ProductsKirkland SignatureProtein Bar Chocolatey Chunks Cookie Dough
Protein Bar Chocolatey Chunks Cookie Dough
Barcode 0096619508228
Kirkland Signature

Protein Bar Chocolatey Chunks Cookie Dough

60 g
BARCODE:0096619508228
CATEGORIES:Snacks, Sweet Snacks, Bars, Dietary Supplements, Bodybuilding Supplements, Protein Bars
LABELS:No Gluten, No Artificial Flavors, Verified
PACKAGING:Plastic Wrap
COUNTRIES:Spain, United States
STORES:Costco

Labels

Nutri-Score
Nutri-ScoreNot computed
NOVA Group
NOVA GroupUltra-processed food and drink products
Green-Score
Green-ScoreGreen-Score not computed

Health

Nutrition

Nutrient levels

Fat in moderate quantity (11.7%)
What you need to know • A high consumption of fat, especially saturated fats, can raise cholesterol, which increases the risk of heart diseases. Recommendation: Limit the consumption of fat and saturated fat • Choose products with lower fat and saturated fat content. Source: National Health Service UK (NHS) - Fat: the facts
Saturated fat in moderate quantity (4.17%)
What you need to know • A high consumption of fat, especially saturated fats, can raise cholesterol, which increases the risk of heart diseases. Recommendation: Limit the consumption of fat and saturated fat • Choose products with lower fat and saturated fat content. Source: National Health Service UK (NHS) - Fat: the facts
Sugars in low quantity (3.33%)
What you need to know • A high consumption of sugar can cause weight gain and tooth decay. It also augments the risk of type 2 diabetes and cardio-vascular diseases. Recommendation: Limit the consumption of sugar and sugary drinks • Sugary drinks (such as sodas, fruit beverages, and fruit juices and nectars) should be limited as much as possible (no more than 1 glass a day). • Choose products with lower sugar content and reduce the consumption of products with added sugars. Source: National Health Service UK (NHS) - Sugar: the facts
Salt in moderate quantity (0.625%)
What you need to know • A high consumption of salt (or sodium) can cause raised blood pressure, which can increase the risk of heart disease and stroke. • Many people who have high blood pressure do not know it, as there are often no symptoms. • Most people consume too much salt (on average 9 to 12 grams per day), around twice the recommended maximum level of intake. Recommendation: Limit the consumption of salt and salted food • Reduce the quantity of salt used when cooking, and don't salt again at the table. • Limit the consumption of salty snacks and choose products with lower salt content. Source: World Health Organization (WHO) - Fact sheet - Salt reduction Source: National Health Service UK (NHS) - Salt: the facts

Nutrition label

Protein Bar Chocolatey Chunks Cookie Dough nutrition label

Nutrition facts

Nutrition factsAs sold for 100 g / 100 ml
Energy~ 1,726.67 kJ (367 kcal)
FAT11.67 g
Saturated fat4.17 g
Cholesterol0.01 g
Carbohydrates36.67 g
Sugars3.33 g
Added sugars3.33 g
Starch0 g
Erythritol3.33 g
Dietary fiber16.67 g
Proteins35 g
Salt0.63 g
Sodium0.32 g
Minerals
Potassium0.13 g
Calcium0.1 g
Iron0 g
Fruits, vegetables and legumes~ 0 %
Choline0 g

Nutrition facts (Detailed data)

Nutrition factsAs sold for 100 g / 100 mlAs sold Per 100 g (packaging)As sold Per serving (60 g) (packaging)As sold Per 100 g (estimate)
Energy~ 1,726.67 kJ (367 kcal)? (367 kcal)? (190 kcal)?
FAT11.67 g?7 g?
Saturated fat4.17 g?2.5 g?
Cholesterol0.01 g?0.01 g?
Carbohydrates36.67 g?22 g?
Sugars3.33 g?2 g?
Added sugars3.33 g3.33 g2 g~ 0 g
Starch0 g?0 g?
Erythritol3.33 g?2 g?
Dietary fiber16.67 g?10 g?
Proteins35 g?21 g?
Salt0.63 g?0.38 g?
Sodium0.32 g?0.19 g?
Minerals
Potassium0.13 g?0.08 g?
Calcium0.1 g?0.06 g?
Iron0 g1.5 mg??
Fruits, vegetables and legumes~ 0 %??~ 0 %
Choline0 g?0 g?

