Often the off brand product is made in the same place as the name brand, seen it myself with brands of milk.
Btw, if you happen to be a Nutella fan: about 2 months ago they altered their recipe and use far more sugar and less cocoa and nuts now. Rumour has it that the new product is terrible, so if you have a chance to buy the old version, seize it.
Btw, if you happen to be a Nutella fan: about 2 months ago they altered their recipe and use far more sugar and less cocoa and nuts now. Rumour has it that the new product is terrible, so if you have a chance to buy the old version, seize it.
That's disappointing. I usually try to keep a jar in the cupboard for baking (who doesn't love Nutella baked goods?). I'm sure it's probably still the old version I currently have, but it would have to be replaced at some point. I wonder if the difference is really noticeable if you're not actually eating it as a spread by itself?
True, but in the case of milk (plain) there isn't exactly much different you can do with it to in terms of recipe changes.
Nope. Before making a lane change you must make sure the way is clear. Turning on a signal does not give you the right to just shove over into other people's lanes just because they are not ahead or apace of your vehicle.
Don't believe me? ask a cop.
Don't know about the situation in GB, but in Germany, there was far less sugar in food, 30 years ago. It's almost impossible nowadays to get decent pickled gherkins - they are all more like candied gherkins. One of the things that annoy me most when Shopping. For the last 10 years I've taken to pickling gherkins myself.
From what I read the company didn't announce what they changed in the Nutella recipe; they just called it "improoved" - the customers complained about a completely different taste and that's how it became public. So it was a sort of blind taste test on a large scale. Personally, I don't like Nutella at all - I've always considered it too sweet and used other brands instead. Recently I found a tiny organic brand that uses 65% nuts =). The disadvantage is that there's a puddle of hazelnut oil on top if you don't use it daily but all you need to do is stir it occasionally.
I've never used Nutella or other spreads for baking because of their high price. Instead, I combine cocoa powder with hazelnut oil (and/or ground hazelnuts) and an absolute minimum of sugar.
Here is the question when a recipe changes slightly could you tell the difference in a blind taste test?
If that's the case, then Vietnamese must be the most dignified and respectable language in the world!Ȋ hãvė ãlŵăŷš fēļť ţħăt åcçeñt mäřķś ġĭve ƫhê ŵŗĭtŧeņ wõrđ å špečiāl åïr õf diĝňĭtŷ ąñđ ŗēşpėċtäbïlîťÿ.
Köř
Laura Scudder's Old Fashioned Peanut Butter -- the kind with no sugar, stabilizers or emulsifiers, just peanuts and salt -- is the only brand of peanut butter I buy. You have to stir it quite thoroughly and keep it in the fridge so the oil doesn't separate.I bought some natural peanut butter the other day. It was so natural it had a slick of oil on the top. . .
[snip] . . .Who corrupted my taste buds by getting me used to sugar in my peanut butter because the natural stuff is in the fridge now hoping to be recycled into a base for satay sauce. I bought a normal jar to replace it. So much better.
Refuge, would you like a recipe for peanutbutter kisses with a chocolate filling?
What frustrates me today is that weekends are so short nowadays. They used to make them much longer when I was a kid.
It frustrates me that there's 3 million people in the US who have celiac, or some similar actual, diagnosed wheat allergy, and they get their own aisle at the grocery store, mainly because of the millions of pumpkin-spice-privileged trend-followers who have IMAGINARY wheat sensitivity.
Meanwhile, there's about 30 million actual diabetics in the US, and we can't get SHIT. No, they give us "Low sugar" options, and "Sugarless" candies LOADED with sugar alcohol (still raises your sugar, just not QUITE as bad). NO< I fucking need SUGAR-FREE options, and I need them NOT to taste like CARDBOARD for once.
Somebody, start a chain restaurant for diabetics. Or invent the sugar-free vanilla cream doughnut so I can throw my money at your face.
T2. I've had good results trying to keep my meals to below 6g of sugar (I've lost 15 pounds in the last 4 months), but I REALLY want to be able to eat the extremely sugary things I like (It does not help that I have a serious sweet tooth) without waking up in the morning to find my sugar at 180.If you're carb counting, it shouldn't be an issue. Yes I stick to diet and no added sugar drinks, but when it comes to food stuffs, I tend to eat what I like when I like.
Although saying that, are you T1 or T2?
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