- May 21, 2003
- 14,644
- 10
- 81
This is the only yogurt needed. I don't care to pandered to with bullshit marketing.
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Ugh, can we give up the Greek yogurt craze already?
It's like ancient concepts, all backwards to what we (educated) people know today: fat isn't the enemy, it's the excess carbs.
I don't need 100 grams of carbs, most of it sugar, in my yogurt. Give me a yogurt chock full of tasty fats, low in carbs - and you'll have an addict regularly buying your product.
I doubt this one is any different from other greek yogurts - it'll have an epic amount of sugar for such a small little supposedly healthy serving cup.
Why is the world punching the throttle on the drive toward the low-fat fantasy? And here I thought we'd be getting more low-carb/low-sugar versions of different foods.
Ugh, can we give up the Greek yogurt craze already?
It's like ancient concepts, all backwards to what we (educated) people know today: fat isn't the enemy, it's the excess carbs.
I don't need 100 grams of carbs, most of it sugar, in my yogurt. Give me a yogurt chock full of tasty fats, low in carbs - and you'll have an addict regularly buying your product.
I doubt this one is any different from other greek yogurts - it'll have an epic amount of sugar for such a small little supposedly healthy serving cup.
Why is the world punching the throttle on the drive toward the low-fat fantasy? And here I thought we'd be getting more low-carb/low-sugar versions of different foods.
Ugh, can we give up the Greek yogurt craze already?
It's like ancient concepts, all backwards to what we (educated) people know today: fat isn't the enemy, it's the excess carbs.
I don't need 100 grams of carbs, most of it sugar, in my yogurt. Give me a yogurt chock full of tasty fats, low in carbs - and you'll have an addict regularly buying your product.
I doubt this one is any different from other greek yogurts - it'll have an epic amount of sugar for such a small little supposedly healthy serving cup.
Why is the world punching the throttle on the drive toward the low-fat fantasy? And here I thought we'd be getting more low-carb/low-sugar versions of different foods.
hmmm - then what the hell have I been looking at these past few years?
I swear all the greek yogurts in the yogurt section at Kroger are all low or zero fat, and chock full of carbs.
Greek yogurt has less liquid, and tends to be tarter. Specifically, the one I linked is full fat, which means full flavor, and good mouth feel. "Traditional" American yogurt is the pretender. It's bland, over-sweetened, and too thin. Greek yogurt has been a savior.
brogurt sounds like cum, just saying.
They need a new word for Yogurt. The term Yogurt just sound unappealing.
Ugh, can we give up the Greek yogurt craze already?
This. I'm so sick of these damn food trends.