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Red Rock Deli Potato Chips 165g (4 Varieties) - $3 ($2.70 Sub & Save) + Delivery ($0 with Prime/ $59 Spend) @ Amazon AU

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Price matching 1/2 price $3 at Coles + a further 10% off with subscribe & save.

Sea Salt 165g
Salt & Vinegar 165g
Honey Soy Chicken 165g
Sweet Chilli & Sour Cream 165g
Lime & Black Pepper 165g - Added 27/8

Price History at C CamelCamelCamel.

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Comments

  • +10

    Godddd how GOOOD is the salt and vinegar in this brand.

    • +2

      Salt and vinegar ukh the worst. I think Honey Soy chicken is the best one out of the 4

      • +10

        Honey Soy Chicken > Sweet Chilli & Sour Cream > Sea Salt > Nothing >Salt & Vinegar

        • Lol yup agree. Can't stand S&V

        • +1

          Haha wow , sweet chilli does also slap though u right

      • +1

        Honey soy smells like piss to me… Idk why— Whenever I've eaten them I've enjoyed the actual taste, but the stink is weird…

        • 100% this.

          I thought it was just me but the lingering smell literally smells like someone just pee'd everywhere.

          • @coffeeinmyveins: Public bathroom right??? It's like not just one type of pee smell it's multiple at the same time…

            • +1

              @monky: Some of my greatest moments come from a public toilet. 😏

        • on the topic of chip flavours that smell foul, there used to be a morrocan chicken in red rock - to me it smelt like dirty stinky feet.

      • I agree. Terrible.

        Natural Chip Co makes a good salt and vinegar.

    • +2

      Sorry Jimbo but @cyrax83 is right, Honey Soy Chicken is the best.

      • +3

        There was a time when I would have agreed but I went through a phase of ONLY eating honey soy chicken , there is such a thing as too much of a good thing lol

    • +2

      Im with ya Jim. Salt and vinegar is the bomb, then Sea Salt.. Honey Soy is dead last

      • This thread needs a poll.

        • +1

          Yep. Sour Cream Chili = number 1

  • +5

    I felt like these tasted better back a couple years..

    Or my taste buds changed

    • +2

      I kinda feel that way with chips in general now. They have a nice flavor but my brain constantly tells me something is missing.

    • Bit of both.

      Things like cadbury will try to gaslight you into thinking it has always tasted like crap but the recipe changes over time to reduce costs, which means cheaper ingredients and less of the expensive ones.

      • Thing is though that chips are basically potatoes and a bunch of chemicals produced on an industrial scale. The way they save money is reducing portion size (and pumping air in to inflate the bags).

        Cocoa costs money. Not that Cadbury uses much of it to start with. Many years ago I recall reading that Cadbury's couldn't be sold as 'chocolate' in the UK because it didn't have enough… chocolate in it. Not sure if this was true or just a good story, but the ingredients can't lie.

        • The way they save money is reducing portion size (and pumping air in to inflate the bags).

          or charging more for 'designer flavours' and 'extra crunchy' chips

    • +3

      They are using different oil now. They are nothing like they used to be, but what is? Everything is going to shit.

    • Was just about to say this too .
      Especially the salt Sea salt.
      Ever since had potato outage i never tasted the same.

  • There’s a blanked out “cheese” flavour when you go to orders, anyone ever seen that before in a store??

  • TY

    • It’s sad that Palestinian Christians suffer at the hands of these brigades as well as the Muslims yet you are downvoted for sharing facts.
      Thank you for your research @bizzish

      • My pleasure. I hope those who downvote eventually realise that there is a historical reality to the good and evil of "Today you, Tomorrow me."

        • -2

          First they came for the Gaza Strip, and I did not speak out — because I was not a strip.

          From the days of the late Roman Empire until the nineteenth century, the Jewish presence in Palestine was thin. The Jews had been expelled after the Romans crushed their revolt and destroyed Jerusalem in 70 AD. But for decades the ban on Jews in the region was often ignored and unenforced, and Jews returned to their ancestral homeland.

