I know that is my favorite thing to do when I am online. Understandably, these findings have caused a frenzy of online debate and speculation because there is nothing that Internet users love more than to debate, speculate, and cause frenzies over nonissues. “While I’m not familiar with what was done in the classroom setting, I can confirm for you that our recipe for the Oreo Double Stuf Cookie has double the Stuf, or creme filling, when compared with our base, or original Oreo cookie.” In response to Anderson’s findings, a spokeswoman for Mondelez International, Nabisco’s parent company, made this claim: 14 of “stuf” that myself and countless Oreo consumers have paid for and not received. I do not think there is any fruit or cheese or stuff in any of these “foods.” I am no lawyer, but I think I see the makings of a class action lawsuit. Perhaps Nabisco’s use of the word “stuf” should have tipped us off to the fallacy of their claim, similar to the way bottled, aerosol cheese is labeled “cheez” and how fruit cereals use the word “froot” on their labels. By comparing the mass of the “stuf” of 10 regular, 10 Double Stuf, and 10 Mega Stuf Oreos, as well as 5 barren Oreo wafers, Anderson’s class came to this disheartening conclusion: Double Stuf Oreos are only 1.86 stuffed. I have a recently learned of a much larger fish that the FDA needs to fry: Nabisco’s so-called “Double Stuf” Oreo cookies.ĭan Anderson, a math teacher in Queensbury, N.Y., assigned his students to test Nabisco’s double-stuffed claim. HUMOR – Do not stress about genetically-modified food.
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