Thinking. 1. **Analyze the Request:** * **Target Keyword:** "How Many Calories In A Mini Reese S Cup" * **Context provided:** * "I refuse to put protein powder in this recipe and we did it! Here are some real deal Low" (Likely relates to healthier/low-calorie dessert recipe posts, but the main query is purely nutritional). * "Go to ..." * "Happy Halloween! This year, I'm taking on an INSANE amount of" (Relates to volume/intake during holidays). * **Content Requirements:** * 600 to 900 words. * Natural headings. * Avoid unsupported claims (stick to standard nutrition facts, standard sizes). * Do not indicate AI generation. * Format: Safe HTML only (h2, h3, p, ul, ol, li, strong, em). No markdown fences. Return the raw HTML. * **Content Strategy:** * The main keyword is "How Many Calories In A Mini Reese S Cup". This is a straightforward nutrition question. The article needs to answer this primarily. * Structure: 1. Introduction (engage the reader, acknowledge the craving, introduce the question). 2. Calorie Count for Mini Reese's Cups (Answer the core query: standard count, vary slightly by weight/type). 3. Nutritional Breakdown (Calories from fat, carbs, protein). 4. Context: "Mini vs. Other Sizes" (Show how the mini fits into a diet). 5. "Portion Control & Diet" (Address the high volume scenario hinted at in the context "INSANE amount of" -- Halloween, snacking). 6. Homemade/Healthier Alternatives (Introduce the "no protein powder" context smoothly, frame it as an option, not a direct claim against the original unless phrased carefully. *Self-correction:* The prompt says "avoid unsupported claims". The best way to incorporate the context is to say there are recipes for lower sugar versions, staying factual without endorsing a specific unverified recipe). 7. Conclusion. * **Key Facts to Include (Backed by general nutritional data):** * Standard serving size of a Mini Reese's Peanut Butter Cup. * Hershey's official nutritional data. * Calories per mini cup: The standard unwrapped mini cup is usually around 1/3 of a standard cup (standard cup ~ 88-90 calories or 1.5 oz / 42g). A standard "snack size" is 2 cups (80-90 cal). A "miniature" cup (like in a bag of minis) typical weight is ~ 9g to 12g, but the "Mini" unwrapped is often specific. Generally, a mini Reese's cup is around **43-45 calories**. Let's verify. Hershey's website states a serving of 3 pieces of Mini Reese's Cups (0.6 oz / 17g) is 80 calories. So 1 piece = ~27-28 calories. Let's be precise. * Wait, Hershey's "Miniatures" (unwrapped, assorted) or "Mini Cups"? There is a difference. * "REESE'S Peanut Butter Cups Miniatures" (bag): serving size 4 pieces (39g), 200 calories. = 50 calories per piece. * "REESE'S Peanut Butter Cups Mini" (the tiny unwrapped ones): serving size 3 pieces (17g), 80 calories. = 26-27 calories per piece. * "REESE'S Peanut Butter Cups Snack Size" (the ones in the orange/black wrapper): serving size 2 pieces (28g), 130 calories. = 65 calories each. * Wait, the exact mini cup product varies. The most common "Mini" bag is the unwrapped ones used for baking (the tiny ones). Let's clarify this in the article. The standard "Mini" Reese's Cup (often sold in a 10 oz or 12 oz bag) contains around 26-28 calories each. *