This is where premium crisps begin.
Kettle Chips Lightly Salted is the reference point, the standard, the crisp that defined what “hand-cooked” means to British snackers. Before Kettle arrived, crisps were thin and light and forgettable. After Kettle, thickness became a virtue and crunch became an expectation.
The texture is everything. Substantial, irregular, with bubbled surfaces and folded edges that create variation in every bite. These crisps have character. Each one is slightly different from the last, shaped by the cooking process rather than engineering precision. You’re eating something that was made rather than manufactured.
The potato flavour is remarkable. Earthy, slightly sweet, genuinely vegetable. Strip away bold seasonings and this is what you find: actual potato taste that industrial crisps process into oblivion. The light salting enhances rather than masks, lifting the natural flavour without competing with it.
The oil quality
Kettle uses sunflower oil, and you can tell. There’s a cleanness to the taste, none of the slightly rancid undertone that cheaper oils produce. The crispness stays crisp. The flavour stays fresh. Quality ingredients producing quality results.
The benchmark
Every premium crisp brand positions against Kettle Lightly Salted. Tyrrell’s, Pipers, supermarket premium ranges. All of them are answering the question: “Can we match this?”
Most can’t. Not quite. Kettle got here first and got it right.



