• expired

50% off Plant Projects: No Ordinary Plant Milk - Like Milk (Pea Protein) 6x 1L $15 + $7 Shipping @ No Ordinary

41
PM50

Received this in my mailbox the other day and thought I'd share it:

CANCELLED EXPORT ORDER. While stocks last | Sale ends May 31st

No Ordinary Plant Milk

No Ordinary Plant Milk isn’t like other milks. This one’s designed for people, by people, from plants. It may not come from a cow, but our plant milk does everything their milk can do.

Powered By Peas (Like Milk)

Plant Milk. It’s just like milk, but made from peas. But Why Peas?

There was Whey protein and then there was Pea protein!

Same technology applies, pea isolate creates the closest profile to dairy milk of all plants! With these added features:

2 – 3 times more protein than most Oat Milk (2.0g per 100ml)
50% less sugar than most Oat Milk
Less sugar than regular milk (1.8g per 100ml)
The Superior Plant Milk (Allergen Friendly milk)

Soy, Nut, Lactose free

We are even Keto friendly with such a low sugar profile

A Neutral p.H

With a definitive PH of 7.4 this is less acidic than regular milk, is light on the stomach and works well in coffee, smoothies, cereal and the rest. Just Like Milk!

Non GMO

Our harvested peas are Non- GMO and free from glyphosate.

A New Zealand Owned Company

Made in Sweden and owned by us Plant Projects

Ingredients:

Water, rapeseed oil, pea protein (2.5%), sugar, acidity regulator (dipotassium
phosphate), calcium carbonate, calcium phosphates, gluten free oat oil, salt, vitamins (D3, riboflavin and B12)

Related Stores

noordinarynz.co.nz
noordinarynz.co.nz

Comments

  • Good price for alternative milks, but is this stuff any good? For reference, I haven't had an oat milk that I liked yet (too gritty, tastes like cardboard), I'm ok with soy and rice milk but they're a bit strong, love a good almond milk. I had an AMAZING pea protein milk in the US several years ago, was like a mild vanilla milkshake and SO smooth. I guess I'll pick some up tomorrow morning and try before I buy bulk but interested to hear if anyone's got any experiences with this.

      • -1

        For some of us dairy simply isn't an option. I have tried all manner of dairy milks and my gut simply can't handle them. I could describe what happens, but it would probably make you taste that a2 powdered milk you just drank again. Not pleasant.

        So yeah, I hate that I'm throwing out a few tetrapaks a week. But chances are most of the plastic milk bottles just end up in landfill as well, and a tetrapak is mostly renewable and biodegradable cardboard (plus a thin plastic and alu foil layer), there's way less plastic than bottles, so I'll stick with them until I find something better thank you.

        • Not the one who downvoted you but that's fair too, I was just posting my opinion which I believe what was being asked for.

      • This is the kind of ignorant bs response that we don't need in our forum. No one cares whether you like it or not mate or what you think about alternative milks in general. This is a bargain hunting website and forum.

        Around 10-20% of New Zealand population is either allergic to cows milk, or is lactose intolerant or has sensitivity to it (with Pacifika and Asian populations more being more susceptible than others). Im guessing by your tone that you are someone who is just entitled, and consider yourself entitled to your opinion, so let me tell you something that might expand that limited view of yours.

        I developed an allergy to cows milk as a kid and I haven't been able to have a decent bowl of cereal, pastry, ice cream (or latte / flat white later on) until pretty recently.

        Mass produced soy milk in western countries esp the big brands I find absolutely abhorrent. It's not how it's supposed to taste. Soy milk originates from China / South East Asian countries. What you have in the supermarkets here are pretty disgusting based on our standards and that's about all you guys had in your supermarkets until about 10 years ago.

        People in my category didn't have alternative milks that were actually decent or drinkable until only a few years ago. I've tried almost every type and brand out there from Alpro to Oatly (all the flavoured varieties, and their varients in between) and @CheapAzChips I can say that this one is not unpleasant in taste but it has a faint pea protein after taste. It has been found in Paknsave and on the same website for less in the past. It's not a bad deal if you like the based on average unit price but not worth it if you consider the shipping cost unless you buy in serious bulk. Normally we buy ours in bulk (about 10 boxes at a time) when Paknsave has Alpro or Oatly milks on special for about $1.50-$2.50 to last our coffees and the occasional cereal/oat milk for about 6 months.

        Also for the comment below, people buy items like this in general because its convenient to pop into coffee or cereal. Not everyone wants to mix pea protein or make their own oat milk every bloody morning.

        Also tetra is recyclable. I always recycle and all my alternative milk Tetra packs are recycled. What bs about alternative milk choices being linked to caring for the enviroment.

        • My understanding of plant milks is that they are soybeans, oats, almonds, etc, that are blended in water and then strained. Is that not how plant milks are made? I also find the ingredients list strange. Why is there canola oil in the milk? That feels more reminiscent of mayonnaise than it does of milk.

          • @Bill: Haha ikr! This must be so lucrative. No one cares what's in the ingredients, they just wanna be told they're doing good and if they make it more like Mayo, someone will be like oo it froths better and not even think about why. Also comes with pre-added sugar! Not sure how they work, maybe they make powder in Sweden and reconstitute it in NZ, adding in cheap ingredients like sugar, then it's not so economic to ship around the world as much.

          • @Bill: Essentially, it's because the liquid needs the consistency.

            As much as I don't like canola oil in plant milks (and at wrong times of the day it induces acid reflux etc), there needs to be some kind of fat / oil substitute added to the "plant element" to give it the milk like consistency to the liquid. Otherwise, it ends up being just vegetable / grain water. Without it it won't froth as you would want it to in making coffees, and it won't have the consistency that mimicks a "milk".

            @NaughtiusMaximus You're a more of an idiot than I thought if you were sold that it's somehow better for you than drinking cows milk. It's just a milk substitute for those who can't have cows milk.

    • I've been getting this product shipped to Christchurch for a few years. I really like it in coffee.

  • -3

    Also, what a joke product. Mostly water, canola oil and then 2.5% pea protein? Just buy pea protein!! Do you know how much pea protein you can buy for the price of this? And then you don't have to be an idiot drinking only 2.5% powder in your flavoured water anymore.

    • +1

      Dude, if you don't like it just move along.

      • -2

        Well sure, just saying a true cheapie wouldn't fall for this. Fair enough if you don't like mixing your own pea protein with your own canola oil (lol). No one forced you to post your dislike about my dislike either.

Login or Join to leave a comment