Mi new favourite chips!
Forget banana, forget plantain chips.
A cassava chips me do pon!
Mi prefer de plain ones thou, but mi will eat the BBQ same way.
It's hard to find the plain ones and BBQ is more common in the supermarket.
<span style="color: #FF0000"><span style="font-size: 17pt"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana'">Cassava snack: a 'chip' off the old block for JP</span></span></span>
<span style="font-size: 8pt">Published: Thursday | July 9, 2009</span>

<span style="font-size: 8pt">The group enjoyed the taste of JP Tropical Foods' latest offering - barbecued cassava chips - during a tour of JP Farm in Annotto Bay, St Mary, last Friday. - Contributed </span>
<span style="font-family: 'Arial Black'">
Minister of Agriculture Dr Christopher Tufton on Friday toured the 600-acre 'JP Farm' in Annotto Bay, St Mary, where he was presented with barbecued cassava chips, the latest product offering of JP Tropical Foods.
Jamaica Producers (JP) Group Chairman Charles Johnston and the JP management made the presentation to the minister, who identified JP as a leader in agro-processing in Jamaica today.
Snack-food
JP redeveloped the 600-acre estate after Tropical Storm Gustav in August 2008. The former banana-export estate is now a mixed-use farm cultivating bananas, sweet potatoes, pineapples and cassava, and is vertically integrated with the company's state-of-the-art tropical snack-food manufacturing facility. The recently redeveloped estate and factory now employ approximately 350 people. </span>
LINK
Forget banana, forget plantain chips.
A cassava chips me do pon!

Mi prefer de plain ones thou, but mi will eat the BBQ same way.
It's hard to find the plain ones and BBQ is more common in the supermarket.
<span style="color: #FF0000"><span style="font-size: 17pt"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana'">Cassava snack: a 'chip' off the old block for JP</span></span></span>
<span style="font-size: 8pt">Published: Thursday | July 9, 2009</span>

<span style="font-size: 8pt">The group enjoyed the taste of JP Tropical Foods' latest offering - barbecued cassava chips - during a tour of JP Farm in Annotto Bay, St Mary, last Friday. - Contributed </span>
<span style="font-family: 'Arial Black'">
Minister of Agriculture Dr Christopher Tufton on Friday toured the 600-acre 'JP Farm' in Annotto Bay, St Mary, where he was presented with barbecued cassava chips, the latest product offering of JP Tropical Foods.
Jamaica Producers (JP) Group Chairman Charles Johnston and the JP management made the presentation to the minister, who identified JP as a leader in agro-processing in Jamaica today.
Snack-food
JP redeveloped the 600-acre estate after Tropical Storm Gustav in August 2008. The former banana-export estate is now a mixed-use farm cultivating bananas, sweet potatoes, pineapples and cassava, and is vertically integrated with the company's state-of-the-art tropical snack-food manufacturing facility. The recently redeveloped estate and factory now employ approximately 350 people. </span>
LINK
forget banana chips? NEVER 
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