Three Wishes Cocoa Grain-Free Cereal: Nutrition & Labelgrade A- (85/100)
A- 85 / 100 — The 'kid-friendly' end of the high-protein cereal category. 8-ingredient panel anchored by chickpea + pea protein + tapioca, with a small amount of organic cane sugar to make it palatable for kids. Significantly less ingredient complexity than Magic Spoon (10 items) or Catalina Crunch (14 items), but also less protein per serving.
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Three Wishes Cocoa Grain-Free Cereal delivers 8 g of protein and 4 g of fiber for 120 calories in a 3/4 cup (35 g) serving — about 23 g of protein per 100 g. What makes it unusual in the protein-cereal aisle is what it isn’t: there’s no whey isolate, no allulose, no proprietary “flour,” just an 8-word ingredient line built on chickpea and pea protein with a small 3 g of organic cane sugar. It earns an A- (85/100), riding perfect marks on fiber and saturated fat. The honest catch is that 8 g of protein trails the engineered competition — but that lower number buys you the shortest, most parent-readable label in the category.
Why the A-
| Dimension | Grade | Score | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein density | B+ | 84 / 100 | 23 g per 100 g — genuinely strong for a cereal, but below Catalina Crunch (31) and Magic Spoon (34), which replace the grain base entirely with isolated protein |
| Ingredient quality | B | 78 / 100 | 8 ingredients, no isolated milk protein, no artificial sweetener — the cleanest panel of the three, though chickpea flour is a humbler protein source than a whey or pea isolate |
| Saturated fat | A+ | 100 / 100 | 0 g — naturally lean with no added oil, unlike Catalina and Magic Spoon which both carry a sunflower-oil base |
| Fiber | A+ | 100 / 100 | 4 g per serving, almost all of it intrinsic to the chickpea — not bolted on as chicory root or inulin |
| Sugar | A- | 88 / 100 | 3 g, all real cane sugar. The deliberate non-zero choice; one ding versus the 0 g rivals, but a third of traditional cocoa cereal |
| Sodium | C+ | 68 / 100 | 100 mg per serving — the one weak score, but still the lowest of the three (Magic Spoon is 160 mg, Catalina 125 mg) |
The C+ on sodium is the only real soft spot, and it’s relative — 100 mg is the best in this comparison set, the formula just gets graded against an absolute scale. Everything else is the story of a cereal that scores by being un-engineered: the fiber and the zero saturated fat both come from leaving the chickpea mostly intact rather than stripping it down to an isolate.
The chickpea base is the whole identity
Catalina Crunch builds its cereal on “Catalina Flour” (pea protein plus four fibers and a gum); Magic Spoon builds its on a milk-protein blend of casein and whey. Three Wishes starts somewhere more recognizable — a roasted chickpea, the same legume in your hummus — and adds pea protein on top. That single decision cascades through the whole label:
- It’s why the fiber is “free.” The 4 g of fiber isn’t an added chicory-root or inulin ingredient; it rides along with the chickpea. That’s also why the fiber grade matches Catalina’s A+ despite Catalina deliberately engineering in 9 g.
- It’s why there’s no oil. Magic Spoon and Catalina both list a sunflower-oil base; Three Wishes carries 0 g saturated fat and only 2 g total fat because the chickpea-and-tapioca structure doesn’t need it.
- It’s why the protein is “only” 8 g. A whole legume is roughly 22% protein, so you can’t reach 13 g per serving without doing what Magic Spoon does — discarding the grain and pouring in isolate. Three Wishes accepts the lower number to keep the food recognizable.
The pea protein is doing real work here, not garnish: chickpea on its own is a touch low in the amino acid methionine, and pairing it with pea (and ultimately the milk you add) rounds the amino-acid profile out.
The 3 grams of sugar are a strategy, not a slip
The most counterintuitive thing on this label is that a “health” cereal includes cane sugar while its rivals show 0 g. It’s intentional. Three Wishes was started by parents pitching it as “the high-protein cereal kids will actually eat,” and the 3 g of real sugar is the bridge: it tastes like chocolate cereal rather than like a sweetener swap. Magic Spoon’s allulose and Catalina’s stevia hit 0 g on the panel but carry a cooling or faintly bitter edge that a kid raised on Cocoa Pebbles can clock instantly. The monk fruit in Three Wishes tops up sweetness without adding sugar, so the 3 g stays low while the flavor stays familiar. For comparison, the cereal it’s actually trying to replace at the breakfast table runs 9-12 g of sugar a bowl.
