I must confess, I thought the same.P.S - when I read your title I thought you were talking about lifts as in elevators, and it took me a while to read your sentence and reset my brainI need more coffee!
NHS recommendations are 30g max of glucose a day for adults.
These are around 3.7g each.
I would guess they are just covering themselves.
They used to be popular with caffeine tablets when we were students working the night before deadlines.
Peanuts aren’t nuts, so if they contain traces of nuts or may have been cross contaminated with nuts then it’s vital they warn people with nut allergies, otherwise they might die.Bags of peanuts always have a “contains nuts” warning too...
You’d be surprised though, how often I serve up a dinner and someone says “ow that’s hot”, to which they are met with a volley of “well duh, it’s been in the oven/on the hob for an hour, what do you expect?!” From every one else at the table![]()
That makes no sense you can’t use that as logic. CocoNUTs have the word nut in too and they aren’t a nut. My sister has an airborne nut allergy, as in she goes into anaphylaxis if someone eats nuts in the same room, or if she uses a hand wash with traces of almonds in, but is fine with eating peanuts because they aren’t a nut they’re a legume.They are called peaNUTS though, and many people are dangerously allergic to them whatever they are, so I think I’d avoid them with a barge pole anyway if I had a nut allergy, just to be safe
Anaphylaxis kills because people don’t understand allergies or take them seriously enough. Even when people do take them seriously they can kill, I’ve been there and done the CPR. So misunderstanding always need education, there’s a very good reason peanuts will state if they could contain nuts.Nae need for tension to be caused in what was supposed to be a LOL post now
Well maybe the packaging said “contains peanuts” then! I wish I’d never started this!
FWIW I do know what anaphylaxis is, a friends of my daughter's has a dangerous nut allergy, and another lad not in her year group went out with his friends for his 15th birthday, asked staff at the restaurant what he could eat with his severe nut and seed allergy, ate their recommendation then had a reaction on the bus on the way home as it turned out the food had been fried in sesame oil. Unfortunately he didn’t have his epipen with him, and by the time the ambulance arrived it was too late there was nothing they could do.