A year ago, Cob introduced itself with sorghum-based popcorn snacks and in 2026, the brand delivering steady energy, gut-friendly prebiotic fiber, antioxidants, and natural GLP-1 support, launched sorghum-based tortilla chips. These tortilla chips are free from corn, preservatives, artificial ingredients and seed oils, and they keep snacking simple with just three ingredients. The crunchy superfood-fueled snacks unite non-GMO sorghum with organic avocado oil and a touch of Himalayan pink salt in thick, restaurant-style cuts that are made for dipping.
These nutrient-dense tortilla chips are naturally abundant in prebiotic fiber and antioxidants while being nut-free, gluten-free, and vegan-friendly. Cob further appeals to ingredient-conscious snackers by testing its sorghum-based tortilla chips for pesticide residue and heavy metals.
Sorghum-Based Tortilla Chips
Cob's Restaurant-Style Tortilla Chips are Corn-Free
Trend Themes
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Ancient-grain Snacks — Products reposition sorghum as a staple ingredient that replaces corn in mainstream snack formats, creating supply-chain and product-development shifts.
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Clean-label Simplicity — The minimalist three-ingredient profile underscores a move toward ingredient transparency that can reshape formulation norms across snack categories.
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Functional Metabolic Snacking — Emphasis on prebiotic fiber and natural GLP-1 support signals a convergence of indulgent snacks with metabolic and gut-health benefits.
Industry Implications
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Snack Manufacturing — A shift to sorghum-based lines would drive changes in processing equipment, sourcing strategies, and product portfolios to meet non-GMO, gluten-free demand.
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Food Testing and Certification — Heightened testing for pesticide residue and heavy metals may expand demand for specialized analytical labs and new verification standards for superfood ingredients.
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Plant-based Foodservice and Ingredients — Menu developers and ingredient suppliers may adopt corn-free sorghum chips as an allergen-friendly alternative that meets vegan and gluten-free consumer needs.