Reviews

    Sundays

    Cookie M 1 Review

    a year ago

    Cookie consumer

    With all due respect to the Sundays team (who undoubtedly directed great efforts in creating this product), the cookies do not achieve the company-described designation of "health conscious" in any meaningful way. Such an outcome is common for attempts at creating healthy sweets. Therefore, consumers who are willing to consume Sundays cookies with their present ingredient mix should simply opt for the familiar taste of marginally less healthy Oreos. Among the contents derailing this product from achieving a healthy status is oat fiber, an insoluble manufactured ingredient that lacks any dietary value because it is fundamentally indigestible. Oat fiber derives from a grain that is typically inundated with pesticides via industrial production processes. Also in the mix is allulose, which in most commercially available forms is synthetically made from corn using genetically modified microbes. Sunflower lecithin, a totally unnecessary additive serving no legitimate purpose in cookie production (and that should at least be organic for the price of a box of Sundays cookies) is also present. Finally, the most ironic addition to the "health conscious" array comes in the form of natural flavors, which are mostly industrially manufactured in labs and production plants where chemical solvents, emulsifiers, flavor modifiers, and preservatives often comprise 80-90% percent of the mixtures. Despite the product backstory, these cookies do not achieve the company-described designation of "health conscious" in any meaningful way, and at nearly $4.2 per ounce, the company is asking consumers to pay equal to or more than they would pay for grass-fed, grass-finished filet mignon or other actually healthy culinary delights. Overall, this product is ideal for the average unthinking Southern California/NYC influencer who claims to "eat healthy" but has never read a book or ingredient list. All due respect to the team again, but any informed health-conscious consumer would reject the product.

    Feedback

    Either the company website should be modified to reflect the product's non-health conscious status, or the product should be modified to reflect the website's health conscious designation.