[US/Texas] Looking for Japanese, Chinese and Indian snacks

Spicy and tangy are not really common flavors here, unfortunately.

Getting you curry and curry-flavored items shouldn't be a problem. Have you tried tonkatsu sauce before? (Should be available in an asian grocery store.) I can get you tom-yum cup noodles (Japanese take on thai) and tan-tan men (ramen with a spicy sesame broth) cup noodles. Also instant yakisoba. Could also probably get hot-chili oil (rayu), which is used to spice up ramen or gyoza dipping sauce. Does any of that sound appealing?

And how authentic is too weird? Like dried-baby fish? Shrimp-flavored rice crackers? Dried squid? Chestnuts? Chips that are cod-roe flavored? Er....there are a lot of fish-flavored savory snacks.

Do you do sweet at all? Sweet red-bean paste? Green-tea flavored stuff? Sakura-flavored stuff (may be too late for this....it's generally early spring)? We also have crispy m&ms.

I'm looking for small, individually wrapped fun-sized stuff to give to my coworkers. The major candy bars (snickers, milky way, hershey kisses, kit kats, m&ms (but no peanut butter M&MS!)) are available. If it's really hot in Texas already, maybe hard candy (jolly ranchers, bullseye chewy caramels, etc.) might be better that chocolate. If you think the chocolate will survive, feel free to send it.

For myself, I'd love a box of reese's pieces and a bag of the krinkle cut Kettle brand potato chips. BBQ would be awesome, but black pepper is also really good. If you can find the Spicy Thai, Sriracha, or Red Curry chips (not krinkle cut but same brand)...you'd make my day. Sorry for being so specific...as an ex-pat I spend a lot of time dreaming about food that I can't find. Otherwise, I'm also interested in Texas-specific flavors/treats. My only caveat is that I really don't like cheese.

/r/snackexchange Thread