Beware Kroger Frozen Vegetables!
Patwin55
Posts: 100 Member
Specifically, the serving/content sizes. One bag of Brussels sprouts stated in the nutrition information, that there were four servings per container and a serving size was ten sprouts. That means 40 sprouts per container, right? My husband cooked two bags. That would equal 80 sprouts. When he served them, there were only 38 sprouts total. Less than half the amount advertised! Also, ten sprouts were stated as having 45 calories. It should read six sprouts for 45 calories.
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Replies
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Good to know! Thanks.0
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Counts are going to tend to be off, since the darned veggies grow in different sizes out in the field. The total contents weight should be close, or you're being shorted (or gifted, depending on whether under/over). Calories would be per weight, too, not per count.13
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Counts are going to tend to be off, since the darned veggies grow in different sizes out in the field. The total contents weight should be close, or you're being shorted (or gifted, depending on whether under/over). Calories would be per weight, too, not per count.
This was what I came to say. This happens with tortilla chips,too, for instance. The bag may say "about 16 chips" for a serving size, but since I weigh them, sometimes I get more chips, and sometimes less. The count is mainly there as a rough eyeball/guideline for people who don't weigh their serving sizes, but isn't necessarily meaningful.
If you weighed the total contents of the bag of Brussels sprouts, OP, it should match the total weight indicated on the package. If not, that would let you know if you're truly getting less product than you purchased.3 -
Thats why you go by weight. They are packaged by weight not number of sprouts.7
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Yup, particularly with brussel sprouts the number in the bag is always off...no matter what brand.0
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Noreenmarie1234 wrote: »Thats why you go by weight. They are packaged by weight not number of sprouts.
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Another vote for using a food scale.
Sometimes I use both the scale and cups when following a recipe. I recently made something that called for a cup of chocolate chips. The weight on the package: (1T = 15g) * 16 T per C = 240 g. But when I measured out a cup it was only 140 g. Huge difference in calories!4
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