thanks. I haven't seen them in England so this is all new information. Love the idea of the castle.
I am highly allergic to shellfish but I can eat prawn cocktail flavour crisps because there are no prawns in them at all. LOL.
Same x
Our version of BBQ flavour is BBQ flavour 😀
😂
Tayto NI was founded by the Hutchinson family in 1956. The Tayto name and logo is used under a licencing agreement with Tayto in the Rep of Ireland. The companies sell similar products but are two different entities . The founder of Tayto was a man named Joe "spud" Murphy who first produced the crisps from a small plant in Moore Street in Dublin in 1954.
You have to try a tayto cheese and onion sandwich 🥪 yum 😋
In the UK, "Spicy" doesn't always mean hot spices (due to US influence it is increasingly used that way though) and often refers to a combination of multiple mild aromatic spices, sometimes including chilis but not as the dominant flavour/sensation.
Exactly, they usually add the words "FLAMIN' HOT" to the packaging of products that are very hot.
Okay! That's helpful to know :)
@alexslater5324 if you say so. You can easily make flaming hot crisps hotter.
You have some really hot dip for your crips?@@Jimmy_Jones
Ireland is not in the UK. That’s common across Northern Europe btw
I didn’t realise that Tayto did so many flavours.
Crisp Butties big here in the UK, but not for me, it’s like biting into a lovely soft sandwich to find it full of eggshells!
Great to see the product names the correct way around 👍🏴
A tayto cheese and onion crisp sambo is also hugely popular here in Ireland ❤ you could possibly say it's a national dish/snack
that's only about half the range
Love the cap Steve happy new year to you Lindsey and Sophia from northeast England x
“Comparison is the thief of joy.”
-Theodore Roosevelt
On holiday in Alicante. Woman asked her husband, to ask me direction to nearest Irish pub . I was eating TAYTO 😊
😅😅😅 very observant man
Happy New Year guys from Northern Ireland🎉
Your ‘peaky’ cap suits you sir! Very nice😁
Hi Guys, just a quick piece of info for all your American viewers.
‘Prawn cocktail’ crisps or any other snack come to that does not contain ANY seafood (Prawns/Shrimp etc).
The flavor refers to the sauce that’s used for a Shrimp cocktail ( as you would call it) which is basically Mayo mixed with Tomato ketchup & may have a hint of lemon and cayenne, that’s why they are marketed as suitable for vegetarians
Thanks for the explanation! :)
I haven't had tayto crisps for years happy childhood memories eating tayto crisps, drinking pink lemonade and the smell of turf burning and playing with the local kids from kilmihill.42 now but these crisps take me back
Turf burning??? You mean tar burning? For roofing? Or perhaps the smell of grass when you skid a bike on it?
One of my favourite kind of burning ish type smells, is the generators at a fair. That smell always takes me back to childhood. 😊😊😊
Try finding out what turf is. I'm surprised you don't know.@@tamielizabethallaway2413
@tamielizabethallaway2413 I mean turf the bungalow we stayed in had a raeburn that heated the place, hot water and you cook on it. On dartmoor people burn turf aswell
@tamielizabethallaway2413 yep fairground generators and you can't beat a fairground hot dog
@@chucky2316 ahhh ok! I've not seen that! I think my Nan had a Raeburn when I was very little...? I vaguely remember my parents talking about it...that was a fuzzy blast from the past memory! 😊 I love the Dartmoor ponies 😁
watched rhis vid while eating a bag of Co-Op Turkey Tikka Masala Crisps - would love to have seen Steve and Lindsey's reaction to tasting these 🤣
I have come to the conclusion that Americans have a very bland food palate. My favourite are Walkers plain crisps, but I do quite like Walkers Sensations Sweet Chilli. Prawns are what Americans call Shrimp. however the crisps are Prawn Cocktail which is a whole different ball game. A prawn Cocktail is made with shredded lettuce, finely diced tomato and sometimes what you call English Cucumber, topped with cooked peeled prawns and a Marie Rose sauce.
When my friend came over from Spain for a holiday, we had fish and chips. He was uncertain about Vinegar on the fish, but I insisted he try. A few days later, he asked if we could have fish and chips again, and really surprised me when he asked the server to add more Vinegar.
I do not like Prawn Cocktail flavour either.
Yes, it's all about what your used to, what you had whilst growing up, I idea is to try other cuisines.