Serving size

1 bar (60 g)

Estimated Activity Time

Approximate time needed to burn the energy in 100 g / 100 ml: 1,727 kJ. Reference adult weight: 70 kg. Energy density: Moderate.

Walking
101 min (~10,068 steps)
Swimming
61 min
Bicycling
47 min
Running
35 min

Ingredients

Ingredients image

Protein Bar Chocolatey Chunks Cookie Dough ingredients image

Ingredients list

Protein blend (milk protein isolate, whey protein isolate), soluble corn fiber, cashew butter, isomalto-oligosaccharides (vegetable source), unsweetened chocolate, erythritol, water, cocoa butter, natural flavors, sea salt, sunflower lecithin, steviol glycosides (stevia).

Ingredient information

Protein Blend
54.17% (estimate)
Milk Protein Isolate
29.17% (estimate)
Whey Protein Isolate
25% (estimate)
Soluble Corn Fiber
22.92% (estimate)
Cashew Butter
11.46% (estimate)
Isomalto Oligosaccharide
5.73% (estimate)
Chocolate
2.86% (estimate)
E968
1.43% (estimate)
Water
0.72% (estimate)
Cocoa Butter
0.36% (estimate)
Natural Flavouring
0.18% (estimate)
Sea Salt
0.09% (estimate)
Sunflower Lecithin
0.04% (estimate)
E960
0.04% (estimate)
Stevia
0.04% (estimate)

Allergens

MilkNuts

Traces

EggsGlutenNutsPeanutsSoybeans

Ingredients analysis

Palm oil free
Yes

No ingredients containing palm oil.

Unrecognized: en:protein-blend, en:cashew-butter, en:stevia

Vegan
No

Contains non-vegan ingredients.

Unrecognized: en:cashew-butter, en:stevia

Vegetarian
Unknown

Vegetarian status unknown

Unrecognized: en:cashew-butter, en:stevia


Food Processing

NOVA group

4Ultra-processed food and drink products

Elements that indicate the product is in NOVA group 4

Additives
E322 - Lecithins
Additives
E960 - Steviol glycosides
Additives
E968 - Erythritol
Ingredients
Flavouring
Ingredients
Milk Proteins
Ingredients
Sweetener
Ingredients
Vegetable Fiber

How NOVA works

The NOVA classification assigns food products into 4 groups based on their degree of processing: 1. Unprocessed or minimally processed foods 2. Processed culinary ingredients 3. Processed foods 4. Ultra-processed food and drink products

Additives

E322 - LecithinsAntioxidantEmulsifier

Lecithins are natural compounds commonly used in the food industry as emulsifiers and stabilizers.

Extracted from sources like soybeans and eggs, lecithins consist of phospholipids that enhance the mixing of oil and water, ensuring smooth textures in various products like chocolates, dressings, and baked goods.

They do not present any known health risks.

E322i - LecithinAntioxidantEmulsifier

Lecithins are natural compounds commonly used in the food industry as emulsifiers and stabilizers.

Extracted from sources like soybeans and eggs, lecithins consist of phospholipids that enhance the mixing of oil and water, ensuring smooth textures in various products like chocolates, dressings, and baked goods.

They do not present any known health risks.

E960 - Steviol glycosidesSweetener

Steviol glycosides are the chemical compounds responsible for the sweet taste of the leaves of the South American plant Stevia rebaudiana (Asteraceae) and the main ingredients (or precursors) of many sweeteners marketed under the generic name stevia and several trade names. They also occur in the related species Stevia phlebophylla (but in no other species of Stevia) and in the plant Rubus chingii (Rosaceae).Steviol glycosides from Stevia rebaudiana have been reported to be between 30 and 320 times sweeter than sucrose, although there is some disagreement in the technical literature about these numbers. They are heat-stable, pH-stable, and do not ferment. Additionally, they do not induce a glycemic response when ingested, because humans can not metabolize stevia. This makes them attractive as natural sugar substitutes for diabetics and other people on carbohydrate-controlled diets. Steviol glycosides stimulate the insulin secretion through potentiation of the β-cell, preventing high blood glucose after a meal. The acceptable daily intake (ADI) for steviol glycosides, expressed as steviol equivalents, has been established to be 4 mg/kg body weight/day, and is based on no observed effects of a 100 fold higher dose in a rat study.

