Cape Cod Potato Chips

Coordinates: 41°40′50.99″N 70°17′40.46″W / 41.6808306°N 70.2945722°W / 41.6808306; -70.2945722

Cape Cod Potato Chips
Corporation
Industry Food
Founded July 4, 1980
Founder Lynn and Steve Bernard
Headquarters Hyannis, Massachusetts, USA
Parent Snyder's-Lance
Website Cape Cod Chips

Cape Cod Potato Chips is a snack food company most famously known for their brand of potato chips. The company is headquartered in Hyannis, Massachusetts, on Cape Cod. Cape Cod Potato Chips is a subsidiary of Snyder's-Lance.

The Company

image of Cape Cod brand potato chips (40% reduced fat variety), January 2016

The company's logo is a woodcut of Nauset Light with the company name in Caslon Antique.

History

Cape Cod Potato Chips was founded in 1980 with the idea of offering healthier foods made with little processing, Lynn had started a natural foods store in the 1970s. Steve Bernard pursued adding potato chips to the mix after tasting a natural potato chip from a successful company based in Hawaii. In 1980, he sold his auto parts business and established Cape Cod Potato Chips with an 800-square-foot (74 m2) storefront in Hyannis, Massachusetts that could reach tourists, an industrial potato slicer he had bought for $3,000 and almost no knowledge of the snack food business other than what he learned in a week-long course on potato chip making at Martin's Potato Chips in Thomasville, Pennsylvania.[1]

Unlike typical commercial brands made using a continuous frying process, in which potato slices travel through a tub of oil on a conveyor belt, Cape Cod chips are cooked in batches in kettles, frying them in a shallow vat in oil while stirring with a rake, producing a crunchier chip. Snack Food Association president James A. McCarthy noted that Bernard "didn't invent the kettle chip, but he was involved in bringing it back to prominence."[2]

The company struggled for months after it opened on July 4, 1980. The following winter a car crashed through the front window of the store, almost hitting Steve's daughter. An insurance payment and publicity from the accident helped tide the company over until the following summer, by which time sales were substantial, and the company's chips were being sold through a number of supermarket chains.[2]

The company was acquired by Anheuser-Busch in 1985, and operated as a division of its Eagle Snacks unit. Sales of the chips were up to 80,000 bags a day by the end of the following year, reaching the entire East Coast, with sales of $16 million annually.[1] Bernard bought the company and its factory back from Anheuser-Busch in 1996.[3] Snack food company Lance Inc. bought the company from Bernard in 1999, by which time annual sales had reached $30 million.[4]

The Chips

Current varieties

Popcorn

Discontinued

Other past snacks

In popular culture

Japanese jazz pianist Hiromi Uehara recorded a composition titled "Cape Cod Chips" on her 2009 solo piano album "Place to Be".

In the spring of 2012, Cape Cod Potato Chips launched a television commercial starring a band of computer-generated seagulls performing A Flock of Seagulls' 1982 hit "I Ran (So Far Away)".

On the Lil Wayne mixtape "Sorry 4 the wait 2" in the song "No Haters" Cape Cod Chips are referenced in the lyrics "Pockets lookin' like the Blob, chips like Cape Cod"[6]

See also

Sources

References

  1. 1 2 "CAPE COD POTATO CHIPS: A 'LUXURY' JUNK FOOD". The New York Times. December 26, 1986. Retrieved March 13, 2009.
  2. 1 2 Weber, Bruce (March 13, 2009). "Steve Bernard, Who Founded Cape Cod Chips, Dies at 61". The New York Times. Retrieved March 13, 2009.
  3. "COMPANY NEWS;DETAILS OF CAMPBELL TAGGART SPINOFF ARE RELEASED". The New York Times. Dow Jones. February 29, 1996. Retrieved March 13, 2009.
  4. "COMPANY NEWS; LANCE AGREES TO ACQUIRE CAPE COD POTATO CHIP". The New York Times. April 17, 1999. Retrieved March 14, 2009.
  5. According to an email from Farrell Souza, Customer Service for Cape Cod Potato Chips, "We blended the Dark & Golden Russet and now only have the Robust Russets. The russet potatoes we cook have been stored at a cool temperature so the starch will turn to sugar and the sugar will brown when we cook them. The russets are not cooked longer than the white potato chips - they actually cook a little faster. We had trouble getting the starch to turn to sugar, mostly caused by weather conditions (we were getting Golden Russets that are white or we would get them too dark - the Dark Russets were coming in too light -not many people complain about them being too dark). So marketing and production got together with the farmers and came up with the robust russets - this should let us have a bit more control over the russet potatoes."
  6. http://genius.com/4779421/Lil-wayne-no-haters/Pockets-lookin-like-the-blob-chips-like-cape-cod

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/7/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.