Geologists have separate terms for potato snacks based on their origin. "Pringles" forms via extrusive eruption. "Spudite" forms via intrusive igneous processes. Same vegetable composition, but different grain size and structure
I’m staying in a hotel in Berlin that has a Pringle’s vending machine in the lobby. Not a potato chip vending machine, mind you—a bespoke mechanism with cylindrical columns for different flavors
I've seen machines with this exact same mechanism, but a variety of tubbed confectionery inside it.
I've also seen that exact kind of pringles machine, also in Germany.
Jesus, I love me some Pringles. I’ve often considered getting the old school Pringles guy tattooed on my back, with “SNACK & DESTROY” over it, ala Rollins.
It is my contention, as someone who has eaten some Michelin tasting menus, that no Michelin chef has yet succeeded in making something that tastes better than a cool ranch dorito
mushing, mashing and smashing one of every flavor pringle into the one and only Allgle, an item guaranteed to start my ascension into a being of flavor and blended potato sensation
I promise I will stop replying to all of your things but I wanted to let you know that Pringles are made in my hometown of Jackson, Tennessee wherein Carl Perkins also lived for most of his life—the “Birthplace of Rockabilly,” they say. Do with that information what you will.
Comments
It's like rhyolite vs granite, but tastier
Geology humor rocks
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q_ogZcvXBqQ
I've also seen that exact kind of pringles machine, also in Germany.