Update: This very popular Frontpage Deal is still available.
Amazon has
26.5-Oz SKIPPY Natural Creamy Peanut Butter for $3.74 - $0.94 when you
'clip' the 25% off coupon on product page - $0.19 (5% Off) when you
checkout via Subscribe & Save =
$2.61.
Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.
Thanks Deal Hunter
phoinix for sharing this deal
Note: You must be logged into your account. Coupons are typically one use per account. You have the flexibility to manage your
Subscribe & Save subscription at any time after your order ships. View
Subscribe & Save filler items and our
current Subscribe & Save Frontpage deals to unlock up to an extra 15% savings when you have 5 or more items in your current monthly subscription.
Leave a Comment
Top Comments
83 Comments
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank huehue
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank howdydo
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank SplendidPocket588
I don't want palm oil or sugar in my peanut butter, and actual peanut butter without this cr* is worth more.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank SplendidPocket588
Now are we debating this being made from artificial ingredients or it being unhealthy? It's probably fine in moderation like all other fats.
But, again, if you don't like the product, don't buy the product. It's actually that simple.
And if you want an actual explanation from the company that makes the product:
"According to FDA regulations, peanut butter must contain at least 90% peanuts. The remaining ingredients can include salt, sweeteners, and hydrogenated vegetable oils. Natural Peanut Butter Spreads can include additional ingredients like palm oil or other oils, which are not hydrogenated. These spreads may still contain at least 90% peanuts but include other ingredients that place them outside the standard definition of "peanut butter."
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank SplendidPocket588
What lab are palm trees made in? What lab is sugar cane made in?
Now are we debating this being made from artificial ingredients or it being unhealthy? It's probably fine in moderation like all other fats.
But, again, if you don't like the product, don't buy the product. It's actually that simple.
And if you want an actual explanation from the company that makes the product:
"According to FDA regulations, peanut butter must contain at least 90% peanuts. The remaining ingredients can include salt, sweeteners, and hydrogenated vegetable oils. Natural Peanut Butter Spreads can include additional ingredients like palm oil or other oils, which are not hydrogenated. These spreads may still contain at least 90% peanuts but include other ingredients that place them outside the standard definition of "peanut butter."
Natural Peanut Butter Spread is meaningless. It has some natural peanut putter and any added ingredients deemed by the maker to maker it a spread. Let's say it had mercury to make it smooth and a spread. So it's natural peanut butter spread.
fyi - repeatedly listing this falsely as natural peanut butter in posts is actionable. Slickdeals is a business, and this isn't being listed by normal users as a mistake.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank SplendidPocket588
Also, the FDA and FTC would consider it deceptive labeling to list natural peanut butter on it when it isn't. The manufacture could certainly be called into account, and Slickdeals definitely crossed the line by covering up the actual label on the product as a Spread in the titles.
I waste 2 minutes everytime PB is falsely listed as natural peanut butter, and find out it isn't, and I'm sure many people are fooled. With the insistence on false marketing this as natural peanut butter, it's beginning to look like a campaign to create that deception. If it is, we're talking fines in the 100k range.
Leave a Comment