          The Jewish presence in Palestine took a more devastating hit with the so-called Bar Kochba revolt (132-5 A.D.) against Roman authority. Jews were once again forbidden to reside in Judaea, and this time Emperor Hadrian determined to erase the Jewish heritage of Judaea and Jerusalem. He essentially declared Jerusalem a pagan city and changed its name to Aelia Capitolina – a city dedicated to Jupiter.

          Hadrian built numerous pagan temples in the city (one over the site of Calvary). Roman repression dominated the next two centuries, and many Jews left Judaea, in particular for Babylon and Arabia (the city of Medina, to which Muhammad fled from Mecca, had a large Jewish population).

          Many Jews continued to reside in Galilee, which became a Jewish cultural center during the medieval and early modern centuries. Throughout the Middle Ages, however, Judaea was a population thinly populated. Natural disasters and poverty prompted many people to seek prosperity and security elsewhere. Desperately poor fellahin, the vast majority of the population, lived in mostly empty rural districts. Christian and Jewish minorities tended to reside in towns.

          Throughout the medieval and early modern centuries, some Jewish voices called for a return to Israel. None had a permanent impact before Theodor Herzl (1860-1904), a subject of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Herzl believed that Jewish assimilation in Christian Europe was a fantasy, and that Jews, like other ethnicities, needed a homeland of their own.

          Many Gentiles agreed with him, and so from the 1880s, the restoration of a Jewish state in Judaea gained momentum. Jewish emigration back to Israel grew. Still, Jews remained a minority concentrated in Galilee and Jerusalem, where they became the majority by 1896.

          Jewish migration to Judaea alarmed the Arabs. Arabs likewise resented British efforts to aid Jewish emigration. In 1917, while a military campaign drove the Ottomans out of Judaea and Syria, the British parliament adopted the Balfour Declaration, which made the restoration of a Jewish homeland the official policy of the United Kingdom.

          With the collapse of the Ottoman Empire after World War I, the British and the French established Mandates, wherein the French ruled Syria and the British ruled Palestine and Iraq. The Mandates were supposed to prepare these regions for eventual independence. The British continued to facilitate the migration of Jews to Palestine. Arabs protested but were rebuffed.

          In 1920, they attacked Jews in Jerusalem in what became known as the Nebi Musa riots (named for the festival at that time of year). Their frustrations again erupted in the 1936-1939 Arab revolt against the Mandatory regime. With Jewish support, the British defeated the Arabs.

          The Arabs subsequently served as Nazi allies during World War II, for both the Arabs and the Muslims sought the destruction of the Jewish people in both Europe and Palestine, which could only happen with a German victory.

          After the war, the British became more favorable to Arab protests against Jewish emigration to Israel and did their best to prevent Jews from settling there. But Jews all over the world helped emigrants avoid the British “embargo.”

          The Haganah, an underground Jewish organization founded in 1920, aided the entrance of Jews into Israel. By 1947, the British had largely conceded control of Israel to Haganah, which contributed in no small measure to the creation of the state of Israel, and its recognition by the United Nations, and most other governments in Western Europe and North America.

          The first Arab-Israeli War broke out soon thereafter.

    • +1

      Red Rock Deli is owned by Pepsico, but Obela make Red Rock Deli dips in Australia as part of a joint venture between Pepsi and Strauss.

      Strauss group have absolutely nothing to do with these chips. If you want to boycott Pepsi in general though I can understand that.

  • +6

    The last 3 times I bought Red Rock Chips from Amazon, their best before date has been close (under 6 weeks). Chips in this household don't last 6 hours let alone 6 weeks but, you get about 6 months when buying from the supermarkets.

  • homebrand deli crisps are pretty decent for about $3.30

  • +1

    Need a good Kettle chips deal

  • +1

    Becareful with delivery - I had also purchased laundry detergent and they packaged in the same box leaving the detergent to move around in the box and break every single bag of chips. So order the chips separately.

    • Refunded?

  • Expiry was in late November to early December. Not too bad

  • +1

    All flavours back in stock.

  • +2

    If Red Rock were serious about sales they would introduce a legit chilli flavour.

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