Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Meet the local-est potato chips

Made in Milwaukee, with a logo like the People’s Flag, and the spuds grown on a family farm in Wisconsin

- Carol Deptolla ANGELA PETERSON /

When Michael Moeller decided in 2019 that he wanted locally made potato chips for Milwaukee, he had no idea just how local they could be.

“I didn’t realize I could use a local potato,” said the Riverwest resident, who founded Milwaukee Chip Co. last year and rolled out the first chips for sale a few weeks ago.

In early March, Moeller made his first sales and deliveries to two businesses that carry Milwaukee Chip: Nice Sandwich, 2705 S. 108th St., West Allis, and Black Husky Brewing, 909 E. Locust St. in Riverwest.

“That’s my neighborho­od brewery; I ride my bike over there,” Moeller said.

Milwaukee Chip’s suggested price is

$2 for each bag holding 1.25 ounces, enough thin, golden-brown chips for a snack with a beer, or beside a sandwich.

In Moeller’s research leading up to starting the company in 2020, he found Wisconsin among the country’s five top potato-producing states.

“I think I called … about every potato farm in the state with a list of questions,” he said, and found his match in fourth-generation grower Okray Family Farms in Plover, a drive of two-plus hours northwest of Milwaukee that Moeller makes to pick up his potatoes.

“Those guys have the kind of potato I like,” a russet, he said, rather than the more commonly used white-skinned potato.

“Most people don’t use a russet potato” to make chips, Moeller said. “It’s more difficult to cook correctly, but the reward is worth it.” He said he finds the russet chips color well and “hits on a savory note instead of just salty.”

They’re all things he learned after doing his research, and then more research, and then some more.

“I literally spent the summer reading academic articles” about potatoes, Moeller said.

He’d started by forming his limited liability company with the state in March 2020 and with a logo he liked for his potato chip bags to set the company’s local identity, conceived by him and designed by Good Land Creative: a potato, three chips fluttering below it, that evokes the lake sunrise on the People’s Flag of Milwaukee.

“I wanted a logo that clearly and concisely said Milwaukee and potato chips,” Moeller said.

Then he launched into research and developmen­t: investigat­ing which licenses he needed and which regulation­s he’d have to follow, testing every potato he could get hold of, slicing potatoes with a dangerousl­y sharp mandoline, then frying and seasoning them.

“I probably made a thousand types of potato chips in 2020,” Moeller said.

And he found the one he could bank his new business on.

“I’m not going to say it’s an easy process, but compared to the other food businesses out there, it’s relatively simple,” Moeller said. He could isolate the variables — the kind of potato, which seasonings and how much — and try every possibilit­y.

Next was finding a licensed commercial kitchen to make the chips for sale, and outfitting it with a less hazardous potato slicer; Moeller works with one employee at Upstart Kitchen, 4323 W. Fond du Lac Ave., which rents space to dozens of entreprene­urs.

Along the way, he’s navigated state regulation­s and U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion requiremen­ts, including nutrition informatio­n, shelf life and the ingredient list — his company is considered a food processing plant — as well as storage, packaging and distributi­on.

“I just had to dive right into the nuts and bolts of all this,” Moeller said.

He’s worked about a decade in food and food service, he said, from flipping burgers and waiting tables to management; most recently, he’s worked at the corporate end, with specialty food distributo­rs. he’s worked with others on their new businesses, but this is the first that’s his alone.

For now, Moeller sells his chips only wholesale to businesses, although he’s exploring direct sales. He does expect more outlets in the coming months to add to Black Husky and Nice Sandwich — a shop he found on Instagram and thought, “This is exactly the kind of sandwich I want my chips next to” when he saw the photos. Milwaukee Chip itself is on Instagram and Facebook, at @mkechips.

He distribute­s his chips once a week, on Friday mornings. So far, they’ve been selling out after just a few days, Moeller said, and he’s looking ahead to ramping up production.

“I’m hoping to do just one thing for the rest of my life, making potato chips,” he said.

 ?? MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Michael Moeller founded the new Milwaukee Chip Co. in his Riverwest apartment in 2020. After a year of research and developmen­t, he began his first sales and deliveries of the chips in early March. They're sold at Black Husky Brewing in Riverwest and Nice Sandwich in West Allis, and more outlets are expected in the next couple of months.
MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Michael Moeller founded the new Milwaukee Chip Co. in his Riverwest apartment in 2020. After a year of research and developmen­t, he began his first sales and deliveries of the chips in early March. They're sold at Black Husky Brewing in Riverwest and Nice Sandwich in West Allis, and more outlets are expected in the next couple of months.
 ?? ANGELA PETERSON / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Michael Moeller fries potato chips for his Milwaukee Chip Co. at rented kitchen space in Upstart Kitchen, a commercial space for entreprene­urs at 4323 W. Fond du Lac Ave.
ANGELA PETERSON / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Michael Moeller fries potato chips for his Milwaukee Chip Co. at rented kitchen space in Upstart Kitchen, a commercial space for entreprene­urs at 4323 W. Fond du Lac Ave.
 ?? ANGELA PETERSON/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? The logo on Milwaukee Chip Co. bags was inspired by the founder seeing the People's Flag of Milwaukee and its lake sunrise design on walks around his Riverwest neighborho­od.
ANGELA PETERSON/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL The logo on Milwaukee Chip Co. bags was inspired by the founder seeing the People's Flag of Milwaukee and its lake sunrise design on walks around his Riverwest neighborho­od.

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