Our search for the Colossal Tot and the best food at the 2019 College World Series
Our search for the Colossal Tot and the best food at the 2019 College World Series NCAA.com
We tried the buffalo and Italian styles. If you are a fan of the tater tot, it’s pretty much your dream concoction. You get a healthy (probably not the best word) dose of buffalo sauce that’s right between medium and hot spice, and they aren’t shy on the blue cheese topping it off with the perfect amount of green onions. The Italian style comes with a hearty offering of sliced sausages that, mixed with a full pound of potato, will keep you full for the rest of the day. So, what else was on the menu? “The pork burger,” Myers quickly rattled off his favorite item sold at the ballpark. “Pretzel buns are the best. We also tried fried apples because most come with fried onions.” Can’t argue with Chef Chris.
CHAMPS
PRESENTED BY OMAHA, Neb. — Each year at TD Ameritrade Park Omaha, our NCAA.com College World Series team searches the many unique food stands for the best menu items offered. You saw , but it’s a new year, and that means new items. In 2019, we went on the search for the Colossal Tot. CWS 2019:The Colossal Tot — Slice Pizza & Grill Located near section 113 $10
One pound of diced potatoes bunched into one gigantic tater tot. It’s never easy to find, and when you do, there’s no guarantee you’ll get your hands on one. “They go pretty fast,” Levy’s Executive Sous Chef Chris Myers told us in an exclusive interview. “I walked by yesterday and the first game hadn’t started yet and we were down to 14. If you’re not here before the game starts, you probably won’t get one.” Levy has become known for its sometimes wacky menus both here and across the street at the CHI Health Center. Chef Chris' love of baseball and the fun side of food is what drew him to the company a year and a half ago as part of the team that created this monster tot. “Trying to figure out how to make another loaded tot,” Myers said of the creative process. “In the process of that, we decided to not do what everybody else does but still have a tater tot. So, let’s just make a giant tater tot.” It’s not an easy process, and much of it has to be done beforehand. “We dice potatoes, flash fry them real quick, and while they are hot we run them through a buffalo chopper,” Myers explained. “It’s like a giant food processor. Then, while they are still warm we form them and wrap them in saran wrap and get them in the cooler. “They’re frozen until we need them. They fry them at the concession stand and hold them hot. And there’s only 50, so once they’re out, they’re out.” That’s right. They put a count on them, 50 each game, which means 100 a day with doubleheaders. And when they’re gone, they’re gone. A digital countdown clock actually rests on the back wall of the concession stand, with a word to the wise: Get one before they're gone! We were lucky to order two with '22' still on the counter. By the time we received our orders, it was down to 17. “The process is a little bit laborious,” Myers said. “We were going to just sell them, but when we tested them before the series last year, we knew there was no way we were going to keep up with these. So, we do 50 and have the countdown and make it kind of fun.” There are three flavors to try. The chili & cheese and buffalo & blue cheese are holdovers from last year, and the new Italian — which blends marinara, sausage, peppers and onions — replaces the poutine option from last year.We tried the buffalo and Italian styles. If you are a fan of the tater tot, it’s pretty much your dream concoction. You get a healthy (probably not the best word) dose of buffalo sauce that’s right between medium and hot spice, and they aren’t shy on the blue cheese topping it off with the perfect amount of green onions. The Italian style comes with a hearty offering of sliced sausages that, mixed with a full pound of potato, will keep you full for the rest of the day. So, what else was on the menu? “The pork burger,” Myers quickly rattled off his favorite item sold at the ballpark. “Pretzel buns are the best. We also tried fried apples because most come with fried onions.” Can’t argue with Chef Chris.