Boulder Canyon Potato Chips, Avocado Oil & Sea Salt

Boulder Canyon Potato Chips, Avocado Oil & Sea Salt — When Boulder Canyon positions their Avocado Oil & Sea Salt potato chips at $3.99, they are not asking for your money so much as your considered attention.

Manufacturer  Boulder Canyon
Form  Standard cut
Stated Flavour  Avocado Oil & Sea Salt
Implied Ambition  Boulder Canyon: elevation pursued not merely as geography, but as aspiration

Boulder Canyon Potato Chips, Avocado Oil & Sea Salt — Chip Aficionado
Photo by Caleb Oquendo on Pexels

There is a particular quality of light in the American Rockies that strips away pretension. One suspects the people at Boulder Canyon understand this. The chip before me — pale gold, ridged at its edges, carrying a surface that catches what little late-afternoon light remains at my desk — makes no claims it cannot honour.

Opening Notes

The aroma on opening is clean to the point of austerity. There is the expected base note of cooked potato, warm and faintly earthy, but beneath it something softer — a mild, grassy quality that one must attribute to the avocado oil, present but not insistent. It does not announce itself the way a saturated fat might, with that heavy, closed-room quality one has learned to distrust. The nose, in sum, is composed. This is not nothing.

Structural Integrity

The slice is thick — genuinely, usefully thick — and exhibits a snap on initial fracture that is both audible and decisive. There is no suggestion of flex, no hesitation in the break; the Maillard reaction has done its work with thoroughness and some integrity. The interior cross-section reveals a uniform cook, no raw or waxy pocket at the centre that one sometimes encounters with dense kettle-style cuts. These are chips that have been given adequate time and adequate heat, and they show it.

Palate Progression

En bouche, the first sensation is textural: a clean, bright crunch that does not splinter into shards but compresses with gradual, satisfying resistance. The potato flavour arrives immediately — direct, unencumbered, honest — followed by the fat, which coats the tongue with a lightness foreign to sunflower or standard vegetable oil. This is the avocado oil making its only significant statement, and it is a tasteful one. The sea salt registers mid-palate, proportionate and unexaggerated, lending definition without aggression. The finish, la persistance aromatique, is brief and clean; there is no acrid echo, no synthetic shadow trailing behind. What lingers is simply the memory of a well-made potato chip, and I find I have no serious opinion on whether that constitutes simplicity or achievement — perhaps it is both.

Tactile Considerations

The hands emerge from this encounter in reasonable condition. There is a fine, dry residue — not the orange-stained catastrophe of lesser products, not the greasy film that necessitates immediate laundering — merely a light powdering of starch and salt that a single pass on a cloth napkin resolves entirely. The chip does not weep oil onto the fingers. This is a direct consequence of the avocado oil’s stable lipid profile and should be noted as a practical virtue.

On Restraint

Three ingredients: potato, avocado oil, sea salt. One might observe that this is not a philosophy so much as a discipline. The complete review of this product’s ingredient panel takes approximately four seconds, and those four seconds are not wasted. In an era when the flavour scientist is consulted more frequently than the farmer, Boulder Canyon’s Avocado Oil & Sea Salt represents a refusal — quiet, uncommented upon, not marketed as rebellion — to complicate what does not require complication.

Pairing Considerations

  • A cold, lightly sparkling mineral water — Badoit if available — which mirrors the salt without competing with the potato
  • A dry, unoaked Chardonnay, whose green-apple acidity will articulate the avocado oil’s subtler grassy registers
  • A firm, young Comté, sliced thin, whose nutty complexity provides precisely the textural counterpoint the chip invites
  • A simple guacamole, should one wish to pursue the avocado theme with a literalism that is, at minimum, consistent
  • Eaten alone, in silence, which is not an anti-social act but a form of attention this chip has, on balance, earned

The Verdict

The Boulder Canyon Avocado Oil & Sea Salt chip is not attempting to dazzle, and this is precisely its competence. It is a well-structured, clean-finishing, texturally honest product that trusts its base material — the potato — to carry the work, and the potato, for its part, obliges. At $3.99 and with an Amazon community rating of 9.0 from over five thousand assessments, the market has formed its view; my own Aficionado rating arrives at the same altitude by a different path.

★★★★★★★★★★
8.4 / 10  ·  Aficionado Rating

Verdict: Disciplined, clean, quietly worthy
Seal of Consideration: The mountain does not explain itself; neither, finally, does the chip.

François Delacroix

About the Author

François Delacroix

François Delacroix is the former chef-proprietor of Restaurant Delacroix (one Michelin star, 2014–2019, closed). He now writes about snacks. He does not wish to discuss the transition.

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