Infographic Nutrition Data

Un packaging très réussi pour cette brique de lait, basé sur les valeurs nutritives. Un travail efficace par la designer Audrée Lapierre autour de la “data-visualisation”, indiquant les informations et données principales. Plus de visuels du produit dans la suite dans l’article.



milk2

milk3

Previously on Fubiz

Salt Mountains

SaltMountains_lg.jpg

A helping of bread crumbs has fourteen times more sodium than potato chips? Good Magazine helps answer such questions with a surprising look at the salt levels in some of America’s favorite eats in an infographic by Next Generation Food. As expected, fast food burgers rank among the worst offenders—three of the four included are loaded with around 1,500mg of salt—but canned soups like chicken noodle and cream of mushroom don’t lag far behind, hovering around 1,000mg per serving. More worrying, the average American consumes 4,500 mg of sodium daily, over double the recommended amount.

While the infographic looks beautiful (click above for a larger view), the figures don’t, and the FDA plans to evaluate thousands of processed and packaged food items, placing caps on how much sodium they can legally contain.


Goji Berry Cookies

GojiCocoaCrop.jpg

Goji berry cookies feature the antioxidant fighting power of Goji berries, the Chinese fruit famous for its bountiful health benefits. Made by NYC-based Goji Gourmet, a new bakery dedicated to deliciously healthy fare, the dessert incorporates other “Superfoods such as almonds, oats, oranges, ginger, honey, and walnuts to ensure that your sweet snacks still contribute to your overall well-being.”

The cookies come in intriguing flavor combos including Cherry Cacao, Ginger Walnut, Almond Oat, Orange Mint Chip and the inimitable Chocolate Chip. The ginger walnut and cherry chocolate were our favorites, but nearly all complimented the taste of the Goji berry.

GojiTwoPack.jpg GojiWalnutCrop.jpg

At around 20 calories per cookie and with a nice balance of texture, moisture and density, the cookies offer a great way to infuse antioxidants into snack-time. The treats sell online from Gourmet Goji or from retailers nationwide, with prices starting at $3.