Originally posted by QualityChimp
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The greatest flavour of crisps is...
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Originally posted by replicashooter View PostI was going to comment on Zens bougieness that was palpably pulsating through the screen in a much more uncouth way but seeing as QC has handled it I’ll just chill... till the next episode.I like the flavour of raw ingredients, that's all. Dates, olives, figs, pita bread, almonds, cashews, humus, sun dried tomatoes, plain potato chips. Those are the kinda snacks I enjoy, but don't read anything into it other than that.
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Originally posted by randombs View PostThey don't do salt and vinegar here in Japan, the heathens.
Very occasionally I've seen vinegar flavoured crisps and I'd just add salt to complete the taste.
On the other hand, the flavours they do here are brilliant. Fried chicken, garlic steak, even pizza flavoured ridge crisps with melted cheese on top. Recently there were really good tom yum kung flavoured ones. They're really good at getting the flavours just right.
I've recently stopped eating Pringles, though; since this year. I'm on a diet, but even putting that aside, they're just of zero nutritional value. They're a salt and fat delivery mechanism.
Popcorn is bad for you, but at least it's roughage.
Ice cream is high in sugar, but at least it contains calcium and can settle your digestion.
Chocolate is bad for you in many respects but again, at least it has mildly positive qualities.
Pringles are just nothing. They turn into a slurry as you eat them and they do nothing for you.
I recently had two or three at a buffet, and I almost spat them out. 6 months of not eating something really affects how it tastes.
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Originally posted by QualityChimp View PostIf Pringles are so nice "Once you pop, just just can't stop", then how come they have a resealable lid?
Apparently it's called "vanishing caloric density"; it's the supposed idea that humans are quite voracious with food, because we had thousands of years where we tended to not have enough calories to sustain ourselves. Many of us now live in a post-hunger society, where you may not remember the last time you were genuinely "starving". As a result, consuming food releases endorphins, and foods like Cheetos and Pringles (also chocolate) go in your mouth and "vanish" quickly, due to the way they break down (chocolate too as it melts at human body temperature). This results in an endophin release that you "chase" by eating more, creating a kind of runaway effect that leaves you with the "Pringle nausea" once you've eaten too many.
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Originally posted by JazzFunk View PostWith Pringles, it's the MSG that makes 'em moreish.
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I'd probably get really drunk, try three teaspoonfuls in a mug of Bovril and probably spend all my night awake in a state of panic attack, but HUNGRY panic attack.
I've never tried it, tbh. I know enough how easy it is to consume an entire tube of Pringles, especially if you have a full, cold pint glass full of nice beer damn right next to you.
Pringles, cool. MSG, cool.
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Whether Pringles are actual crisps or not, all I know is that Xmas Turkey flavour Pringles are, by light years, the best ever Pringles flavour and pretty much the best ever poultry-flavoured crisps.
I will be seriously p1ssed off if they do not make an appearance in supermarkets for this year's festive season.
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Originally posted by Nu-Eclipse View PostWhether Pringles are actual crisps or not, all I know is that Xmas Turkey flavour Pringles are, by light years, the best ever Pringles flavour and pretty much the best ever poultry-flavoured crisps.
I will be seriously p1ssed off if they do not make an appearance in supermarkets for this year's festive season.
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