Its personal taste. I cannot stand anything pickled or vinegar on my fish n chips. Someone else would love pickled anything & like vinegar on their chippy tea. 🇬🇧
Thanks
Thank you Ann! Hope you're having a great New Year. :)
Just as a point of interest, you might notice people in the comments referring to plain crisps as "ready salted". This term came about to differentiate them from "Salt 'n' Shake" crisps that are made by Smiths, where the salt comes separately in a little blue packet and you add as little or as much salt to the plain crisps as you want (or none at all, if that's what you're in to!). You then shake the bag to distribute the salt around the crisps. "Ready salted" crisps have the salt already added.
Yes love them, I was going to get them the other day but got pawn cocktail instead, I will definitely get some next time , they bring back memories of when I was little.
Oh that's very interesting! Don't know that I've ever seen chips here that come with a packet to salt them yourself. Cool concept
@@reactingtomyroots The separate bag of salt is a very old concept here in the UK. In fact the earliest types of salt them yourself crisps had the salt in a small twist of blue paper instead of a sealed paper bag, consequently many times the salt was already loose inside the main bag of crisps. The crisps were always available as unsalted or plain, then they started to sell them as ready salted followed by cheese and onion and only later did the makers add the little twist of salt. The reason for the cheese and onion flavour choice is down to the British pub culture, because originally the only locations that most crisps were easily available from were the public bars , which started putting out bowls of salty snacks to encourage people to drink. The patrons would purchase a bag of crisps but would crave more flavour and since the only other foods that were available were things like pickled onions and eggs and sometimes an odd cheese sandwich, the customers would take a small pickled onion or a piece of cheese and slide it still covered in the pickling vinegar into their bags of plain crisps then close the neck of the bag as tightly as possible, then proceed to partly crush some of the contents to obtain sharp flakes of the crisps that would pierce the skin of the onion releasing more of the taste into the crisps, making them stronger tasting and the same kind of result was achieved with the crisps getting stuck in the cheese giving it a different texture. Modern day flavours have expanded into many other dishes from many global flavour profiles.
Love the Irish music in the background. And Steve, great to see you wearing your Peaky Blinder cap ❤
Thanks that was interesting to watch. I think you hit the nail on the head when you mentioned taste profiles and what we are used to eating and in a way what you were showing us in your preference/leaning towards for cheese and onion and sour cream and reaction to some of the different textures proved this. With the vast range of flavours of crisps available here IMO cheese and onion while popular is somewhat muted compared to other flavours we have.
My favourite crisps are Pipers, the business started when 3 farmers in North Lincolnshire got together, they use really flavoursome, quality potatoes & , to me, you can tell !
I first tried them when I had to travel by train backwards and forwards Newcastle to London for a number of years when I'd had 6 ops on my ankle/s &, feeling sorry for myself & partly out of needing extra space, I travelled 1st class where all food and drinks were free ...I was hooked from then on , didn't realise they'd been in business less than 5 or 6 years then &, consequently, their crisps were hard to find, now though, Sainsbury's and Waitrose sell them...they are THE best mmh !
My favourite crisp when I was at school was TOMATO KETCHUP flavour.
Didn't see any BEEF (BBQ/ROAST), SWEET CHILLI, ROAST CHICKEN in the video.
Beef crisps discontinued, by Walkers at least! 😕
Try making a crisp buddy (sandwich) I use cheese and onion or salt and vinegar yum.
I use all flavours. Chicken crisps on a tuna mayo sandwich is one of my favourites
*butty. It's food not your mate.
We love our vinegar here in England we pickle alot of our food so that's probably why , and salt and vinegar with fish and chips is the best. With the prawn cocktail crips it's the cocktail sauce your tasting not the prawns hence the name , it's called Marie Rose sauce and is delicious, again we love those sorts of things , we also have tartar sauce and fresh lemon juice with fish and chips , I suppose its what your use to and what your pallets are use to .
The first one that you ate, the cheese and onion one, that's the one we'd generally consider the plain, default one. What you do is, you put it in a sandwich. White bread, butter, cheese and onion crisps. Amazing.
Surely ready salted would be considered the plain one. Cheese and Onion definitely better in a sandwich that bit I agree with.
@@beltrofix7667 I don't think Tayto do ready salted......at least i've never seen them.
I have my own rules re: crisps that go with which sandwiches in my packing up...
