think! Brownie Crunch High Protein Bar: Nutrition & Labelgrade B (78/100)

B 78 / 100 — Exceptional protein density at 33.3g per 100g and effectively zero sugar.

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Protein
100/100
📋
Ingredients
68/100
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Sat fat
70/100
🧂
Sodium
66/100
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Sugar
100/100
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Fiber
42/100

The short answer

The think! Brownie Crunch High Protein Bar delivers 20g of protein for 230 calories with 0g of sugar. That’s 33.3g of protein per 100g — genuinely dense, on par with Quest and Barebells. The catch is how it gets to zero sugar: this bar is sweetened almost entirely with maltitol syrup, a sugar alcohol, rather than the sucralose or stevia most rivals use. It earns a B (78/100) — held back from a higher grade by a long, sugar-alcohol-led ingredient list, not by its macros.

Why the B

DimensionGradeScoreWhy
Protein densityA+100 / 10033.3g per 100g — capped at A+ by formula, among the densest bars we’ve graded
Ingredient qualityC+68 / 10016 ingredients led by a soy/caseinate/whey blend and maltitol syrup — functional, not clean-label
Saturated fatB-70 / 1003g per serving (5g per 100g) — moderate, from cocoa butter and milk fat
SodiumC+66 / 100190mg per serving — moderate, roughly 8% of the daily limit
SugarA+100 / 1000g sugar — but earned with maltitol, not by being low-carb
FiberD42 / 1001.02g per serving — almost none, unlike fiber-heavy bars such as Quest

The honest read: this bar is all engine, modest chassis. The A+ protein score is fully deserved — 20g in a 60g bar is excellent. The C+ on ingredients is where the trade-offs live, and it’s the maltitol that drives both the perfect sugar score and the ingredient ding. The sugar “A+” is technically true but worth an asterisk: a bar sweetened with maltitol is not the same as a bar that’s genuinely low in digestible carbs (see below).

The maltitol trade-off — the one thing to know

Here is what separates this bar from its shelf-mates. The second ingredient is maltitol syrup, and there is no sucralose, aspartame, acesulfame potassium, stevia, or monk fruit anywhere on the list. That’s unusual — most “sugar-free” protein bars reach for a non-nutritive sweetener to hit zero sugar without the carbs. think! does it the old-school way, with a sugar alcohol.

That choice cuts two ways, and you should pick based on which side you fall on:

There’s also a labeling nuance worth understanding: maltitol counts in the 23g of total carbs but not in the 0g sugar line. So “0g sugar” does not mean “no blood-sugar impact.” Maltitol has a moderate glycemic load, which is why strict keto dieters generally skip maltitol-sweetened bars in favor of erythritol or allulose, which pass through largely inert.

How it stacks up against Quest and Barebells

This bar competes in the most crowded shelf in the category, and the protein numbers are nearly a wash. The real differences are texture and sweetener:

BarProteinCaloriesSweetener approachFiber
think! Brownie Crunch (this product)20g230Maltitol syrup (sugar alcohol)1g
Quest Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough21g200Erythritol + sucralosehigh
Barebells Caramel Cashew20g200Sucralose (soft, candy-like)low
Power Crunch Mocha Creme13g205Wafer style, smaller barlow

Net: if you want fiber and don’t mind sucralose, Quest wins. If you want the softest, most dessert-like bite, Barebells. think! is the pick when you specifically want to dodge sucralose and stevia — provided maltitol agrees with you. It’s a clear, defensible niche, not a knock.

Who it’s for

A solid 20g-protein, 0g-sugar bar for someone who wants their sweetness from a sugar alcohol rather than a non-nutritive sweetener. It’s a fine on-the-go protein top-up — roughly the protein of 2.3 oz of cooked chicken in a shelf-stable wrapper. Skip it if you’re sensitive to sugar alcohols, if you’re doing strict keto (the maltitol carbs aren’t “free”), or if you’re chasing fiber, where a soluble-fiber bar like Quest does more.

