Reddit Reddit reviews Nestle Nesquik Variety Pack, 5 Flavors, 14 oz Plastic Bottles, Pack of 12

We found 1 Reddit comments about Nestle Nesquik Variety Pack, 5 Flavors, 14 oz Plastic Bottles, Pack of 12. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Grocery & Gourmet Food
Dairy, Cheese & Eggs
Milks & Creams
Dairy Milks
Nestle Nesquik Variety Pack, 5 Flavors, 14 oz Plastic Bottles, Pack of 12
This Variety 12 Pack comes with 5 Flavors: Banana Strawberry, Strawberry, Chocolate, Double Chocolate, VanillaReady-to-drink products are fortified with extra calcium and deliver 40% of the daily value for calciumKids drink more milk when it is offered in various flavors and they are more likely to meet their daily calcium needs99% caffeine freeBecause NESQUIK is specially pasteurized, you can store it in your pantry without having to refrigerate it. Just remember to put it in the fridge once it is opened.
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1 Reddit comment about Nestle Nesquik Variety Pack, 5 Flavors, 14 oz Plastic Bottles, Pack of 12:

u/w3woody ยท 1 pointr/AskAnAmerican

I've noticed absolutely no difference between homogenized-pasturized fresh whole milk in the United States and in Europe. I use whole milk for my coffee and for cereal--I perhaps use about 1/2 gallon a week.

I have never tried UHT milk, and I avoid like the plague "flavored milk" (such as Nestle Nesquick flavored milk); that stuff tastes like milk-colored syrup to me. (Okay, once in a while I'll get chocolate milk--but I consider it more like liquid chocolate frosting rather than "milk.") The worst are skim flavored milks; those are horrid--though for the elderly, fortified flavored skim milks make an excellent nutritional supplement. (My wife, an RD, has recommended them to patients in her dialysis clinic; there are brands of protein supplements which are basically milk, egg white and other protein sources, sugar and a bunch of random nasty stuff to assure shelf stability.)

And let's be clear. Most "creamers" are not milk. It's some sort of chemical byproduct of some manufacturing process somewhere, and is nasty-ass shit. (Though if you have a milk allergy, I guess you don't have much choice.)

If your parents want a good coffee creamer, either whole (pasteurized/homogenized) fresh milk works, or "half-and-half", which is half fresh milk, half cream. (I find very little half-and-half is needed for coffee.) Both will be sold in the refrigerated sections of a grocery store, and must be kept refrigerated or else will go bad very quickly.

Do not put flavored milk into your coffee, unless you really hate yourself and want to punish yourself for sins from a past life.