Cheese Sandwich - ready salted or salt & vinegar
Cheese and Pickle - ready salted only
Ham - ready salted or salt & vinegar
Chicken/Turkey - salt & vinegar
Beef - cheese & onion
That's the gist of it...and Prawn Cocktail can stay on the shelf in the shop.
Meat flavours i.e. steak, beef and onion, smoky bacon whenever, but not with sandwiches and roast chicken can stay in the shop along with the prawn cocktail.
As others have said Tayto produced the world’s first flavour added crisp, and it was cheese and onion. Although I live in the UK have spent a lot of time in Ireland. I remember going into an Irish supermarket a few years ago trying to find plain (salted) crisps, a young assistant saw me looking and asked me if he could help. I said I was looking for plain crisps, he pointed out a section of cheese and onion, I said no and am looking for plain crisps. He said “well they are plain”. I don’t think Tayto make salted only crisps.
@@ann-marieleahy7741 my mistake I didn't realise we were speaking specifically about Tayto
the cap looks good on you
Blasphemy! 😄 The southern tayto cheese and onion is KING 😄 especially between bread... 🤤
Sampled one crisp from a Walker’s “Festive king prawn & Marie Rose sauce” packet as I was laying a buffet for “his family rellies” …..it was a lush crisp moment! So much so, I only put a handful of them in a bowl on the table and hid the rest for me to eat ALLLL ON MY OWNNNNNNN!
might write to Walker’s and ask if they will keep this “deluxe” version of a prawn cocktail crisp for all year!
Did you try the beef wellington ones?
@@catherineturner2839 😱😱😱 nooooooooooooo !!!!!! ohhhhhh I’ve missed out there!! 😥😥😥 I’m now sobbing silent tears into my deluxe prawn cocktail flavour crisps! - mustn’t make them soggy! 😳😂😂 (checking online to see if Sainsy are still selling them ….) I tried the festive “pigs in blankets” ones - didn’t go much on them really 🤷🏽♀️
@@weedle30 they are still everywhere
I think brits like salt & vinegar because it’s what we’re used to on fish & chips 🥰
That definitely makes sense!
love fish and chips with loads of salt and vinegar but salt and vinegar crisps are the worst flavour of the full ranges
@@GB-nu6ow walkers salt & vinegar are the nicest. But is all down to individual taste buds.
Your flat cap looks terrific , man!!!!
Yay! You managed to fix the camera setup!
If you're chary about salt & vinegar it's just as well no-one sent you a packet of pickled onion Monster Munch! 😁
I was thinking this too…. These are definitely a fab snack of childhood 😊
seeing some of the comments below, while a lot of brits would hesitate to admit it in public, in private a lot like the flavour and crunch that a good crisp butty (sandwich or roll) gives. my favourite is cheese and onion.
Brits love -prawn cocktail, cheese and onion, salt and vinegar & roast chicken flavoured crisps. Not everyone loves all those flavours but they are some of the most popular flavours in uk.
Love to see your wife joining !!! ❤
I know you'll hate me for saying it, but my favourite crisp is marmite
Marmite is nice with an egg between two slices of hot buttered toast.
Some will hate you for it, I love you for it.
It's a Marmite thing 😂
Vile creature 😉
I love marmite but I think Marmite crisps taste more beefy than marmite
@@siangreenwoodx So do I. The Walkers Marmite crisps seem way more beef flavour than their Beef and Onion to me. Nice.
ive never heard of this brand and am sure SKIPS are GOLDEN WONDER
Tayto is an Irish brand. Steve's channel covers his British and Irish roots. British Skips are made by KP.
Skips are tayto but in around about fashion,not the tayto featured here but NI tayto as they bought golden wonder
Skips crisps are what we normally give young kids when they are starting to eat more solid foods as they dissolve in the mouth as a treat.
Do we? There’s processed sugar and all sorts of rubbish in there. I wouldn’t personally call skips a food a young child should nourish their growing body with. I feed my young kids bananas or avocados. This mentality is why obesity is becoming common in the UK.
I'm going from the time especially coming from a lower class background and raised in the 70s and 80s. Obviously that probably isn't the case now and I did state it as a treat.
@@amandathatcares1277you don’t need to defend yourself. Every family I know have given skips to their children. Literally everyone I know. I think it’s because of the way they melt in the mouth making them easy to eat and start chewing.
@@scottneil1187 I'm 53 and they're my favourite! 😁
@@WatermelonPlayzzRoblox-lol Ok here you go Mum of the year! 🏅🏆
Feel better now someone has honoured your greatness? That *WAS* the sole purpose of your comment right...? To place yourself on a higher platform than others and claim to be a better Mother...?
