About this deal
In a more recent commercial, from 2018, Kellogg’s promotes the fact that its new recipe now means that Coco Pops has 30% less sugar than previously. With health warnings becoming more apparent and increasingly fierce, Kellogg’s moved to reduce the amount of sugar in Coco Pops by 30 per cent in 2018. Vitamin D is important as it helps your body to absorb calcium and then use it to create healthy, normal bones.
Kellogg’s Coco Pops contains 116 calories and 5.1g of sugar in a serving which is pretty low for a chocolate-flavored cereal. They’re also low in fat with just 0.3g of saturated fat per serving. This is partly because they now contain a fat-reduced cocoa mass.
Coco Pops Recipes
Katy Bailey, brand manager for Kellogg’s Coco Pops, said: “Our food developers have succeeded and for the first time in the cereal’s 59-year history a white chocolate version will hit the shops.” This cereal contains Vitamin D, meaning it is not considered to be vegan. Vitamin D3, which has been used to fortify this product, is sourced from lanolin, which is an animal product. The lanolin is sourced from sheep without killing them, meaning the cereal is vegetarian, but not vegan.
It hasn’t helped that more Brits are starting their day with an on the go option rather than sitting down for brekkie. Unfortunately cereal brands have been slow to respond.”So, if you’re looking for a cereal to complement a high protein diet, then Coco Pops may not be the best choice. Is Coco Pops Cereal High in Fiber?