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A 50 gram serving of Lay's BarBQ chips contains 270 calories, and 17 grams of fat. It also contains 270 mg of sodium, and 15% of the daily recommended dose of Vitamin C. [13] The baked variety, introduced in the mid 1990s, feature 1.5 grams of fat per one ounce serving, and have no saturated fat. Each serving has 110 to 120 calories.
They were first introduced in 1998, and were marketed using the Lay's, Ruffles, Doritos, and Tostitos brands. Although initially popular, charting sales of $400 million in their first year, they subsequently dropped to $200 million by 2000, as Olestra caused "abdominal cramping, diarrhea , fecal incontinence ["anal leakage"], and other ...
Frito-Lay, Inc. (/ ˈ f r iː t oʊ l eɪ /) is an American food company that manufactures, markets, and sells snack foods. It began in the early 1930s as two companies, The Frito Company and H.W. Lay & Company, which merged in 1961 to form Frito-Lay. Frito-Lay itself merged with the Pepsi-Cola Company in 1965 to form PepsiCo.
A new collaboration between Lay’s and IHOP has many people rolling their eyes.. Lay’s has teased fake flavors before, but snack lovers say this time is different. In a Jan. 31 post on ...
Lay’s is one of the most well-known legacy potato chip brands. The company has been making potato chips for more than 75 years and is proud of its history of using potatoes carefully grown on ...
A popular salty snack is being recalled. Frito-Lay issued a limited recall on Monday Dec. 16 for 6,344 of its 13-ounce bags of Lay’s Classic Potato Chips, an alert from the Food and Drug ...
Since late 2006, Lay's Stax have been available in Brazil under the name "Elma Chips Stax", deriving their name from that of a Brazilian division of the PepsiCo corporation known as Elma Chips. However, the yellow lids atop the cans are marked with the Lay's Stax brand name typical in most other regions of the world.
The Frito Company acquired the rights to Ruffles brand potato chips in 1958 from its creator, Bernhardt Stahmer, who had adopted the trademark on May 11th, 1948. [1] Frito merged with H.W. Lay & Co. in 1961 to form Frito-Lay . [ 2 ]