The Saga Continues
IMPORTANT NOTE: This entry has been updated several times and reads in reverse chronological order.UPDATE (March 7, 2013): Cool Ranch Doritos Locos Tacos are available today at Taco Bell, presumably all locations.
UPDATE (February 13, 2013): Have just been sent info from Taco Bell that the Cool Ranch Doritos Locos Tacos will be available in all (or most?) locations on March 7th.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
THIS IS HAPPENING: COOL Ranch Doritos® locos tacoS TO arrive in taco bell® restaurants MARCH 7
Fans Asked For It – and Now Taco Bell’s Most Successful Menu Item Ever
Will be Joined by Fan-Favorite Cool Ranch
IRVINE,
Calif., Feb. 13, 2013 – When Taco Bell® launched Doritos® Locos Tacos
in 2012, it quickly became the company’s most successful product launch
ever, selling more than 350 million in less than a year. While
Taco Bell lovers couldn’t get enough of the Doritos Nacho Cheese taco
shell combined with the company’s classic crunchy taco ingredients, it
wasn’t long before fans turned to social media and asked “when is
Doritos Cool Ranch coming?”
On
March 7, 2013, Doritos Cool Ranch fans won’t have to wait any longer.
Today Taco Bell announced it will launch another soon-to-be blockbuster
Doritos flavor to the Doritos Locos Tacos line-up: Cool Ranch Doritos
Locos Tacos. The announcement was made today directly to Taco Bell’s
most ardent fans across social and digital media channels, and via a
six-second Vine video announcement, the first-ever product announcement
made by Taco Bell using the Vine platform.
“There has been enormous interest in the new Cool Ranch flavor of
Doritos Locos Tacos and people are wondering why it took so long,” said
Greg Creed, chief executive officer, Taco Bell Corp. “Originally
we had planned to launch the Cool Ranch flavor in the same year as the
introduction of Doritos Locos Tacos. However, the demand for Nacho
Cheese Doritos Locos Tacos was so strong that we worked closely with our
partner Frito-Lay to increase our capacity and
meet the needs of both Doritos Cool Ranch and Nacho Cheese fans.”
Taco
Bell plans to support the Cool Ranch Doritos Locos Tacos launch with its
largest marketing campaign in history, topping the launch of the
original Nacho Cheese Doritos Locos Tacos. Specific details of the
marketing campaign will be released in the coming weeks. To gain
consumer feedback and ensure the taco shell delivered on the same Cool
Ranch taste and crunch consumers expect from Doritos, Cool Ranch Doritos
Locos Tacos were tested in select restaurants in
Toledo, Ohio for more than six months. To join in the conversation and
keep in-the-know about Cool Ranch Doritos Locos Tacos, fans can tweet
@TacoBell using #CoolRanchDLT and by staying tuned to youtube.com/tacobell.
About Cool Ranch Doritos® Locos Tacos
Cool
Ranch Doritos Locos Tacos features a shell made out of Doritos Cool
Ranch chips on the outside, filled with the classic tastes of the Taco
Bell crunchy taco on the inside: 100 percent premium seasoned beef,
crisp shredded lettuce and real cheddar cheese. Available exclusively
at participating Taco Bell restaurants nationwide beginning March 7,
2013, the suggested retail price for the Cool Ranch Doritos Locos Tacos
is $1.39 (160 calories; 10g total fat) and $1.69
for a Cool Ranch Doritos Locos Tacos Supreme (200 calories; 12g total
fat) with reduced-fat sour cream and diced tomatoes. A Cool Ranch
Doritos Locos Tacos $5 Buck Box will include a Doritos Locos Taco
Supreme, Burrito Supreme®, Crunchy Taco and a medium fountain
drink. For people looking for lower-calorie, lower-fat options, Cool
Ranch Doritos Locos Tacos will be available Fresco Style with 140
calories and 7g total fat. For complete nutritional information after
March 7, visit
www.tacobell.com/nutrition/ information.
About Taco Bell Corp.
Taco Bell Corp.,
a subsidiary of Yum! Brands, Inc., (NYSE: YUM), is the nation's leading
Mexican-inspired quick service restaurant. Taco Bell serves made to
order and customizable
tacos, burritos, and specialties such as the exclusive Doritos® Locos Tacos, gourmet inspired Cantina Bell® Menu and lower calorie
Fresco Menu. The company encourages customers to “Live Más,” both through its food and in ways such as its Feed the Beat® music program and nonprofit organization, the
Taco Bell Foundation for Teens.
Taco Bell and its more than 350 franchise organizations have nearly
6,000 restaurants across the United States that proudly serve more than
36 million customers every
week.
Follow:
@TacoBell
Subscribe:
www.youtube.com/tacobell
A while later when the tacos were being served I got my taco and started opening it up when the Register's video person came back to me and said, "Wait! I need to get video of you taking your first bite." So I ended up like a deer caught in the headlights. I really didn't know what to say. After I took my first bite and they asked me how it was I blurted out, "It's like the biggest Doritos chip ever." Actually they took more video than that but that's what ended up on The Daily Show so that's all that really matters. I guess I inadvertently created a zen moment.
If you're a Mexican restaurant in Orange County and you want me to provide strangely profound commentary on your food then I am open to it. I just prefer to do it in writing next time. The real star of the video above is that Matt Bustamante guy.
