REVIEW: GHOST Protein Cereal (Peanut Butter and Marshmallow)

GHOST cannot be stopped. After years of dominating the fitness-related supplement space via excellent pre-workout, protein, and greens powders, and their fantastic ready-to-drink Energy cans, the brand is now coming for your breakfast bowl. 

GHOST Protein Cereal has arrived in two flavors — Peanut Butter and Marshmallow — initially as an exclusive limited website-only release with boxes rolling out to major retailers like Walmart beginning this week.. I was fortunate enough to win a giveaway of two boxes through one of the GHOST brand ambassadors, Chef Bob, and got my hands on the cereal, which sold out in less than five minutes.

A serving of GHOST Protein Cereal clocks in at 170 calories with 18g of protein for the Peanut Butter and 17g of protein for the Marshmallow. The peanut butter is a straight forward “peanut butter ball” type of cereal like PB Cap’n Crunch or Reese’s Puffs (minus the chocolate), while the Marshmallow is the same small-ish ball shape but vanilla flavored, mixed with genuine Lucky Charms marshmallows courtesy of General Mills.

Both cereals are truly, and slightly surprisingly, delicious. The cereal balls, mostly comprised of milk protein concentrate, carry a gentler crunch than your typical Cap’n-style berry variety, but still have plenty of crumbly chomp to be more than satisfying. The element that stands out the most with these cereals compared to their actual sugar-laden protein-devoid counterparts, is that they are, not surprisingly, less sweet. The flavor is still very much there, especially the slightly salty and true peanut-y flavor on the PB, but it’s a bit less potently dense and more muted than on the actual sugary ones. 

I don’t mind it, though, because there also isn’t a pronounced protein taste or any strong chemical-y aftertaste, either. The white Marshmallow balls are less flavorful but they’re served next to actual sugary marshmallows, which when eaten in tandem as intended, have a nice sweet vanilla flavor that’s mild but just potent enough to satisfy that breakfast cereal itch.

I am much more of a dry guy when it comes to my cereal, or more specifically a snacking-and-topping kind of guy, putting it on bowls of yogurt, often laced with GHOST protein powder, as opposed to sitting in a bowl of milk. However, understanding that most people will eat this with milk, I took each flavor for a spin in a smaller bowl with some reduced fat Fairlife and was pleasantly surprised. 

The peanut butter gets a much more prominent sweet flavor in the milk, unleashing even more of the nut’s rich fatty creaminess, which boosts this one to an even more impressive level than I already had enjoyed it at as a dry guy. I didn’t expect the PB to perform so well in milk, but it does, and it holds its crunch for a pretty decent amount of time, too.

The marshmallow, which I expected to be the clear winner in milk, wasn’t a loser per say, but wasn’t as impressive as the PB. The light vanilla flavor on the balls gets much more muted in the milk, and the marshmallows have to do all the heavy lifting for the flavor to come through. They can also sit in milk for many minutes without getting aggressively soggy, still bringing a satisfying crunch after a proper soaking next to the marshmallows, which get softer and maintain all of their sweetness.

It’s hard to go wrong with either variety, as both are among the greatest tasting high protein cereal’s I have ever had. The only “healthy” cereal I have ever been impressed with and buy repeatedly is Three Wishes, and GHOST cereal now firmly cements itself next to that brand as a really great, even higher protein option to keep in the rotation among a crowded and often disappointing category of alternative cereals.

Rating: 9/10 (Peanut Butter, 8.5/10 Marshmallow)

Purchased at: GHOST

REVIEW: Chocolate Peanut Butter Cheerios

If I could eat Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups every day for breakfast and not feel like a pile of garbage, I probably would. My fantasy was somewhat fulfilled as a youngster when I was beckoned to the TV as another young white boy hollered at me “It’s Reese’s…for breakfast!” My head turned and my life changed, when Reese’s Puffs cereal was gifted to the world in the mid-90’s. From that moment on the Puffs became one of my favorite cereals, and up there with Cinnamon Toast Crunch and Count Chocula, it has maintained a stronghold on my nostalgia-fueled favorites as I’ve gotten older. Whether tugging at our Reese’s Puffs memories or just realizing PB and chocolate is one of the greatest flavor combo’s ever, Cheerios came strong this autumn with a new member of their preferment lineup – Chocolate Peanut Butter.

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The cereal has a great, sweet peanut butter-y aroma mixed with the whole oat goodness you know and love from Cheerios. Visually they’re very appealing with an equal amount of tan PB and brown chocolate O’s mingling together to create a wholesome version of one of the greatest duos of all time.

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What’s most impressive about eating these Cheerios is the authentic peanut butter slick that coats the pieces of cereal. Peanut butter is the third ingredient on the label, and I was pleasantly surprised that the PB presence pushes beyond flavor and translates to a wonderful fatty texture as well. The pieces taste like peanut butter and chocolate but also very distinctly Cheerios, and much like Honey Nut and other sweetened varieties, the sugar content isn’t so much that it takes away from the base flavor of the notoriously heart healthy breakfast option.

In milk the peanut butter mouthfeel is much less apparent, but the smoothness is still in tact with the natural texture of the milk. Once fully submerged in the cold creaminess the lower sugar content as compared to Reese’s Puffs is more obvious, and it eats a lot more like an “adult cereal” than a cartoon kiddy classic. There’s a nice, genuine bitter cocoa flavor that pops up over the PB and compliments the fatty nutty qualities really well. The chocolate and peanut butter are balanced with neither really taking the other one over, and every bite has a solid distribution of both flavors.

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Are Chocolate Peanut Butter Cheerios better than Reese’s Puffs? Nah. Nothing can top those sweet crunchy balls of goodness; but this is a great addition to Cheerios’ strong lineup of cereals that still feels more responsible than eating candy for breakfast. And the milk that’s leftover after a hearty bowl? Pure bliss.

Rating: 8.5/10
Found at: Safeway ($4.99)