Sunday, February 14, 2010

Assigment 4 : The origin of crispy potato chips


Subject : Potato chip 1
Dimensions : 1426 x 2144
Date Picture Taken : 1/16/2010 <11.56AM>
Camera Model : Nikon D90
Saiz : 1.89MB
Angle : Eye level center
                Potato chips (American English and Canadian English: chips, Irish English and British English: crisps) are thin slices of potato that are deep fried or baked until crispy. Potato chips serve as an appetizer, side dish, or snack. Commercial varieties are packaged for sale, usually in bags. The basic chips are cooked and salted, and additional varieties are manufactured using various flavorings and ingredients including seasonings, herbs, spices, cheeses, and artificial additives. Chips are a predominant part of the snack food market in English-speaking countries and numerous other Western nations.

Subject : Potato chip 2 
Dimensions : 142 x 2144
Date Picture Taken : 1/16/2010 <11.56AM>
Camera Model : Nikon D90
Saiz : 1.89MB          Angle : Eye level centre
              According to snack food folklore, the original potato chip recipe was created by a chef named George Crum, the son of an African American father and Native American mother, at a restaurant called Moon's Lake House in Saratoga Spring, New York on August 24, 1853. Fed up with angered customer, some sources say it was none other than Cornelius Vanderbilt, who continued to send his fried potatoes back complaining that they were too thick and soggy, Crum decided to slice the potatoes so thin that they could not be eaten with a fork. As they could not be fried normally in a pan, he decided to stir-fry the potato slices. The customer, whoever he was, and others around him, loved the thin potatoes. Against Crum's expectation, the guest was ecstatic about the new chips and they soon became a regular item on the lodge's menu, under the name "Saratoga Chips." Crum soon opened his own restaurant across the lake and his policy of not taking reservations did not keep the customers from standing in line to taste his potato chips. They eventually became popular throughout New York and New England. One version of this story identifies Cornelius Vanderbilt as the customer who wanted them thinner.
Subject : Potato chip 3
Dimensions: 2144 x 1424
Date Picture Taken: 1/16/2010 <10.56AM>
Camera Model : Nikon D90                                                                        Angle : 45 degrees center                 
Subject : Potato chip 4
Dimensions : 2144 x 1424
Date Picture Taken: 1/16/2010 <11.09AM>
Camera Model : Nikon D90
Saiz : 1.41MB
Angle : Eye level center
              The popularity of potato chips quickly spread across the country, particularly in speakeasies, spawning a flurry of home-based companies. Van de Camp's Saratoga Chips opened in Los Angeles on January 6, 1915. In 1921, Earl Wise, a grocer, was stuck with an overstock of potatoes. He peeled them, sliced them with a cabbage cutter and then fried them according to his mother's recipe and packaged them in brown paper bags. Leonard Japp and George Gavora started Jays Foods in the early 1920s, selling potato chips, nuts, and pretzels to speakeasies from the back of a dilapidated truck.

Subject : Potato chip 5
Dimensions : 2144 x 1424
Date Picture Taken : 1/16/2010 <11.36AM>
Camera Model : Nikon D90
Saiz : 1.86MB
Angle : 90 degress left
             The chips were commonly prepared in someone's kitchen and then delivered immediately to stores and restaurants, or sold on the street. Shelf-life was virtually nil. Two innovations paved the way for mass production. In 1925, the automatic potato-peeling machine was invented. A year later, several employees at Laura Scudder's potato chip company ironed sheets of waxed paper into bags. The chips were hand-packed into the bags, which were then ironed shut.
Subject : Potato chip 6
Dimensions : 1426 x 2144
Date Picture Taken : 1/16/2010 <11.56AM>
Camera Model : Nikon D90
Saiz : 1.89MB
Angle : Eye level center

Subject : Potato chip 7
Dimensions : 1426 x 2144           
Date Picture Taken : 1/16/2010 <11.56AM>
Camera Model : Nikon D90
Saiz : 1.89M
Angle : Eye level center
          Potato chips received a further boost when the U.S. government declared them an essential food in 1942, allowing factories to remain open during World War II. In many cases, potato chips were the only ready-to-eat vegetables available. After the war, it was commonplace to serve chips with dips; French onion soup mix stirred into sour cream was a perennial favorite. Television also contributed to the chip's popularity as Americans brought snacks with them when they settled before their television sets each night.

Subject : Potato chip 8
Dimensions : 2144 x 1424
Date Picture Taken: 1/16/2010 <2.01PM>
Camera Model : Nikon D90
Saiz : 2.08MB
Angle : Eye level center
              In 1969, General Mills and Proctor & Gamble introduced fabricated potato chips, Chipos and Pringles®, respectively. They were made from potatoes that had been cooked, mashed, dehydrated, reconstituted into dough, and cut into uniform pieces. They further differed from previous chips in that they were packaged into breakproof, oxygen-free canisters. The Potato Chip Institute (now the Snack Food Association) filed suit to prevent General Mills and Proctor & Gamble from calling their products chips. Although the suit was dismissed, the USDA did stipulate that the new variety must be labeled as "potato chips made from dried potatoes." Although still on the market, fabricated chips have never achieved the popularity of the original.


Subject : Potato chip 9
Dimension : 1424 x 2144
Date Picture Taken: 1/16/2010 <11.56AM>
Camera Model : Nikon D90
Saiz : 1.94
Angle: 45 degrees center










Subject : Potato chip 10
Dimension : 1424 x 2144
Date Picture Taken: 1/16/2010 <11.56AM>
Camera Model : Nikon D90
Saiz : 1.94
Angle: 90 degrees center


                Today, potato chips are the most popular snack in the United States. According to the Snack Food Association, potato chips constitute 40% of snack food consumption, beating out pretzels and popcorn in spite of the fact that hardly anyone thinks potato chips are nutritious. Nonetheless, the major challenge faced by manufacturers in the 1990s was to develop a tasty low-fat potato chip.

Subject : Potato chip 11 

Dimension : 1424 x 2144
Date Picture Taken: 1/16/2010 <11.56AM>
Camera Model : Nikon D90
Saiz : 1.94
Angle: Eye level center
               In the 20th century, potato chips spread beyond chef-cooked restaurant fare and began to be mass produced for home consumption; Dayton, Ohio-based Mike-sell's Potato Chip Company, founded in 1910, calls itself the "oldest potato chip company in the United States". Chips sold at markets were usually sold in tins or scooped out of storefront glass bins. The early potato chip bag was wax paper with the ends ironed together. “Potato chips are thin slices of potato, fried quickly in oil and then salted”.

Note:

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Thank you.