Sabritas

RECENT POSTS

The cross-cultural legacy of Doritos

Photo courtesy of Jim Benning

Doritos then (okay, sort of - a Hipstamaticized bag of resurrected Original Taco in vintage packaging)

It might seem to some who read this blog that I’m a fan of junk food. I’m not, really, unless it involves something doused in Tapatío sauce. But in recent days, after reading a series of obituaries for Archie West, the man credited with inventing Doritos, I’ve become fascinated with the chips’ cultural legacy.

The dusty little corn-based triangles were, according to lore, inspired by an encounter that West had with real Mexican fried tortilla chips while he was traveling in California in the early 1960s. The Doritos product launched in 1964. The first flavored variety appeared a few years later, something involving brownish flavored dust dubbed “Taco” that tasted nothing like tacos, in a bag that implied something Mexicanish, but wasn’t.

Doritos, what a long way you’ve come. The blog Now That’s Nifty lists 102 flavors of Doritos, a sum that seems like an undercount. The list doesn’t include Tapatío sauce flavor, a recent innovation. Still, that’s a lot of flavored dust. Flavors from around the world that are listed range from the ubiquitous Nacho Cheese and Salsa Verde stateside to flavors like Sesame Chicken and Tandoori Sizzler and the intriguing Mr. Dragon’s Fire Chips.

Now the cross-cultural part: In 1966, two years after the unveiling of Doritos to the general public and not long after Frito-Lay merged with Pepsi-Cola to form PepsiCo (whose fast-food brands have since worked their way into the flavored dust selections), the company bought out the Mexican snack manufacturer Sabritas.

There was once a time that Sabritas chips – typically far tastier and spicier than anything marketed to U.S. consumers, often laced with the zing of lime and hot chile powder – were found chiefly in Mexico. Buying up bags of Sabritas and competing brand chips was one of the highlights of traveling over the border to the nearest CaliMex.

Photo by Leslie Berestein Rojas/KPCC

Doritos now: With same-flavored Sabritas in a Los Angeles-area Food 4 Less, October 2011

But over the years, as the Mexican immigrant population has grown and marketers have gotten wise to it, Nacho Cheese and Cool Ranch have given way on grocery shelves to Doritos flavors closer to those found in Mexico: Flamas (a flavor also used in Sabritas Turbos, corn-chip spirals sold in both countries), Toros (“bulls,” flavored with tongue-numbing habanero chile) and most recently the Tapatío sauce flavor.

The list goes on from there. The Doritos Latino-market flavors often feature the familiar Sabritas logo on the upper right-hand corner of the bag, not typically found on the flavors aimed at the mainstream palate.

Continue reading