Who it’s for
The right buyer is feeding a household, not bulking. If you want one box that a six-year-old and a calorie-conscious adult will both eat, the short ingredient line, the lowest sodium of the bunch, and the just-sweet-enough flavor make Three Wishes the path of least resistance — and a cup of milk turns its modest 8 g into a respectable ~16 g breakfast. The shopper who should look elsewhere is the one optimizing the macro line itself: if you want 0 g sugar and double-digit protein per serving, Catalina Crunch’s 11 g / 9 g fiber or Magic Spoon’s 13 g do that better, just with longer labels and a flavor kids are likelier to push back on.
Ingredients
Chickpea, tapioca, pea protein, organic cane sugar, cocoa, natural flavors, salt, monk fruit. (Verbatim from the USDA Branded Foods entry, FDC 2166952 — eight ingredients, the shortest panel of the cereals on this page.)
Where to buy
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Quick Facts
Per serving · 3/4 cup (35 g)
Full nutrition facts
| Nutrient | Per Serving (3/4 cup (35 g)) |
|---|---|
| Calories | 120 |
| Protein | 8g |
| Total Fat | 2g |
| Saturated Fat | 0g |
| Trans Fat | 0g |
| Total Carbohydrates | 18g |
| Dietary Fiber | 4g |
| Total Sugars | 3g |
| Added Sugars | 3g |
| Sodium | 100mg |
| Cholesterol | 0mg |
| Calcium | 155mg |
| Iron | 2.6mg |
| Potassium | 384mg |
Scope: This page applies specifically to Three Wishes Cocoa Grain-Free Cereal (8.6 oz (245 g) box) · UPC 860002152493. 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.
contains no listed animal products
contains no listed meat or fish
no wheat, barley, rye, or malt detected in USDA ingredient list
Frequently Asked Questions
How much protein is in Three Wishes Cocoa?
8 g per 3/4 cup (35 g) serving (USDA FDC 2166952), which works out to about 23 g per 100 g. That's roughly 6× the protein you'd get from the same weight of a standard chocolate cereal, but a clear notch below the engineered protein cereals: Catalina Crunch hits 31 g per 100 g and Magic Spoon 34 g. The protein is a blend of the chickpea base and added pea protein.
Does it actually qualify as 'high in protein'?
Not under FDA labeling rules. 8 g is 16% of the 50 g Daily Value, which clears the 'good source' bar (10% DV) but misses 'high in protein' (20% DV, or 10 g). Catalina Crunch (11 g) and Magic Spoon (13 g) both clear it per serving; Three Wishes needs the milk you pour on it — a cup of dairy milk adds ~8 g and pushes the bowl to ~16 g.
Why is there cane sugar if it's a 'better-for-you' cereal?
That 3 g of organic cane sugar is the whole strategy. Traditional kids' chocolate cereal runs 9-12 g of sugar a serving; Catalina Crunch and Magic Spoon run 0 g but lean on stevia, monk fruit, or allulose that some kids taste as 'off.' Three Wishes sits deliberately in the middle — just enough real sugar to read as normal chocolate cereal, with monk fruit topping up the sweetness so the sugar stays low.
Three Wishes vs Magic Spoon vs Catalina Crunch — which should I buy?
Three Wishes: 8 g protein, 3 g sugar, 4 g fiber, 8 ingredients, vegan. Catalina Crunch Chocolate Banana: 11 g protein, 0 g sugar, 9 g fiber, vegan, but a 14-item engineered panel. Magic Spoon Fruity: 13 g protein, 0 g sugar, but only 1 g fiber, a milk-protein base (so not vegan), and the most sodium of the three (160 mg vs 100 mg here). Buy Three Wishes for the simplest label and the easiest sell to kids; Catalina for the best protein-and-fiber combo; Magic Spoon for raw protein density.
Is it keto or low-carb?
No. 18 g total carbs minus 4 g fiber is 14 g net carbs per serving — this is a 'better breakfast cereal,' not a keto one. If you need roughly 5 g net carbs or fewer, Catalina Crunch (14 g total, 9 g fiber → 5 g net) or Magic Spoon (15 g total, 1 g fiber, but milk-protein-based) are the closer fits.
Is it vegan and allergen-friendly?
Yes to vegan — the protein is chickpea plus pea protein, with no milk, whey, or egg (this is the line where it beats Magic Spoon, whose base is casein and whey). It's also grain-free, gluten-free, and soy-free. The one caveat: chickpea and pea are legumes, so it's not a fit for a legume-free or strict-paleo plate.
When was this data last verified?
2026-05-28, against USDA FoodData Central FDC 2166952 and the Three Wishes product page. We re-verify top pages monthly and update within 7 days of a reformulation — worth noting because Three Wishes has quietly adjusted this recipe before.