About Smiths Bacon Fries
About Smiths Bacon Fries
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrΓ©dients
AllergensAllergènes
Contains: milk, soya, wheat.
May contain: gluten, barley, celery, mustard.
Contient : Lait, Soya, BlΓ©.
Peut contenir : Gluten, Orge, CΓ©leri, Moutarde.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Smiths Bacon Fries
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Additional Information
Packaging Accuracy. We keep product information as accurate and up to date as possible. Manufacturers sometimes change packaging, ingredients, nutritional information, allergen advice, pack sizes or branding without notice, so the product you receive may look slightly different from the images shown. If you have a question about ingredients or allergens before ordering, please get in touch and we will gladly check for you.
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The story of Smiths Bacon Fries
The packet that knows exactly what it is
Smiths Bacon Fries are not crisps in the neat potato-slice sense, and they do not waste much time pretending otherwise. They are a savoury British pub-style snack, bacon flavoured, crunchy, salty, and very much in the family of things that once sat behind the bar beside Scampi Fries, pork scratchings, and a little cardboard display that had seen some life. The 24g bag is small, direct, and oddly memorable. It is the sort of snack people either remember from pubs, corner shops, lunch breaks, or multipacks brought out when someone was trying to make a buffet look more organised than it was.
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Smiths on the modern packet
In the UK today, Smiths is retained as a sub-brand of Walkers, covering products including Chipsticks, Frazzles, Bacon Fries, Scampi Fries, and some multipacks of familiar crisp flavours. That matters here, because Bacon Fries are one of the products where the Smiths name still does useful work on the front of the packet. During the Nabisco era, Walkers, Smiths and Tudor Crisps operated as separate brands within the same UK snack division, with Tudor more associated with northern England and Smiths concentrated more in the south. Before all that brand sorting, Smith's Potato Crisps was founded in 1920 by Frank Smith and Jim Viney, originally selling crisps around London in greaseproof paper bags with a twist of salt. Not bacon seasoning yet, but very much the beginning of Britain taking snacks more seriously than it admits.
From salt twists to savoury snacks
The early Smiths story is one of practical crisp-making rather than glossy invention. Frank Smith had experience with potato crisps through a Smithfield wholesale grocery business before setting up on his own. He converted garages in Cricklewood, London, into a crisp factory and sold to local businesses. The famous little blue sachet of salt came from the idea of letting people season their own crisps, which became one of those British food habits that seems faintly absurd until you miss it. The company grew quickly, moving into larger production and becoming a major force in British crisps before flavoured snacks properly took over the shelves. Bacon Fries belong to a later snack world, but they sit under a name that had already helped teach Britain how to buy crunchy things in packets.
Why Bacon Fries feel so British
There is no need to dress Bacon Fries up as an ancient farmhouse recipe. Their appeal is much more modern and much more honest than that. They belong to the British savoury snack tradition where the flavour is bold, the portion is modest, and the packet does not suggest you pair it with anything more complicated than a pint, a packed lunch, or standing in the kitchen before dinner. Bacon flavour has long had a firm place in the British snack aisle, and Bacon Fries carry that pub-snack energy rather than the polite manners of a standard crisp. The texture is part of the memory too: not a potato crisp snap, but a firmer, ridged crunch that feels made for slow picking until, mysteriously, the bag is empty.
The tangled family behind the name
British snack brands have a habit of changing hands, changing wrappers, and then acting as if nothing confusing has happened. Smiths is a good example. The company passed through several owners, including General Mills, Associated Biscuits and Nabisco, before Smiths and Walkers came under PepsiCo ownership in 1989. Over time, many products once associated with Smiths moved under the Walkers name, while a smaller set kept the Smiths identity. That is why the modern packet can feel both familiar and slightly historically untidy. Bacon Fries are not being presented here as a product born in 1920, because the supplied heritage does not show that. What can be said is that the Smiths name on the bag connects it to one of the old pillars of British packet snacks.
A small bag with a long memory
For British shoppers in Canada, Smiths Bacon Fries often land less as a novelty and more as a tiny, salty reminder of ordinary places: a newsagent shelf, a pub table, a petrol station stop, a grandparentβs cupboard with suspiciously good snack discipline, or a lunchbox addition that made everything else look dull. It is not grand food history, and that is rather the point. Some of the strongest homesickness is attached to things that cost little, made your fingers dusty, and disappeared in under five minutes. If a 24g bag can carry all that across the Atlantic, The Great British Shop is happy to let it do so quietly.