Skip to content
Michoko lait
Michoko lait - La Pie qui Chante with score 93/100

Michoko lait - European Score 93/100

La Pie qui Chante

Michoko lait by La Pie qui Chante is rated 93/100 according to our European origin criteria. Excellent choice! This product strongly supports the European economy.

It is a food product found in 1 countries.

308 g

7622210444233
🛡️ Data verified by Open Food Facts
🍽️ Food

Nutritional Scores

Nutri-Score
E
Eco-Score
UNKNOWN
NOVA
4

Ingredients

caramel 77% (sirop de glucose, lait écrémé concentré sucré, lait, sucre), sucre, huile de noix de coco, sirop de glucose, fructose, E471, sel, chocolat au lait 23% (sucre, beurre de cacao, poudre de lait entier, pâte de cacao, poudre de lait écrémé, lécithine de soja.

Allergens

milk, soybeans

Origin Data

Countries france
Packaging Plastique, Sachet

European Score

0 /100
Purebred European

"More European than the Eurovision Song Contest."

Detailed Breakdown:

Scoring Methodology
Headquarters 35/35
Manufacturing 35/35
Ingredients 3/10
Distribution 15/15
Proximity +5

Analysis:

  • Corporate headquarters in Switzerland (+35 pts)
  • Manufactured in Europe (france) (+35 pts)
  • Main European ingredients: sucre, chocolat au lait (+3 pts)
  • Distributed exclusively in Europe (1 countries) (+15 pts)
  • Bonus: Completely European product (+5 pts)
Amazon logo
Buy on Amazon

Affiliate link. Independent from score results.

Analysis & Insights

Expert Data Analysis

With a critical score of 0/100, Michoko lait shows a total lack of verifiable alignment with European industrial sovereignty.

When analyzing the corporate structure of La Pie qui Chante, we see its direct and positive impact on the regional economy.

Moderate transport mileage makes this a balanced but not leadership-level choice for the environment.

Health data for this item shows basic compliance but a limited nutritional focus.

Traceability is at the heart of this product, with clear indicators of its verified European origin.

Fact-based analysis identifies the product as a poor choice for those prioritizing local roots.

Looking for better alternatives...