How are crisp flavours made?
So, in my local supermarket, I stumbled upon these bags of "Wiltshire Cured Ham, Mature Cheddar and Farmhouse Chutney" flavoured crisps (a.o.) and inquisitive as I am I couldn't help myself but to try them out and discover what glorious tastes these produced.
Lo and behold my surprise when they turned out to taste just like many others on this list of flavours. I tried my best, closing my eyes, looking for a hint of cured ham, maybe a vague sense of cheddar, but as hard as I tried, I couldn't make out anything remotely close to it.
Hence my question, how do they make such flavourings?
Yes, here's the list of ingredients:
Ingredients:
Potatoes, Sunflower Oil, Rapeseed Oil, Wiltshire Cured Ham and Mature Cheddar with Farmhouse Chutney Seasoning [Contains: Sugar, Salt, Natural Flavourings, West Country Mature Cheddar Powder (from Milk), Fruit Powders, Spices, Dried Milk Whey, Parsley, Acid (Citric Acid), Wiltshire Cured British Ham Powder, Colour (Paprika Extract), Vinegar Powder.
But, my point is, apart from there being no "chutney" in there at all, for example, how do people come up with this? Do they boil down a Wiltshire cured ham and dry the slurry to a powder? And what about the cheese? Was it cheese in the first place? And who comes up with this? Is there some cook who says: "Hmmm, this sure is a tasty dish here on my plate, how about I take those chips (fries) and add the rest of the meal to it as a flavour!" and who then goes out and 'distills' the rest of the meal?
I know that "beef extract", which you can find as an ingredient sometimes, is actually boiled down and dried cow, but how about this?
Best Answer
There is no one answer, as each manufacturer has different processes
Most flavours are simple esters, acids, and salts that mimic the main flavour notes of the food being replicated. Some high quality chips will use actual freeze dried powders made from the actual food
e.g.
Ham powder = the good stuff is freeze dried and then powdered real ham, the other stuff is just fat, smoke, and maybe some chemical esters
Fruit powder = either just the essential chemical ester that denote the fruit, or actual freeze dried fruits. A little freeze dried fruit goes a long way
Cheese powder = spray dried melted cheese, a similar process to how milk powder is made. It's basically cheese with no water
Vinegar powder = acetic acid powder. Vinegar is mostly a ~5% solution of acetic acid, and acetic acid is a common and cheap chemical used in the plastics and glue industries
Chilli or Paprika = capsaicin oil, either naturally extracted, or chemically made, one drop goes a very long way
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ester
Chip flavours are just "invented" like every thing else. The chips invention is more interesting, see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Crum
Pictures about "How are crisp flavours made?"
Do the flavors on Crisps / Potato Chips Use Real Ingredients? | Food Unwrapped
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: Meggy Kadam Aryanto, FWStudio, Kasumi Loffler, Cats Coming