Tudor Crisps
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Tudor Crisps was a brand of potato crisps produced in Sandyford, Newcastle upon Tyne, England.[1]
The 1970s television advertisements featured a paper boy, bribed with a ‘canny bag of crisps’ to brave delivering his papers to a tall tower block (in reality Derwent Tower, Dunston, Tyne and Wear). In the 1980s, the ads gave cult status to their star, Allen Mechen, who played the adult paperboy who returned as an apparently successful and wealthy man, driving a Rolls-Royce car and eating a bag of Tudor Crisps. The twist in the tale was when he donned a chauffeur's cap in the finale.[2]
Originally an independent firm, established in Newcastle in 1947, Tudor later moved to Peterlee to a new factory, which still exists but was closed in 2017. Tudor was acquired by Smiths Crisps in 1961. Smiths Tudor was later bought by Nabisco, which also owned Walkers Crisps and later became to be part of the Walkers division of PepsiCo.
The Tudor Crisps brand was discontinued in 2003, when Walkers decided to focus on its core crisp range. The Smiths brand was also mostly phased out around the same time as Tudor, although some products such as Scampi Fries and Frazzles are still sold under the Smiths brand.
Notably, Tudor salt and vinegar flavour crisps were sold in blue packaging and cheese and onion in green bags, like most other brands in the UK, but the move to Walkers crisps reversed the colours.
Product lines
Flavours
- BFee (Beef)
- BFee Barbecue
- Brown Sauce
- Cheese and Onion
- Chocolate
- Cream Cheese & Chives
- Fried Onion
- Fried Tomato & Bacon
- Gammon & Pineapple
- Hedgehog
- Hot Dog & Mustard
- Kipper
- Mild Curry
- Mint Sauce
- Pickled Onion
- Pork & Apple
- Ready Salted
- Roast Beef & Pickle
- Roast Chicken
- Roast Lamb and Mint Sauce
- Vinegar
- Smoky Bacon
- Spare Rib
- Spicy chicken
- Spring Onion
- Sweet and Sour
- Tomato Sauce
- Turkey & Stuffing
References
- ^ Morton, David (23 September 2015). "Tudor Crisps: The North East's very own snack was produced until 1993". Evening Chronicle. Newcastle upon Tyne: Trinity Mirror. ISSN 0960-3573. Retrieved 25 February 2018.
- ^ "1 Tudor Rolls Royce". YouTube. Retrieved 25 February 2020.