Red Monday Julio’s Chips


Julio’s Chips:
The first, should be an obvious connection, the only place I’ve found these chips are south of Interstate 10. El Paso, San Antonio, don’t know about other places. This image is from last summer’s sojourn into the twilight of the American West, and points along the Texas Frontier.

Julio’s Chips are from Del Rio, TX. The bag now says “Del Rio, San Angelo” (both in Texas). That image was the factory outlet, or something. It was good. Very good. Still have half a bag leftover from the holiday. Xmas Tamales from Eddie’s and Julio’s Chips with Kay-Sew. (Queso: Velveeta and meat products, peppers and so forth), your mileage may vary. Gray sky, suicide weather, warm but not hot, spicy but not too spicy. Red trim, red letters. Seriously good chips.

“All natural ingredients.”

There’s a certain smell, an aroma, and I’ve quizzed real cooks, it’s some combination of a slightly more coarse grind to the corn meal, the lime, and the other seasonings, of which the label lists precious few. It’s hard to wax poetic about a simple corn chip, but this is like the old-school Frito-Lay chips. Smell is similar, that corn-chip, corn chip smell.

The chips are dusted with with an alarming amount of salt, which, I’m sure, isn’t good for cardiac health, nor is the grease the chips were fried in, but the dusting includes some kind of peppers, and the label does include paprika.

C’mon, every Tex-Mex palace has a source of chips, and those chips are served by the scoop and bucket-full. It’s just the Julio’s, in part for the limited dispersal, and in part, for its full-flavor.

Nor to nitpick but I will. There isn’t a cactus like the image, not in that part of Texas. Nor, really, in any part of Texas, not native.

As the best of the “mexican” cooks explained to me, “It’s the lime.”

Doesn’t make the chips any less than wonderful.

  • Aperture: ƒ/4.5
  • Camera: KODAK EASYSHARE C315 DIGITAL CAMERA
  • Focal length: 6mm

About the author: Born and raised in a small town in East Texas, Kramer Wetzel spent years honing his craft in a trailer park in South Austin. He hates writing about himself in third person. More at KramerWetzel.com.

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  • rhubarb Dec 27, 2010 @ 10:17

    Waxing poetic about chips. I understand completely. Though I have to say, if you say “Velveeta”, it ain’t queso. Velveeta is too cheesy to be cheese.

  • Ralph Dec 27, 2010 @ 15:10

    The cute exterior attracts my attention. Your poetic description shows these as wonderful and tasty chips. I guess you have to go south in Tex to get authentic Mex…

  • wenn Dec 27, 2010 @ 20:03

    nice!

  • chubskulit Dec 27, 2010 @ 21:44

    Must be a very good place to eat chips!

    Christmas Tree Ornaments with sentimental values, happy holidays!

  • Liz Dec 27, 2010 @ 22:44

    Great shot!

    Happy New Year!

    My entries:
    Moms… Check Nyo
    Yummy-as-can-be

  • Paulina Oct 18, 2011 @ 11:19

    I used to live in Del Rio,Tx. I just moved to El Paso and was wondering where in El Paso did you buy the Julio chips. I really need to know.

    Thank you.

    • Kramer Wetzel Oct 18, 2011 @ 11:24

      I tend to get them at the HEB — in San Antonio, but South of I-10… try a Wal-Mart, over on Mesa, in El Paso, and check me out, next time I’m in El Paso… here.

  • Paulina Oct 18, 2011 @ 11:23

    Julio’s Resturant is one of the best in Del Rio,Tx. I highly recommend it to all visiting Del Rio.

  • Paulina Oct 18, 2011 @ 11:59

    I just called the Wal Mart over on Mesa in El Paso,but they said they don’t carry them. I haven’t been able to find them here,and looks like I won’t. Thank you for your help really appriciate it.

    Thank you once again Kramer

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