Thursday, February 11, 2021

Kroger Hot & Sweet Snackers

Kroger Hot & Sweet Snackers

Heat, Sweet and Cheap!

Those three words really sing for me.  Kroger's Hot & Sweet Snackers make an excellent replacement for the excellent Premium Selection Spicy Bread & Butter variety.  Premium Selection is another Kroger Co. brand, so apparently Kroger has a relationship with a great pickle maker (or at least somebody who makes really great sweet-hot pickles).

Heat.  Yep.  These have some kick, but nothing that's going to abuse your taste buds.  The warm feeling they leave on your tongue that combines with the nicely Sweet and a balanced amount of vinegar/sour flavor.  All-around balance of sweet, sour and heat.  You can munch on these enough so that Kroger ought to put a warning label on the side, or sell them as 2-packs.

As you can see in the photo to the right, there's plenty of goodies in there...mustard seed, onion slices, and plenty of red chili peppers.  All of the stuff that you'd expect from a premium jar of pickles.

On the label, they point out that there are no artificial flavors, dyes or use of high-fructose corn syrup, and once you opened the lid, it was clear they meant it. The light color of the cucumber was actually a little odd, as there's usually a more yellowy color that perhaps is from that dye?  

The crinkle cut worked well, and set expectations that you quickly realized as a crunchy bite.

Lastly, these were the Kroger store-branded pickles, and had a price to match...I wanna say $2.59?  For such a nice presentation, flavor and crunch, what a deal.  The pickle department at the Kroger company has certainly done their job--I now have a number of their varieties that are not only as good as the national brands, but in most cases exceed the flavor, quality and value.



 

Wednesday, February 10, 2021

Meijer Bread & Butter Chips

 

Meijer Bread & Butter Chips

In the infinite universe of pickle selections your travels often take you to places you seldom frequent and you can find varieties and brands that you wouldn't ordinarily seek out.  Well, due to a weird pandemic shortage of Solo Almond Filling (for Gretchen's bakery), I found myself in a Meijer store on the other side of Ann Arbor (about 15 miles west).  Since I was in a grocery store, and had located the last 2 cans of the stuff for 25 miles, I dug out the shopping list and found we were out of bread'n'butter sweet pickles.  

If you're not familiar with the Meijer chain, they're a Grand Rapids, MI based chain of everything-stores, they're positively monstrously large buildings with a full grocery store, department store, hardware store and outdoor gardening store all under one roof.  When we were growing up, they were a novelty and were known as "Meijer's Friendly Acres".  No kidding!  I detest getting anything in that store because every visit is 45 minutes, regardless of how much stuff you're picking up.

After a 10 minute search for the pickle aisle, I found them, but didn't find any chunk-style bread'n'butter pickles, like we prefer in the Kroger store brand.  I hadn't tried Meijer's offering, so I picked up a jar of their "chips".

They're crinkle-cut, and seemed to have plenty of the mustard seed and onions that other store brands often skimp on.  Upon opening the jar, the pickles were sticking out above the brine level, so I figured those couple might be a little on the limp side--they were.  What I didn't expect is for most of the jar to be pretty limp.

The flavor was good, though; not too sweet, and a tad more vinegary than I was expecting.  You "grow into" the vinegar strength, although there's enough there that you won't have to worry about burning through a jar of these.  Like the McClure's pickles, the vinegar acts as a brake on things, although, McClure's pickles set the bar.

These are good muncher pickles to have "straight up" on the side, but would also be an excellent sandwich or burger topping.  The "not too sweet" character puts 'em up there.  I made a burger and had these on top and they worked well.  They'd be perfect on a meatloaf sandwich!

Lastly, they weren't that expensive...these ain't no $9 pickles.  I think they were around $2.39 for a decent sized jar.