Submitted by bufadad t3_z8fqfj in mildlyinteresting
The_Mosephus t1_iybv5lf wrote
Reply to comment by afiendindenial in A cooking spray serving size is measured in units of time. by bufadad
how does that work for stuff like a stick of gum? because a normal stick is like 2-3 grams, and i have a hard time contextualizing eating like 30-50 sticks of gum.
oakteaphone t1_iyc06v7 wrote
They should make the serving sizes reasonable servings.
You shouldn't be able to sell a "snack size" bag of chips and have a serving size be half the bag.
Bagel Bites have a serving size of 4 bagel bites. They're called bagel bites because you could reasonably eat them in one bite.
4 bagel bites is one serving. The heating instructions tell you to heat up one box/tray, about the size of any other frozen lunch tray.
Do you know how many Bagel Bites come on one tray?
>!9.!<..am I supposed to eat my one serving, give a second serving to my partner, and then save one Bagel Bite from 4 different meals to get one bonus serving later??
afiendindenial t1_iyc1nfk wrote
The nutrition label has both what a single serving is and what 100g of the food in question would be. You can find the label for Eclipse mint chews here.
jbFanClubPresident t1_iyc8ejp wrote
Did you know that standing in line for 45 minutes would probably maybe not even burn off the calories in a stick of carefree gum. I mean, standing in line for forty five minutes is hardly aerobically effective.
ImgurIsLeaking t1_iyf1iju wrote
It basically gives you the percentage composition of the food: for example if gum has 50 g of sugar per 100 g, it means that half of each gum you eat is sugar
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