Well there you go, I've acknowledged that fragile ego of yours.
I take it you're NOT a speech and language therapist? No, didn't think so. Teaching a child about different foods is essential so they learn to swallow safely...an essential skill in learning to speak so they don't aspirate.
Skips are a perfect example of a food that changes texture in the mouth, and so are perfect to teach the child to learn to control their chew and swallow rate.
Banana and avocado are not. Sorry to burst your inflated opinion of yourself as Mother Theresa, but there you go. There is more to teaching children about food and associated pleasure than serving up boredom on a plate.
A little of everything in moderation is how to raise mentally and physically healthy children, and a packet of Skips every so often is absolutely NOT going to make anyone obese! There is far more to teaching children about food than making sure they get certain nutrients, too much of ANY food is bad for you.
Obesity comes mainly from children playing with gadgets these days, rather than whole neighbourhoods of kids running round outside, riding their bikes or skipping like they used to! Food is not an enemy, it is fuel for the body, and as long as you burn that fuel, then you won't get fat!
One of the main causes of childhood obesity is the parent's unstable relationship to food. "Sweet" foods being withheld until whole meals are eaten first, or given as a reward for good behaviour. Whilst we think it is the best way to bribe them to finish their main meal, it creates a reward association with food, they are being taught they get certain foods when they've "done well" and oops there's a comfort eater in the making!
Only feeding super foods like you've kindly shared with the group that you do, your Highness, teaches children an association between food and guilt. So when your little cherubs seem to spend a long time throwing up after meals, or so thin and frail their heart gives out, then you can give yourself a big pat on the shoulder for creating an eating disorder! 😁
I think your New Year resolution should be working on that good old fashioned saying, "if you don't have anything nice to say, then kindly shut the fuck up, alright?" Yes I ad-libbed the last part to give the sentence more weight! It's an obese version of the saying, you could say...?
Actually I think it would be better if you didn't say....anything at all! Oh except an apology to Amanda would be nice, for being an absolutely unnecessary bitch! 😠
My favourite crisps are pickled onion, beef and onion, salt and vinegar and roast chicken. But only the Walkers crisp brand. I do like prawn cocktail, Worcestershire sauce flavour, cheese and onion as well. I’m from the UK. Happy New Year.
Omg, you're the right way around, amazing! That's a lot of Tayto. We are an Island, fishing and sea food are bread and butter, or used to be. Ironically, potatoes feature strongly too!
Most crisps are vegetarian unless stated on the packet. Unless they are near the expiry date, when they start to taste slightly off, they are gorgeous - each and every flavour!
The Gatsby looks awesome from the back Steve,
It makes a change from seeing you in the beanies or the baseball caps,
🇬🇧😎👍🏼
Hi steve & lindsay , my fave flavour has to be plain old ready salted in any variety of crisp but kettle crisps are very good and least favourite cheese and onion . 😊
When we used buy a big multipack of crisps with different flavours of individual packs inside in my house every flavour would get eaten with the exception of salt and vinegar. We had to give those to my partner's son when he visited because he's the only one in the family who will eat them.
In the end we gave up and just bought multipacks with all one flavour inside to make sure we got the flavour we specifically wanted.
Cheese and onion is my favorite I will even eat a crisp sandwich but we mainly have Walker's Crisps, I'm with you I'm not a fan of salt and vinegar but most people love them, good on you for trying them all just for the experience 👍👍
children love skips because of the melt in the mouth texture, Cheesy Wotsits is another melt in the mouth crisp that children love
Love the flat cap, it really suits you
The Tayto cheese and Onion are the default crisp in Ireland, everyone seems to enjoy them eg if I was asked to get someone some crisps my first thought is the tayto cheese and onion
I’m with you both I hate salt & vinegar & prawn cocktail crisps. I love plain, cheese & onion & chicken crisps. Happy new year to you both & Sophia. Xxx🎄☃️🎄☃️🎄Xxx
I am from northern Ireland and love both the Republic and Northern Ireland tayto. if you were to go in the larger store they can't sell the Republic of Ireland tatyo in Northern Ireland UK Tesco and the same for the Tesco Ireland (eire) they can't sell the Northern Ireland version but small shops in Northern Ireland will sell the Republic ones in Catholic areas. Which I always grap a bag as a treat if I see them. Same with Cadburys chocolate made in Republic of Ireland is far better than the Cadburys chocolate made in England . It's hard to believe on till you taste test them side by side. Ps just googled it cadburys in Dublin still make the chocolate the original way as the cadburys in Birmingham UK changed the recipe when they where taken over.
