FITNESS Chocolate Hazelnut cereal bar on a stage

    FITNESS® Delice Chocolate & Hazelnut Breakfast Cereal Bar

    FITNESS® Delice Chocolate & Hazelnut Breakfast Cereal Bar is a delicious one of a kind taste combination, filled with a creamy choco-hazelnut! And now we have added oats to that irresistible mix. Plus every bar has B-vitamins for nutritious energy to fuel your morning. Every bar is also a Source of Fiber and has no artificial colors or flavors.

    Features & Benefits

    • With Wheat and Whole Wheat
    • Source of Fibers
    • No Artificial Colors & Flavors

    Our carefully selected ingredients

    49.6% cereals ( 23.3% whole wheat, 17.1% rice, 3.3% whole wheatflour, 3.3% whole oats, 2.6% whole corn flour), milk chocolate 17% (sugar, cocoa paste, milk skimmed-milk powder, butter, cocoa, fat milk, whey milk powder, emulsifier soya lecithin - polyglycerol polyricinoleate, natural vanilla flavor), glucose syrup, sugar, malt extract of barley, invert sugar syrup, glycerol humidifier, Vitamins and minerals (Calcium carbonate, Iron, Niacin, Pantothenic acid, Vitamin B6, Folic acid, Riboflavin), vegetable oil (palm), barley, partially inverted cane sugar syrup, salt, corn starch, sunflower lecithin emulsifier, natural flavors, antioxidant tocopherol-rich extract, sodium phosphate acidity regulator.

    It may contain nuts.

    32% Whole
    Grain
    Content

    Product Whole Grain Product Whole Grain

    Nutritional Info

    Serving Size

    Woman pouring cereals on a spoon

    22.5 g

    Energy

    362kJ/86kcal

    4 %

    Fat

    1.6 g

    2 %

    Saturates

    0.8 g

    4 %

    Sugars

    6.1 g

    7 %

    Salt

    0.16 g

    3 %

    Reference Intake of an average adult (8400 kJ/2000 kcal)

    * of an adult`s RI

    NutritionFacts

    22.5g
    Typical Values

    Energy

    362 kJ/86 kcal

    Protein

    1.4 g

    Fats

    of which Saturates

    1.6 g

    0.8 g

    Carbohydrates

    of which Sugars

    15.3 g

    6.1 g

    Fibre

    1.3 g

    Salt

    0.16 g

    Vitamins & MineralsNRV*

    Riboflavin (B2)

    0.29 mg

    21 %

    Niacin

    3.76 mg

    24 %

    Vitamin B6

    0.25 mg

    18 %

    Folic Acid

    40.5 mg

    20 %

    Pantothenic Acid

    1.15 mg

    19 %

    Calcium

    261 mg

    33 %

    Iron

    2.61 mg

    19 %

    * Nutrient Reference Value (NRV)

    NutritionFacts

    100g
    Typical Values

    Energy

    1608 kJ/381 kcal

    Protein

    6.4 g

    Fats

    of which Saturates

    7.3 g

    3.8 g

    Carbohydrates

    of which Sugars

    67.8 g

    26.9 g

    Fibre

    5.8 g

    Salt

    0.7 g

    Vitamins & MineralsNRV*

    Riboflavin (B2)

    1.3 mg

    93 %

    Niacin

    16.7 mg

    104 %

    Vitamin B6

    1.09 mg

    78 %

    Folic Acid

    180 µg

    90 %

    Pantothenic Acid

    5.13 mg

    86 %

    Calcium

    1160 mg

    145 %

    Iron

    11.6 mg

    83 %

    * Nutrient Reference Value (NRV)

    Footnotes

      Let'stalk

      We've tried to answer as many of your questions as possible. You can search them all here:

      How can I find foods made with whole grain?

      Two things to remember: • Look for food labels where the word 'whole' appears in front of the name of the grain, like “whole wheat” or “wholemeal bread”. • For foods with more than one ingredient, make sure whole grain is listed towards the top of the ingredients list. The further up the list it is, the more whole grain has been used in the recipe. And look out for the percentage of whole grain. You should find this in the ingredients list too.

      What’s the difference between a whole grain and a refined grain?

      A ‘whole’ grain has more nutrients than a ‘refined’ grain, because all parts of the grain are retained – kernel, bran, endosperm and germ – along with their fibre, vitamins, minerals and phytonutrients. But most of the bran and germ are removed when producing refined grains. Whole grains therefore contain more nutrients than refined grains.

      What is gluten?

      The general name for proteins found in cereal grains such as wheat. It holds the food together, like a ‘glue’, and gives dough its elasticity.

      How much whole grain do I need to eat every day?

      Keep it simple: make grains the base of your diet and choose whole grains over refined grains wherever possible. U.S Dietary Guidelines recommend eating 3 servings (48g) a day. So, whenever you look for breakfast cereals, bread, pasta, rice or flour to cook at home, look for the word “whole”, ideally among the first ingredients in the list.

      We'd love to hear your comments about Nestlé cereals, so please let us know what you think, we always appreciate hearing from you.