You can get 10 lbs bags at Costco. They also have larger sizes if 10 lbs isn’t enough. |
+1 It’s been a while. |
Oh yeah? What brand, what store, what country? |
You must have Alzheimer's. It was always this in America: ![]() |
This shrinkage started over 20 years ago. Less soap in a bar of soap. Less ice cream in a container, not 1/2 gal. Less liquids in bottles. Less sugar in a bag. Most manufacturers did all of this years ago without announcement. |
Yes. We're also forensically analyzing whether it's the same troll who asked whether she was high-maintenance. There's been a recent uptick in trolling. |
+1 Sugar has been 4 lbs. for at least 20 years. Flour comes in 5 lb. bags. |
See the picture above but yea, sugar was 5 lbs. |
An easy google search says that the size of the sugar package transitioned to 4 lbs. around 2009 during the great recession. |
Interesting. Here's a thread from 2006 lamenting about sacks going from 5lbs to 4lbs. https://groups.google.com/g/rec.food.cooking/c/HzzzzWkaWl8 Most people here are probably under 60 so might not remember them. |
I do feel like there was recent shrinkage thought because I have a big glass jar for sugar and I used to have to put the overflow in a Tupperware but now it seems to all fit. Is it possible that the 5 pound bags were still sold in some places until recently? I do feel like I was buying 5 pounds. I actually like the smaller as it fits in my jar! |
What brand of sugar are you buying and how often do you fill your container? It seems that most brands, including store brands, transitioned to 4 lbs. at least 10 years ago. |
A pound of sugar is just a pint. Shake it and it's easy to squeeze another pound in a container. Don't shake it and have more air space. |
In 2021, the Domino tub shrunk from 4 lb to 3.5 according to the web archive.
The bag was already 4 pounds in 2021 it shows too. |
I always thought the plastic tub looked really convenient but it's way more expensive than the paper sack. If you're buying the tub, then it's unlikely you care so much about the shrinkflation of sugar. |