Good morning ☺ that hat really suits you Steve
It does doesn't it! Although he's too sweet to be a peaky blinder 😂
@@tamielizabethallaway2413
indeed.... He's More of a Fred Dibnah
@@Rachel_M_ 😂
@@tamielizabethallaway2413 🤔.... I might send Steve a boiler suit 😂
My mum also used to slice up thin circles of cucumber, then put loads of vinegar over them and add salt and pepper, all in a little dish. I eat more salt and vinegar crisps now than as a child. My favourite is Marmite flavoured crisps then cheese and onion!.
Hey Steve I'm the same as you with cheese only on pizza and stuff not on it's own. Great vid love it.
As an Irish person; I was interested to hear your opinion on those snacks & in PARTICULAR, the "Tayto" branded crisps. It probably won't surprise you to learn that the "Cheese & Onion" flavoured crisps are a BIG seller, here & will often be found accompanying a toasted sandwich in bars & restaurants/diners in Ireland. We have also been known to make a Tayto sandwich & so popular is that idea, that some restaurants/diners in Dublin, sell pre-packwd Tayto sandwiches! Now; to settle something you were curious about: Prawn Cocktail flavour is EXACTLY the SAME as shrimp: in FACT, what you know as shrimp, we refer to them as prawns. Anyway; Happy New Year to you & your family!! 👍🙂🎉🎉🥂🍾🇮🇪❤🇺🇸
Skips are really good, you can get other flavours too, i love how they dissolve in your mouth. 😂
I’m loving these tasting videos. You are both very entertaining the way you throw yourselves into trying the different flavours! When I was younger I loved the prawn cocktail variety but find them too sweet today. Sour cream and chives are my go to crisps now.
Glad you're enjoying them! Appreciate you hanging out :)
That was brave guys! I used to eat some of those flavours when I was younger but now just the smell puts me off! Just ready salted for me now! these tastings are fun keep them up, x
Congratulations on getting the camara sorted. It throws a whole new perspective on your video.
Got to say Stevie you look fantastic in that cap😊😊🇬🇧
\hi both...nice to see you in a flat cap steve!!
We also have roast chicken, steak and also beef and onion flavour crisps and then also all the different flavours that come out for holidays etc like turkey and stuffing 🙂
My spaniel has tried all of those flavours, and rated all of them as 10 😁👍
Best day every!!!! 🎉 Eireann go Bragh! 🇮🇪
FWIW here in New Zealand you can get salt and balsamic vinegar flavour, which is a strong flavour but the vinegar is much more subtle (and it's my favourite flavour)
Steve, May I say that I much prefer the flat cap (that you received from a viewer) than the baseball cap.
The flat cap suits you, I hope you continue to wear it. Happy New Year from Annie in Australia.
Loving the flat cap Steve.
Steve like the Peaky Blinders cap on you. How do you like it?
Cheese and onion are the post popular flaver as well as salted crisps
the ridge cut (or ripple cut ) are supposed to hold more flavour as they have a larger surface area, a lot of the healthy substitutes to crisps are baked rather than fried and use other staples- eg the maize or lentil rather than a fried potato. you can also get crisps that are air fried that contain less fat too.
Prawn cocktail is super popular in the UK. That's shrimps in a ketchup. mayo and worcestershire sauce. The sauce is the flavour of those crisps.
It's usually served as a starter or in sandwiches.
Prawn cocktail used to a popular starter in the 1970’s
I cannot _stand_ _prawn_ _cocktail_ crisps.
I don't like "Skips".
I don't care for "cheese & onion"
I do enjoy "salt & vinegar"... But then I really like malt vinegar (& mint sauce).
@@brigidsingleton1596 ah now i love skips but not standard prawn cocktail, love cheese and onion, dont like salt and vinegar but love malt vinegar
@@brigidsingleton1596oooh I love mint sauce too! That's got my mouth watering! Roast lamb and mint sauce....I ladle it on! Hmm hmm hmmmmmmm 😍😍😍
@@tamielizabethallaway2413
To be honest, I used to eat 'mint sauce sandwiches' when I was younger... Now, I'm tempted all over again !! 🤔🥺😏🙂🏴❤️🖖
Nice hat, Steve. 😉Makes you look a 'proper geezer'.
