

Cereals ready-to-eat, KELLOGG, KELLOGG'S PRODUCT 19 : 60.3mg (431%RDA)ģ. Cereals ready-to-eat, KELLOGG, KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN COMPLETE Wheat Flakes : 62mg (443%RDA)Ģ. Top twenty kelloggs cereals products high in ironīelow is a summary list for the top twenty kelloggs cereals items ranked by the amount or level of iron in 100g.ġ. The percentage of the recommended daily allowance (RDA) for iron is based on a 14 mg RDA level for a mature adult. This corresponds to an RDA percentage of 32%. For a typical serving size of 1 cup (1 NLEA serving) (or 30 g) the amount of Iron is 4.5 mg. (The good folks at Junk Banter reviewed Smorz, too! Check out their thoughts.15 mg of iron per 100g, from Cereals ready-to-eat, KELLOGG, SMORZ corresponds to 107% of the iron RDA. But the ho-hum marshmallows mean that s’mores addicts might want to book a flight to Madagascar instead. The Breakdown: Fudgy when dry and graham-y in milk: both flavors are tasty. At least you and I will always share the memory of that time I accidentally Googled “milky balloons.” “Do they taste like Ritz Bitz S’Mores, which might just be my favorite snack of all time?”Īnd sorry, Smorz: I love you, but you’re no Ritz Bitz. But to qualify as a top quality s’mores snack, they would have to pass my personal, one question test: Fudge, so this cereal still earns high marks. The squares are innovative and tasty, and they remind me of E.L. Spoiled by nostalgia (everything tastes better in the memory of a child) and spoiled by the superior Madagascar S’Mores Jungle Party Cereal, which is the current gold standard for s’mores cereals (or should I call it the golden toasted graham standard?) I’m gonna be honest here: Smorz are good, but I’ve been spoiled. The ‘mallows toss in a dash of vanilla flavor and creamy texture, but the squares still run the show. The fudge flavor is kinda washed away, and a strong toasted graham flavor emerges from the saturated squares that swell like milky balloons (you really shouldn’t Google that one!). They’re half creamy, half chalky, and they have a little bit of chocolatey oil seeped into them from the squares.īut strangely, the addition of milk changes everything. The marshmallows are nothing special, of course (they’re certainly not “flesh-eating dinosaur” levels of exciting). I really, really need to stop referring to things as “fudgy intestines.” If you’re reading this, NSA (or Grandma): I’m sorry. Instead, the squares’ chocolate flavor is what shines! More fudgy and buttery than cocoa-y, the rich chocolate coating is like a powdered version of the sweet, fudgy intestines Keebler stuffs inside every E.L. It’s more like the muted, grainy graham of those Oreo graham wafers you see on flavors like Key Lime Pie.

Kellogs smorz cereal cracker#
I wouldn’t say it has the honey profile of a Teddy Graham or a Honey Maid graham cracker either. Their graham flavor isn’t too strong when eaten dry. I mean the “graham cracker part of the s’more that the melted chocolate made deliciously soft and squishy” kind of spongy, which is a good thing. I don’t mean the “lives in a pineapple under the sea” kind of spongy. Because, excuse my language: they’re delicious as h*ck! (Alright, you can bring the kids back into the room.) These pillowy delights have a slightly spongy texture, and while this might sound gross, hear me out. So unless these are genetically engineered Indomimallow Rexes, most of us will probably buy this cereal mostly for the squares.Īnd there’s a very good reason for that. Yeah, there are marshmallows too, but to paraphrase Jurassic World, “Let’s face it: no one’s impressed by marshmallows anymore.”

Though I have a feeling I’ll be just as bulbous by the time I’m done with this cereal. Pouring out a bowl of Smorz, I’m impressed by just how big, bulbous, and puffy these chocolate-covered graham squares are. We’ll just forget the part where s’mores are a traditional summer treat and the ice on my driveway just made me slip head over heels like Charlie Brown kicking a football.īut who can be upset when Smorz, one of the most-missed discontinued cereals, is back? Well, maybe fans of S’Mores Crunch (keep dreaming, friends).ĭo Smorz hold up to the not-too-distant memories we have of them? Memories of the early 2000s that are filled with Backstreet Boys CDs, post-Y2K relief, and American Idol viewing parties? Let’s find out!

With not one, but two-count ’em- two (2) exclamation points! That’s how you know Kellogg’s means business.