UPDATE (Early early March 8): Just got back from the official launch party held at a Taco Bell location in the city of Orange. The party was sponsored by Nancy Luna, the famous Fast Food Maven blogger and reporter for The Orange County Register. About 50 of her invited guests were able to come and sample the new, inventive taco two hours before its launch to the general public at a rare midnight unveiling. Goodies such as t-shirts, beanies and key chains were also given out. For now only the Nacho Cheese kind is available but the Cool Ranch variety is expected to be released later this year. See Nancy's coverage of this event here where it is hinted that other Doritos flavors in addition to Nacho Cheese and Cool Ranch may be used as Taco Bell taco shells in the future.
Cost: $1.29 for regular or $1.69 for supreme.
Here's the update from July 25, 2011: The Taco Bell near me that tries out test items is now selling Doritos Locos tacos again, this time with the much-fantasized about "Cool Ranch" version (seriously, do a search and you'll see a bunch of sites where people talk about how they heard Taco Bell was trying out a taco with a shell made out of Nacho Cheese Doritos and then they go on to talk about how awesome it'd be if they made a Cooler Ranch version . . . but then they also go on to talk about how that will probably never happen; well, it's happened):
You might ask if they are good. The answer to that is: yes, if you like eating Taco Bell tacos and then munching on Doritos right after that. Now your eating habits will be more efficient. It's like when Will Ferrell was asked at the beginning of "Land of the Lost" why he was eating a doughnut with M&M's on it. His reply? "This way I don't have to eat M&M's when I'm done with my doughnut." So, you see, it all makes perfect sense. My prediction is that Taco Bell's next taco will already have the Pepsi or the Mountain Dew in it. (UPDATE: have found out that there was a Doritos flavor called X-12 before that was actually Mountain Dew flavor so maybe my idea will happen if they use those as taco shells later.)
Here's the original entry from April 14, 2011:
Soooo... back in September 2010 I'm driving by a Taco Bell and see a poster at their drive-thru menu board for Doritos Locos Tacos. I pull in, take a picture of the poster, try one of the tacos, mention it on Twitter and then never hear about the item again. Now in April 2011 the web is abuzz with everyone talking about these crazy things as though it's a brand new thing. Apparently somebody else even mentioned it a couple months before I did so I wasn't the first one but now these things are appearing at Taco Bells in Ohio and people are making videos of it and creating Facebook fan pages for it, etc. I guess when an item goes this viral then it's time for Taco Bell to put it in all their stores.
And what's my verdict on the Doritos taco shell at Taco Bell? If I remember it correctly from eight months ago I think I kind of liked it. If you want powdery, spicy stuff all over the outside of your taco and all over your fingers then track this puppy down. And for now that could mean going to Ohio (unless somebody can point out where it can be found behind the Orange Curtain). And, yes, it'd be interesting to see them do this with other Doritos flavors, such as "new" taco flavor in the retro bag:
I need this taco.
ReplyDeleteSomeone must know if they have them in/near the OC.
Since I have a super sensitive tummy, I have used crushed doritos as the seasoning for my tacos for years instead of traditional seasoning and/or peppers. I have a bit of a problem with the spicier chips sometimes. Why can't they ever leave products alone?
ReplyDeleteJudging by the online buzz I think we'll see this taco at all Taco Bells pretty soon.
ReplyDeleteSadly the location near The District no longer has Doritos Tacos. I tried today and was told they were discontinued 2 days ago.
ReplyDeleteI bet they took it out because I told people where to go get it. I could tell people from Taco Bell were checking out my entry numerous times.
ReplyDeletemay be you can tell me about recife of the taco,i wanna try for sale in indonesia,if i wish
ReplyDeleteI'm not backing this thing. Here's a letter I sent to the LA Times (they didn't run it) about it:
ReplyDeleteDid I read that correctly? Taco Bell is accused of skimping on the beef, sales slump, so they plan a rebound based in part on a monstrosity like Doritos Locos Tacos, with shells made out of Doritos? Gag me with a spork!
Listen up Taco Bell. Pull your head out of your marketing research and listen to your gut for once. The taco needs no reinvention. It's a perfect meal made from real, inexpensive foods: tortillas, meat, onions, cilantro and a splash of salsa. Maybe your idea will work in Iowa, but your HQ teeters precipitously close to the land where the taco was born. You won't fool the locals. That's why I'll continue to drive by two Taco Bells on my way to a neighborhood taco truck whose fifty-cent tacos surpass anything engineered in a marketing and innovation office.
This was in the works before they were accused of skimping on the beef and a sales slump and there were also people who were requesting this item before they tested it. Hopefully Tacos el Chavito can expand.
ReplyDeleteWHICH CAME FIRST.........RANCH.....OR COOL RANCH???????????
ReplyDeleteWith Doritos I'm pretty sure the first Ranch flavor was called "Cool Ranch." But later they changed the name of the chips to "Cooler Ranch." The taco had goes back to the original name.
ReplyDeleteIf I could get these delivered by the TacoCopter (tacocopter.com), my life would be complete.
ReplyDeleteEveryone thinks that the Taco flavor that Doritos has now is new. This flavor is not new. It is from 1967. This flavor has been around for ever! They just brought it back from the Frito Lay graveyard. The bag that this flavor is in now is what the original bag looked like back in 1967.
ReplyDeleteThat's why I put "new" in quotes.
ReplyDeleteIts crap like their rest of their food. Salad dishes with a straw full of meat in each.
ReplyDeleteYou notice none of the pictures of the taco here does not show what little meat is in them like the rest of their foods. Its a shame Taco bell has to keep coming out with with new foods to keep customers when all they have to do it actually put at least half the meat they show on their adverts.
I guess a solution is to make your own taco with as much beef as you want and eat it with Cool Ranch chips.
ReplyDelete