Ingredients

Protein blend (soy protein isolate, calcium caseinate, whey protein isolate), maltitol syrup, vegetable glycerin, water, almond butter, cocoa butter, alkalized cocoa, chocolate, sunflower oil, lecithin, sodium caseinate, natural flavor, tapioca starch, milk fat, salt. (Verbatim from the USDA Branded Foods entry, FDC 2608367.)

Where to buy

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Quick Facts

Per serving · 1 Bar

Size 2.1 oz/60 g
UPC 753656701271
Verified 2026-06-03 · checked monthly
230
Calories
20g
Protein 40% DV
23g
Carbs 8% DV
8g
Fat 10% DV
per 100 g
33g protein · 383 cal ·0.00g sugar ·317mg sodium
per oz (1 oz)
9.4g protein · 109 cal ·0.00g sugar ·90mg sodium
Sugar 0g · 0g added
Fiber 1.02g · 4% DV
Saturated fat 3g
Trans fat 0g
Sodium 190mg · 8% DV
Cholesterol 0mg
Calcium 120mg · 9% DV
Iron 2.1mg · 12% DV
Potassium 170mg · 4% DV
Full nutrition facts
Nutrition Facts
Nutrient Per Serving (1 Bar)
Calories230
Protein20g
Total Fat8g
Saturated Fat3g
Trans Fat0g
Total Carbohydrates23g
Dietary Fiber1.02g
Total Sugars0g
Added Sugars0g
Sodium190mg
Cholesterol0mg
Calcium120mg
Iron2.1mg
Potassium170mg

Scope: This page applies specifically to Brownie Crunch High Protein Bar, Brownie Crunch (2.1 oz/60 g) · UPC 753656701271. Other sizes, flavors, or formulations may differ.

How this fits each diet

Each score is computed from the same USDA nutrition + ingredient data, against the published rules of each diet. They tell you "does this food fit this diet" — not whether the diet is right for you.

Vegan
F 0/100

contains animal-derived ingredients

Vegetarian
A+ 100/100

contains no listed meat or fish

Gluten-free
A+ 100/100

no wheat, barley, rye, or malt detected in USDA ingredient list

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much protein is in the think! Brownie Crunch bar?

20 grams per 60g bar (USDA FDC 2608367) — 33.3g of protein per 100g, or about 9.4g per ounce. The protein comes from a three-source blend: soy protein isolate, calcium caseinate, and whey protein isolate.

How does it have 0g of sugar but 23g of carbs?

The sweetness comes from maltitol syrup (the second ingredient) and vegetable glycerin, not from sugar. Maltitol is a sugar alcohol, so it counts toward total carbs (23g) but not toward the sugar line, which is why the label reads 0g sugar. It still carries calories and can raise blood glucose — it is not a 'free' carb.

Does the think! Brownie Crunch bar use artificial sweeteners like sucralose or aspartame?

No. Looking at the USDA ingredient list, the only sweeteners are maltitol syrup (a sugar alcohol) and vegetable glycerin. There is no sucralose, aspartame, acesulfame potassium, stevia, or monk fruit in this bar — which is unusual for a sugar-free protein bar.

Will maltitol cause bloating or digestive issues?

It can, for some people. Maltitol is the sugar alcohol most associated with gas, bloating, and a laxative effect when eaten in quantity, because a portion ferments in the gut. One bar is a moderate dose; tolerance varies a lot person to person. If you're sensitive to sugar alcohols, this is the bar's main downside.

think! Brownie Crunch vs. Quest and Barebells — which is best?

All three sit near 20-21g protein for ~200-230 calories. Quest leans on soluble corn fiber plus erythritol/sucralose; Barebells uses milk protein with sucralose and is the softest, candy-bar-like option. think! is the one sweetened with maltitol instead of non-nutritive sweeteners — better if you avoid sucralose, worse if maltitol upsets your stomach.

Is the think! Brownie Crunch bar keto-friendly?

Not really. Although it's labeled 0g sugar, maltitol is only partially keto-friendly — it has a meaningful glycemic impact and contributes digestible carbs, so the 23g total carbs are not all 'free.' Strict keto dieters usually prefer bars sweetened with erythritol or allulose instead.

When was this data last verified?

2026-06-03, against USDA FoodData Central FDC 2608367. We re-verify top pages monthly and update within 7 days of a reformulation.