No one in the UK should wear a baseball cap. Dreadful things 😀
And that cap makes you look like my granda.
Peaky blinders ❤
prawn cocktail crisps dont taste of prawn it tastes like the marie rose sauce used when making a prawn cocktail.
I've got a bunion on my foot, but it's not an American chip/crisp 😂
*Funions.
@@elemar5 😂 😂
We don't call them plain crisp we call them ready salted
Well, we do. Lots of people say plain crisps. Only posh people call them ready salted! 😂 Jk but I call them plain and I'm quite posh.
Nah, it’s plain. You’d get beaten up around here if you said ready salted 😂
Almost everyone I know calls them plain crisps. Hardly ever hear ready salted, that's what 'posh' people say. Must be a regional thing. Don't assume the whole country is the same as where you're from 😊
@@EmilyGilbeywilbeyI call them Ready Salted because that’s what Walkers call them. They are also the flavour I avoid
@@faithpearlgenied-a5517 That's literally what they are called on the bag I'm not being posh (I'm from Grimsby) you are just using the American term for them
😮 Watching you devour Irish crisps in so many different flavours, just makes me want a nice 'chunky chip butty' with some 'Flora' (sunflower) spread (as I _dont_ like butter) with salt & _plenty_ of vinegar on them!!😊❤🏴😏🇬🇧🙂🖖
In northern ireland we have a crusty bap called a belfast bap and a big favourite is belfast bap butter and tayto cheese & onion crisps delicious .we also have a Tayto factory in Northern ireland
Prawn cocktail doe NOT have any prawn in it. It is the sauce used for a prawn cocktail.
Am I the only one thinking Steve could be an East London geezer with the cap! (apart from the accent)
Loving the vids..
My favourite is King Cheese and Onion (which is made by Tayto Crisps)
I not sure king is made by tayto really
Love the video guys. The chipsticks, skips and onion rings are usually eaten more by kids,
The prawn cocktail flavour is maire rose sauce that is a mix of tomato ketchup and mayonnaise.
You really need to try a tayo sandwich which is a kids and sone adults favourite sandwich. You got a white sliced pan bread with loads of butter on both slices. Then crush the cheese and onion crisps in bag and pour on to bread and make sandwich
From Northern Ireland Tayto cheese and onion in a few bits of bread - perfection.
Good morning my favourite UA-cam family! ❤
My favourite crisps are not "crisps" ...
I prefer "snacks" (maize and corn) to "crisps" (potato)
I love...
Prawn cocktail Skips (other flavours available)
Beef Hula Hoops
Cheesy Wotsits (I think they're like your Cheetos)
No, prawn cocktail flavour tastes NOTHING like prawn cocktail. Prawns are basically slightly meatier shrimps, but less concentrated "fishy" flavour and smell to them.
Prawn Cocktail is a starter course (I think you call it an entrée???) It is generally served in a stemmed glass sundae dish stood on a tea plate. (Side plate not dinner plate) It has a base bed of lettuce, usually round leaves or shredded iceberg lettuce, covered in cooked cold prawns, topped with Marie Rose sauce that is lightly sprinkled with paprika and served with a wedge of lemon on top. Usually accompanied by a buttered slice of bread with the crusts cut off, cut into 4 triangles, sitting on the edge of the plate.
Marie Rose sauce is what prawn cocktail flavouring tastes most like...vinegary, tomatoey and sweet. Marie Rose sauce is similar to a seafood sauce (mayonnaise mixed with tomato sauce) and is pale pink in colour.
Basically it was the height of fashion during '70's & '80's dinner parties and considered a posh choice back then 😂.
It became popular for that reason and so the flavour became a crisps flavour too. But like I said, the flavour mostly resembles the sauce itself rather than the actual prawn cocktail. Lindsay said she thought it was sweet and vinegary, and she's right!.... but missed the tomato. 😊
Yes we use malt vinegar on our fish and chips...top tip, if you buy fish and chips here, make sure to tell them not to add salt and vinegar if you don't want it, as it's usually added without thinking!!! I personally choose battered Cod because it's thick and meaty and the flakes just fall apart in your mouth....rather than haddock, hake, or plaice. But to be fair I like them all. It's not greasy, it's more steamed inside, because the oil is so hot it sears the batter instantly into a crispy coating, which prevents the oil oozing into the fish inside.
