Hawaiian Kettle Chips
Since George Crum invented the potato chip in 1853, Americans have been downing them by the bagfull. These days, people in the United States eat approximately 17 billion dollars worth of potato chips each year. That's more than a third of the snack industry by itself. Go down to any supermarket, convenience store or gas station and you'll find anywhere on the order of a dozen or more varieties of chip, be it in brand, texture, or flavor. It's a complicated enough issue that regulatory courts have had to formally define what exactly constitutes a potato chip. For example, a recent ruling declared Pringles to be a snack food adequate for human consumption, but not sufficiently within the bounds of potato-chipdom.
In recent years one particular style of chip, the kettle chip, has been gaining in popularity. Kettle chips are naturally very crunchy, have a distinct dark color, and tend to hold on to that much-desired potato flavor a little better than your average fried or baked chip. One particular brand of chips, Hawaiian, has started to appear in more places and in several new varieties around the Pacific Northwest.