So we're at the grocery store, and OneCentStamp spots a jar of something called "Calorie Free Whipped Peanut Spread, Natural Fresh Roasted Peanut Flavor, Creamy."
...calorie free? Yes, really. The first ingredient is water. The second ingredient is cellulose gum. Then salt, corn starch, xanthan gum, and only THEN, sixth on the list, is "natural fresh roasted peanut flavor." Flavor, you understand, not actual peanuts.
(Also, "creamy"? Is there a "chunky" variety, and if so, does it contain bits of packing peanuts? Packing peanuts, see what I did there? Ahem.)
Well, obviously we had to get it. I mean, it was on sale, only $4 for a 12 ounce jar. I just had to know, you know? I didn't expect to like it, I just couldn't resist finding out what the fuck it tasted like.
(OneCentStamp refused to physically handle it, and insisted that I fetch it from the shelf and put it in the cart.)
It was even worse than I expected. I'd explain, but I think the photos do the job better:
Huh.
Really, this just isn't right.
It kind of smells sort of like peanut butter. Ish.
Our eight-year-old makes this same face when he has to try pretty much any new food.
If I tried it, everyone else gets to. Come over here and taste this, AndrewRyan.
OneCentStamp's turn:
It has Splenda, so it tastes like licking a tin spoon that's been stuck in machine oil. It does not taste like anything anyone would identify as food, and I seriously question its inclusion in the foodstuff aisles. While I recognize that this may be as shocking a conclusion as that recent study that found out that people really love their iPhones, we must in good conscience warn the public, or at least the part of it that reads Mellophant.


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