Only 2 tablespoons per jar. Total of 20 ounces so the cost is $1 per OUNCE of peanut butter!
Glad you saw that, i almost made the mistake of purchasing it as a gift for Christmas
4 tablespoons per jar
.50¢ per ounce.
Pricey PB.
$19.99/(2oz/jarX10jar)=$0.9995/oz
so is oz volume or weight? Most likely volume in this case.
Stupid imperial system. We should be 40 years into the metric system by now…
PS. I’m an engineer. Does it show?
The front of the jar says net weight (it’s almost ALWAYS weight for food) and the back of the jar shows grams. So the “stupid imperial system” isn’t really causing any problems here.
We’re a little full of ourselves here. We refuse to switch to metric because:
- We think everyone else in the world is wrong.
- It’s too hard to understand. We’d rather not switch to anything based on 10 when we can figure out that 12 inches are a foot, but 3 feet are a yard, and 1760 yards to a mile.
Mini jars. Mini.
There are 4 tablespoons per container. Go into your kitchen. Find your measuring spoons. Look at the tablespoon. You’re getting enough peanut butter to fill that 4 times. Or roughly 5 grams.
This is packaged as a gift. A fun novelty. I bought something like this the last time they were on offer. The pretzel one was a big hit.
It’s basically a gourmet sampler so you can find the one you like right? Which one was your favorite?
Edit: pretzel. Missed that lol.
I bought this brand’s variety last time I saw it here (a few of the flavors were different) for my daughter, but she didn’t like any of it because it is crunchy peanut butter and not smooth. My favorite was the cinnamon sugar cookie. Best PB&J’s I’ve ever had!
Oooh see I like the crunchy. Thanks!
It’s my honor to point out whenever the ‘Moon Meme’ pops up that NASA uses the metric system.
And whenever the “NASA uses metric” response comes up, I point out that they didn’t start until 1990 (well after the Apollo missions) and they still actually use both as strange as that sounds.
bNutty was my stage name in college.
Chippendales stage name?
Hmm.