Given the additives, there is very little that’s ‘real’ about Reese’s Puffs

Written by Ajay Chohan, Founder @ Small Batch Goodness

Reese’s Puffs Cereal not healthy processed.jpg

Reese's Puffs - General Mills

Reese’s Puffs Cereal not healthy Ingredients.jpg

Why the Reese’s Puffs product labeling is misleading: This unhealthy breakfast cereal is actually made of extruded & hence toxic grains, and contains the potentially carcinogenic caramel coloring

Potentially Harmful Ingredients in Reese’s Puffs: Corn Starch, Caramel Color, Trisodium Phosphate, Added Sugars

Potentially Harmful Process used by Reese’s Puffs: Extrusion

Reese’s Puffs is made via extrusion - a high heat & pressure process that denatures grains making them toxic:

With Reese’s Puffs, as with most other cereals, the trouble starts with the way the cereal is made. These puffs are made via extrusion, a harmful process that takes corn grain through extremely high pressure and temperatures in an extruder and then emits it on the other end out of tiny holes in the form of various fluffy shapes. This unnatural process changes the very nature of the grain & the proteins, making the denatured proteins toxic and harmful to our nervous system! (1). Puffed & extruded grains in Reese’s are toxic and unhealthy for your body.

Please Note:

Here is my article on the 3 wholesome and alive breakfast alternatives to the processed cereal +

Here is the complete guide to all the 7 unhealthy additives commonly found across breakfast cereals + my complete list of the worst cereal brands to avoid

The ingredients in Reese’s Puffs and links to blood sugar spikes, inflammation and more:

Getting into the ingredients, sugar is the second primary ingredient in Reese’s Puffs, containing 31 grams of sugar per every 100 grams of this cereal. That’s an obnoxious amount of sugar. Eating foods with high amounts of added sugars has been consistently linked with weight gain and diabetes.

The label boldly states the cereal being made with real Reese’s peanut butter. We don’t think this peanut butter is very “real” though. This peanut butter contains corn starch, which is made by removing the outer layer and shell of a corn kernel. Why does that matter? This makes corn starch a processed food containing only calories & carbohydrates; it is largely devoid of nutrients found in whole grain corn and is not wholesome. To make things worse, processed corn is well known to spike blood sugar, leading to higher insulin and a resulting inflammatory response from our bodies.

The cereal also contains caramel color, which is made “by reacting sugars with ammonia and sulfites under high pressure and temperatures” and was shown to cause lung, liver and thyroid cancers in studies on mice or rats (2). Reese’s Puffs also contains trisodium phosphate, which while not a health risk by itself, is added to cereals to help it go through the extruder in the harmful extrusion process described above. Trisodium phosphate would not be needed in a wholesome cereal that has not undergone extrusion!

Reese’s Puffs is not a healthy breakfast choice:

This cereal is not nourishing for your body in any way. The next time you find yourself researching if your favorite cereal is gluten free, dairy free, vegan or how many calories it has, make sure to also research how it is produced! If something is not nourishing for your bodies, why eat it? As we covered, the first two primary ingredients in this cereal are A. whole grain corn - which sounds nice but the ‘puffing’ effect is achieved by extrusion and extruded denatured grains are toxic for our bodies and B. added sugar. The ingredients and additives don’t get any better from there on out. My recommendation would be removing Reese’s Puffs from your family’s breakfast routine with immediate effect.

What actually makes a real and wholesome breakfast?

Foods we eat should be wholesome and alive. This starts with a rich soil! The soil should be organically tilled and nutrient dense. The whole grains should only be minimally processed. And the breakfast that reaches our bowl needs to be absolutely free of additives, which often go hand in hand with ultra-processed foods. You can read my article here for quick yet healthy + tasty substitutes to eating overly processed cereal, from producers mindful of the entire food journey.

Lastly, here are other Reese’s Puffs cereal varieties that are equally bad for you:

  • Reese's Puffs Breakfast Cereal, Chocolate Peanut Butter with Whole Grain

  • Travis Scott X Reeses Puffs Cereal Limited Edition Family Size

  • Reese's, Breakfast Cereal With Lil Yachty Collectible, Chocolate Peanut Butter

  • Reese’s Puffs Bunnies Cereal-Limited Edition

Is (or was) Reese’s Puffs part of your daily diet? Share your thoughts below!

Sources - Research for Yourself!:

1. https://www.westonaprice.org/health-topics/modern-foods/dirty-secrets-of-the-food-processing-industry/

2. https://www.cspinet.org/new/201102161.html

Previous
Previous

Lucky Charms: 4 reasons to keep your kids away from this devilish cereal