I was going to send you an email about these today, having noticed them on SSC. I had forgotten reading this, I guess. $3 per is still considerably more than a Clif Bar, unfortunately, but I think a Clif is ~250 calories whereas one of these is presumably 450+ if I'm expected to live on five of them. I read through the website for evidence that they might get cheaper over time and was not reassured. Too many sentences about things like phytic acid.
After posting my comment while eating a square, I went to a meeting to which someone brought doughnuts. I'll normally grab a doughnut, but a mealsquare sits heavy in the belly and I had no interest in another snack. That afternoon, another meeting caused me to miss my lunch, so I went downstairs and paid $1.50 for a bag of sugar—I mean a Big Texas. I love those things, because they are optimized for my dopamine receptors rather than for nutritional balance. That's when I ordered a box of 30 mealsquares. So the question is what you will do if you don't pay $3 for an optimized gingerbread loaf. If you're regularly eating oatmeal for breakfast and a sandwich or some other real food for lunch, you might want to pass or wait for a cheaper knockoff. I often bring a box of cereal or a can of Pringles from the corner pharmacy to my office, so by paying a little more I think I am significantly improving my snacking performance. These days I am saving $7 a day by biking to work, so it's easy to rationalize an overpriced cake and a fancy coffee from Reiter's.
This accurately describes me, unfortunately. I'd love to support mealsquares. At Aldi I regularly buy a six-pack of fiber bars for $1.79, to eat while I'm on long bike rides. 30 cents for, I think, 175 calories. Pretty healthy ones, too. I just can't justify going square at the moment. Damn cheap alternatives!So the question is what you will do if you don't pay $3 for an optimized gingerbread loaf. If you're regularly eating oatmeal for breakfast and a sandwich or some other real food for lunch, you might want to pass or wait for a cheaper knockoff.