Remember I mentioned Hastings the other day...? 2 videos ago I believe...? Well beneath the cliff that the castle, 1066 story and smugglers caves are on, sits Hastings Old Town fishing village and it doesn't get any fresher than THAT! Out the sea and served within hours. Yum!
I love shellfish too, prawns, shrimps, fresh crab, cockles, winkles, mussels, lobster....and I love anchovies too! hmm hmm! 😁
Love to you 3! 😘😘😘 xxxxx
Good morning ♥
I agree, ar'nt they great!
Skips used to be made by KP snacks, a lot of the crisp brands were bought up by Walkers a few years ago, wotsits, smiths salt and shake etc
No there is a factory in my home town of Corby, Northamptonshire, England, also golden wonder and pombears are made there too, plus a lot of the flavourings are made in corby.
Take a bag of plain crisps, pour Worcestershire sauce into the packet and give it a shake. Tastes good
If you’re in Sheffield you put Henderson’s relish in the bag rather than Worcester!
@@audreybagshaw5231mmmmm Hendos!
I'm a Scot who doesn't like sweet or salty snacks, but nothing against people who do!
All the best for 2024 ❤
I loooove salt and vinegar crisps. They are the ones I buy mainly, even with Pringles. I do love salt and vinegar on chips.
Tayto Cheese and Onion was the worlds first flavoured potatoe crisp.
do you not count salted as a flavour which is 1800s
There's a reason we call ready salted, 'ready salted' and it is because it is the first flavoured crisp.
@@Gambit771 I don't count salt or vinegar only complex flavors.
@@GB-nu6owcrisps came with a packet of salt until Tayto invented the flavouring process
I’m thinking “our vinegar” flavouring processes is comparable to the USA slapping chilli or salsa sauce on almost anything and everything! Give me vinegar all the time!
I absolutely love❤ crisps i could eat everyone😂 even though ive never had tayto. Also hope someone sends them McCoys crisps sooo good like thai sweet chilli chicken 🤤 and many other different flavours than ur average cheese n onion or salt n vinegar
You need to try McCoy's thai sweet chilli.....yum
Just so you know, we dont really have plain crisps in Ireland. Cheese and Onion Tayto are the basic standard crisps, with Salt and Vinegar being the second standard. When people say they like crisps, or are having a packet of crisps, they more than likely are talking about cheese and onion Tayto.
We have Doritos Cool Original, buts thats not really that popular, its more a specialty or novelty brand.
Something thats very popular as a lunch snack is a crisp sandwich.
2 slices of white bread, salted butter (Kerrygold) and a bag of cheese and onion Tayto as the filling.
In supermarkets you can get a 6 pack of either cheese and onion Tayto, salt and vinegar Tayto or mixed. These are popular with families and many people, both children and adults have a packet of crisps for lunch.
Pubs also sell crisps so its very normal when out for a drink that people will have a packet of either cheese and onion Tayto or salt and vinegar Tayto with a round of drinks.
Prawn cocktail is one of my favorite flavours... along with salt and vinegar lol. I quite like salt and pepper flavour crisps too
Omg...that flat cap really suits you
HI GUYS
DEBRA HERE FROM SOUTH WALES UK
The prawn cocktail flavour crisps are mainly flavoured by the marie rose sauce not the actual prawns themselves.
MARIE ROSE SAUCE
INGREDIENTS
200ml mayonnaise
2-3 tbsp tomato ketchup
½ tsp hot sauce
¼ tsp Worcestershire sauce
¼-½ tsp lemon, juiced
pinch of cayenne pepper, to serve
We then pour this over a bowl of lettuce tomatoes cucumber and prawns (shrimp).
What we in the UK call PLAIN crisps are called READY SALTED so they are only flavoured by salt and no other flavouring.
My own personal favourite flavour of crisps is salt and vinegar.
We also have barbeque fjavour crisps are well mainly barbecomue beef flavour
If you want to try really plain crisps with no actual flavour on them you should try SMITHS SALT AND SHAKE as with these crisps you get a little blue sachet of salt to add to the crisps yourself as the crisps are just unflavoured fried potatoes.
HAPPY NEW YEAR TO STEVE LIBDSAY AND SOPHIA
It would be fun to do all the Walkers flavours, ready salted, ketchup, beef and onion ,chicken etc
(Do they still do all those?).