E968 - ErythritolHumectantSweetener

Erythritol ((2R,3S)-butane-1,2,3,4-tetrol) is a sugar alcohol (or polyol) that has been approved for use as a food additive in the United States and throughout much of the world. It was discovered in 1848 by Scottish chemist John Stenhouse. It occurs naturally in some fruit and fermented foods. At the industrial level, it is produced from glucose by fermentation with a yeast, Moniliella pollinis. Erythritol is 60–70% as sweet as sucrose (table sugar) yet it is almost noncaloric, does not affect blood sugar, does not cause tooth decay, and is partially absorbed by the body, excreted in urine and feces. Under U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) labeling requirements, it has a caloric value of 0.2 kilocalories per gram (95% less than sugar and other carbohydrates), though nutritional labeling varies from country to country. Some countries, such as Japan and the United States, label it as zero-calorie; the European Union labels it 0 kcal/g.

Environment

Green-Score, origins bonus, and transportation impact are shown for Worldwide .

Green Score

Overall grade

UnknownUnknown environmental impact

About Green-Score

The Green-Score is an experimental score that summarizes the environmental impacts of food products.

Current scope

The Green-Score was initially developed for France and it is being extended to other European countries. The Green-Score formula is subject to change as it is regularly improved to make it more precise and better suited to each country. Select a country to include the full impact of transportation in the final score.

Green-Score availability

We could not compute the Green-Score of this product because some data is missing. A more precise category, ingredients list, origins or packaging data can unlock the computation.

Bonuses and maluses

Declared origins

Origins of ingredients are missing for this product. Ingredients need to be completed before the transportation bonus can be computed precisely.

Packaging impact

Packaging with a low impact Malus: -1 Packaging score: +90

Packaging

Packaging impact

Packaging with a low impact Malus: -1 Packaging score: +90

Packaging materials

Material%Packaging weightPackaging weight per 100 g of product
Plastic
Total

Declared packaging

Plastic Wrap

Transportation

Declared origins

Origins of ingredients are missing for this product. Ingredients need to be completed before the transportation bonus can be computed precisely.

Data Source

Data presented on this page is sourced from the Open Food Facts database. This platform does not alter the original dataset; its purpose is solely to enhance data visualization and user accessibility.

Product added on March 22, 2018 at 8:39:29 PM UTC by openfoodfacts-contributors .

Last edit on March 18, 2026 at 1:59:51 AM UTC by municorn-calorie-counter-app .

Product page also edited by acuario, dvir42, ecoscore-impact-estimator, elcoco, foodiq, inf, kiliweb, macrofactor, maldan, municorn-calorie-counter-app, musarana, nimakm2, openfoodfacts-contributors, packbot, roboto-app, ryancr, yuka.WW9kWUw0Z0h1UDB5dXZJQjR4Zm44Zmx2bkxpeldIR2VOdFFWSWc9PQ, yuka.sY2b0xO6T85zoF3NwEKvlh1fTIPkiGLtNjbuu0-u-vKJIIC4edEv26ijHKo, yuka.sY2b0xO6T85zoF3NwEKvlkUXUdj7ohD2KQLuumaZ9vXTE8e0avp2xLL1Oas, yuka.sY2b0xO6T85zoF3NwEKvlkhkXNX8vDHICjzjpxav19WMPoP1OOpWv6HHNqg, yuka.sY2b0xO6T85zoF3NwEKvllR_d9PivA3vCUDhskfa6tOnJ8PuWs5X5NmqGKo, yuka.sY2b0xO6T85zoF3NwEKvlmsbVebivhDIMiPukGCo7fSqP4XPRIpg55OrP6s, yuka.sY2b0xO6T85zoF3NwEKvlnBdXuPfrC_IFiLggHXS2NGPdIPCe85jxdj7Gqs.