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Tate's Bake Shop Cookies Double Chocolate Chip -- 7 oz


Tate's Bake Shop Cookies Double Chocolate Chip
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Tate's Bake Shop Cookies Double Chocolate Chip -- 7 oz

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Tate's Bake Shop Cookies Double Chocolate Chip Description

  • Uniquely Crispy
  • Deeply Delicious
  • Made in the USA

What makes Tate's Bake Shop cookies so deeply delicious? It's something we call "The Bake Shop Way". It started when 11-year-old Kathleen King began baking cookies to sell at her parents farmstand. Her love of baking and dedication to quality made her crisp, buttery cookies legendary in Southampton, and were the inspiration for what eventually became Tate's Bake Shop. While our bake shop is still a local favorite, our cookies have won a loyal following from coast to coast, with Kathleen's intuition, passion and principles guiding everything we do, so enjoy one of our deeply delicious cookies and experience "The Bake Shop Way".

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.


Nutrition Facts
Serving Size: 2 Cookies (1 oz) (28 g)
Servings per Container: 7
Amount Per Serving% Daily Value
Calories140
Calories from Fat70
Total Fat8 g12%
   Saturated Fat4.5 g23%
   Trans Fat0 g
Cholesterol25 mg8%
Sodium150 mg6%
Total Carbohydrate17 g6%
   Dietary Fiber1 g4%
   Sugars12 g
Protein2 g3%
Vitamin A4%
Vitamin C0%
Calcium0%
Iron8%
Other Ingredients: Semi-Sweet chocolate chips (sugar, chocolate liquor, cocoa butter, milk fat, soy lecithin [an emulsifer], vanilla, natural flavor), butter, unbleached flour (wheat flour, niacin, reduced iron, thiamine mononitrate, riboflavin, folic acid, malted barley flour), cane sugar, brown cane sugar, eggs, cocoa powder, salt, baking soda and vanilla extract.
Contains: wheat, milk, eggs and soy.

Manufactured in a facility that processes walnuts, macadamia nuts, pecans and almonds.

The product you receive may contain additional details or differ from what is shown on this page, or the product may have additional information revealed by partially peeling back the label. We recommend you reference the complete information included with your product before consumption and do not rely solely on the details shown on this page. For more information, please see our full disclaimer.
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Junk Food Addiction is Real. Here's Help if You're Trying to Quit.

As the name suggests, junk food is unhealthy—favorites like potato chips and chocolate chip cookies are typically loaded with calories, fat and sugar.

Making matters worse: Mounting evidence points to junk food being addictive. For instance, a new study by researchers at the University of Michigan shows people trying to cut junk food from their diets suffer short-term withdrawal symptoms similar to those experienced by addicts who are trying to quit using drugs. Those symptoms include sadness, irritability and fatigue.

Addictive Junk Food Such as Chips, Fries, Soda and Burgers on Arranged on Wooden Cutting Board | Vitacost.com/blog

While you might not be able to avoid those symptoms when you’re striving to dump junk food, you can ease the process. Nutrition professionals offer these nine tips for trashing your junk food fixation.

1. Figure out your triggers.

Molly Sommerhalder, a certified wellness coach with the International Association of Wellness Professionals, suggests examining why you pick junk food over healthy food. Are you rewarding yourself? Are you stressed? Are you feeling bored or lonely?

“This will help you look at why you have chosen a certain food,” Sommerhalder says, “and how you can retrain yourself mentally to find other stress-relief habits or ways to reward yourself.”

2. Start slowly.

Begin by replacing just one snack with a healthy option — swapping crunchy snack chips with crunchy carrots, for example. Once you’ve conquered that, move on to replacing another bad item with a good item until you’ve cleared your plate of most, if not all, junk food.

“It is best to slowly make changes so you stick with them. Otherwise, you might revert back to your old habit,” Sommerhalder says.

Registered dietitian nutritionist Summer Yule says it’s usually more sustainable for people to take small, rather than big, steps toward goals like giving up junk food.

“What the overall dietary pattern looks like over time is more important to health than having a ‘perfect’ day. Consistency is key, not perfection,” Yule says. “Reducing portions of the less healthy options and being more moderate about intake are good initial steps for many.”

3. Map out a plan.

Just as you should establish a budget to determine how you spend your money, you should establish a plan to determine how you spend a modest amount of junk food calories.

“Setting clear boundaries can help you gain control over your junk food habit and still allow some room for a treat now and then,” registered dietitian Suzanne Dixon says. “Nobody needs to completely swear off junk food, but cutting back can have significant benefits to your health.”

4. Switch from bad to good.

Look for ways to satisfy your cravings without sacrificing your health.

If you gravitate toward salty snacks, registered dietitian Nicole Hinckley recommends substituting heavily salted snacks with something like lightly salted popcorn. Have a sweet tooth? Grab a piece of dark chocolate or a piece of fruit.

5. Alter your environment.

Want to eliminate the temptation to indulge in junk food? Keep it out of your home, Dixon recommends. Ditch the typical excuses like “My kids are always begging for snacks” or “My husband really likes ranch-flavored tortilla chips.”

“If it’s not there,” Dixon says of junk food, “you can’t eat it.”

6. Take healthy snacks with you.

Buy or assemble small packets of nuts and dried fruit. Keep apples, bananas and other portable fruit on hand. Stock the fridge with yogurt cups and individually wrapped string cheese.

Then, before you head out the door, stash a couple of those snacks in your purse or backpack.

“Be ready for hunger wherever you are,” Dixon says. “If you have something to tide you over until you can get home and make a meal, you’re less likely to hit the fast food drive-through. Don’t think of it as wasted or extra calories. Think of it as quality control for your entire dietary pattern.”

7. Know when to shop.

If you’re tired, irritated or hungry when you shop for groceries, you’re more likely to make emotionally charged or physically driven — and bad — choices, according to Dixon, and throw junk food in your cart.

Instead of reaching for cookies or candy in the grocery aisle, try dealing with your emotional needs by taking a walk, horsing around with your dog or relaxing in a bubble bath, Dixon recommends. Or if you must curb your hunger at the grocery store, commit to searching for a healthy snack.

8. Don’t skip meals.

Maintaining a proper schedule for meals and snacks helps regulate your blood sugar level throughout the day and enables you to pick better foods, registered dietitian nutritionist Maria-Paula Carrillo says.

9. Discover a new hobby.

Have you always wanted to be an amateur photographer? Grab your camera and shoot! Are you itching to do some knitting? Pick up some yarn and needles, and create that quilt!

“Snacking sometimes accompanies boredom. Find something fun that you can do that will keep your mind from thinking about that junk food,” Hinckley says.

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