This was posted 9 months 2 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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Gippsland Dairy Twist Yoghurt Boysenberry 700g $5.50 (Was $7.90) @ Woolworths

750

Gippsland Dairy Twist Yoghurt Boysenberry 700g
$
5.50
Was $7.90

YOGHURT!!!

For ONE or the whole Fam

Related Stores

Woolworths
Woolworths

closed Comments

  • Good special👍 bought 7 of these a couple of days ago, they are so good 😋

    • Yes but don't think they last long or taste not best after a while

      • +1

        I have found they last a pretty long in my experience, I always check the dates before purchase, and these ones as usual had several weeks, late Feb/early March iirc. So they definitely wont go to waste. But I've also noticed that they are fine even several days or more, past the date printed, with no change to taste or smell, but I have a pretty cold fridge so that always helps 👍

        • +1

          they definitely wont go to waste

          Try to eat a high-fibre diet, so that as much of your food goes to waste as possible

    • They are really good, but 7? You have issues.

      • Haha, probably sounds like it. But I go through roughly two tubs a week, and as I said, these will last me till the end of the month.

  • +4

    29 cents cheaper than Aldi charge for it all year? https://www.aldi.com.au/groceries/fresh-produce/dairy-eggs/d…
    Maybe Aldi don't sell Boysenberry.

    • +2

      Aldi is hit and miss, sometimes they have this or blood orange in stock sometimes they don't

    • +4

      … or maybe some people in Australia live near a Woolworths, but an ALDI is nowhere to be seen.

      For me, going to the nearest Woolworths is a 5km round trip, but I am not prepared to do a 1400km round trip to my nearest ALDI for a tub of yoghurt.

    • +2

      Why compare to Aldi when its not even the same brand. Compare like for like, not with some no name brand.

      • +5

        I'm comparing because It is the exact same product from the exact same manufacturer in the same tub, just with a different name.

        https://www.productreview.com.au/listings/gippsland-dairy-yo…

        • +2

          is there a page that shows all the aldi identical equivalents of colesworth products?

        • +1

          Just copied from the link-

          Was delighted to find exactly the same product from Gippsland in exactly same container but being marketed by Aldi as "Fruit Swirls".

          That's when my problems started…this morning's Fruit Swirls had a ballooned foil due secondary fruit fermentation & tastes weirdly fermented (bad) despite it being only 2 days home & kept in chiller bag & refrigerated.

          This is the 4th time I have had to return this product. Given 3 of the times the problem is with Aldi sourced product line suggests the problem lies in Aldi's distribution & sales storage…

    • why not just make it at home, yogurt is a simple thing to make

  • +2

    Shrinkflation has affected this product though. The tub is significantly smaller now

  • +1

    Thanks OP, this is a quality ghurt.

  • +3

    Would be good if it had no added sugar

    • +1

      💯

      This stuff is 17% sugar 🤯🤮

    • +1

      I agree it would have been great if they had not loaded it with sugar. If you look at the nutrition information, this Gippsland Dairy Twist Yoghurt Boysenberry 700g contains 16.7g per 100g/100ml. 1 teaspoon of sugar is usually 4grams, so that’s like 4 teaspoon of sugar in 100ml/100g. So, they have added around 117g of sugar to the entire tub. Usually most people don’t consume 700g of yogurt in one sitting, they would usually consume the smaller tub which is around 160gm like Gippsland Dairy Blueberry Twist Yoghurt 160g which contains 27grams of sugar which is equivalent to 7 teaspoons of sugar. In a different context it’s like adding 7 teaspoon of sugar in a small takeaway coffee. Nice!!

  • +1

    Why did they stop making the strawberry and watermelon one in the big tubs? That was always my favourite.

    • I think you just answered your own question

  • +4

    this was always 5.50 then it went to $6 when no one was watching.. and then it was jacked up to $7 riding along the cost of living bandwagon then crept up to $7.90, it is on a trajectory to $9

    • -1

      Increasing prices are a direct consequence of additional environmental constraints being placed on farming practices. For centuries we have exploited this planet and reaped the benefits. I guess it will take food prices going up a lot more for people to finally wake up to the hidden costs of going green

      • +1

        Wont be long before peeps will be 'eating grass'

  • Are these good if frozen?

    • +1

      Nope. You may be looking for greek yogurt.

      • Why people wanna freeze ?

        • Homemade yogurt block which is good for teething.

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