Amount Per 0.25 cup (47 g) | |
Calories 234 | |
% Daily Value* | |
Total Fat 12 g | 18% |
Saturated fat 8 g | 40% |
Trans fat regulation 0 g | |
Cholesterol 0 mg | 0% |
Sodium 91 mg | 3% |
Potassium 169 mg | 4% |
Total Carbohydrate 28 g | 9% |
Dietary fiber 1.4 g | 5% |
Sugar 25 g | |
Protein 6 g | 12% |
Caffeine 0 mg | |
Vitamin C | 0% |
Calcium | 3% |
Iron | 1% |
Vitamin D | 0% |
Vitamin B6 | 5% |
Cobalamin | 1% |
Magnesium | 10% |
People also ask
Is there any chocolate in Reese's Pieces?
Chocolate is NOT an ingredient, despite sharing a name with the chocolate peanut butter cups, and the brown color, which I guess we all just assumed meant they were chocolate?! A closer inspection of a Reese's Pieces box confirms that it is described as "peanut butter candy in a crunchy shell." No mention of chocolate.
Why are Reese's pieces orange, yellow, and brown?
He wanted to create a package that would stand out from the crowd and capture the attention of candy lovers. After much trial and error, Reese settled on a combination of orange, yellow, and brown. These colors were chosen for their bold and eye-catching appeal.
Are Reese's pieces just peanut butter?
Well, as it turns out our favorite peanut butter and chocolate candy pieces are more peanut butter than chocolate. To be precise, they're more peanuts, oil, syrup, artificial colors, salt, glaze, wax and milk. But, no chocolate.
Why do Reese's pieces taste different?
Even though all Reese's shapes are made the exact same way with the exact same recipe, the temperature at which the chocolates hang out in during shipping could play a factor into how fresh each shape tastes.