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‘We take pride in surprising customers.' Publix rolls out a new soft Pub Sub roll

‘We take pride in surprising customers.' Publix rolls out a new soft Pub Sub roll

Miami Herald15-02-2025

Publix is embracing its softer side with the recent addition to its Pub Sub lineup.
A new soft white bread roll can serve as a pillow for your fillings — whether it's the supermarket's most popular sub, with chicken tenders, or old standbys like tuna or Boar's Head ham and cheese.
The new soft white bread option made its debut in the deli counter section at Publix stores in its homestate Florida and seven other southeastern states in mid-February, joining regulars including the Italian 5 Grain, whole wheat and white rolls, and the various wraps.
Publix wouldn't exactly say they were responding to some of the snarkier comments on a recent Reddit titled 'Soft Bread at Publix? Yes!!!' — but one comment seemed representative of a particular point of view.
'This is a game changer for me,' wrote a Reddit user with the screen name BadCaseofClams. 'I hate our regular sub rolls. They're dry and crumbly and just not my thing. Got an Italian with this today. I could bite it without cutting the roof of my mouth and shooting bread shrapnel out in every direction. Already a win, but the light sweetness also tastes really nice with the salty Italian meats and tart toppings.'
Publix spokeswoman Nicole Krauss told the Miami Herald on Friday: 'We're always listening to our customers and following the latest trends. And as we continue to grow our signature sub offerings, the new soft sub roll is just another option for our customers to experience and enjoy.'
We tried the soft white roll with tuna and the week's Publix cheese special — smoked gouda. Toasted, please. Like biting into a cloud but we festooned our Pub Sub with raw onions, lettuce and black olives for some texture and crunch. The new fresh-baked bread was sweet, almost like Hawaiian bread.
We kind of agree with Ben aka SashaIsMySpiritAnima on Reddit who posted, 'It was soft and pillowy on the inside and nice and crispy without killing my mouth on the inside' and had to chuckle a bit at another who apparently doesn't mind the coarser variety. 'I kind of like the hard a-- bread at Publix. But will try the soft one to see if I like it more.'
The new soft white is baked in-store and will be available year-round at Publix.
'We take pride in surprising customers with new products and offerings alongside the favorites they've come to know and love,' Krauss said.
READ MORE: Are you waiting for that new 2-story Publix to open near The Falls? There's now a date
Pub Sub history
The 95-year-old Lakeland-based supermarket chain shared some history of its deli subs in tandem with the release of its new soft sub roll.
▪ The first custom sub shop and sandwich menu board debuted at a Publix in Marietta, Georgia, in 1992.
▪ The most popular toppings are lettuce, tomato and onions.
▪ The best-selling Publix sub is the chicken tender sub.
▪ A holiday season limited-edition turkey cranberry sub debuted in 2010 and remains a popular recurrent.

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"I Didn't Know How Seriously My Parents Would Take That": 17 Times Kids Told Silly Little Lies That Spiraled WAY Out Of Control
"I Didn't Know How Seriously My Parents Would Take That": 17 Times Kids Told Silly Little Lies That Spiraled WAY Out Of Control

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"I Didn't Know How Seriously My Parents Would Take That": 17 Times Kids Told Silly Little Lies That Spiraled WAY Out Of Control

It's normal for kids to lie sometimes. It's how they learn important life lessons and test boundaries, but sometimes a little lie can have consequences that kid-brains never saw coming. Recently, on Reddit, people shared that "small" lie they told as a kid that had unexpected results, and it was too relatable not to share. Here are some of the best stories from the thread: 1."My younger brother was a really dumb kid. I managed to convince him that badgers were mythical creatures like dragons or unicorns. He then freaked out after seeing a dead badger on the road on his way to school. They had to call our parents. But that's not where it ends. During the subsequent talk about badgers actually being real and seeing one wasn't noteworthy, he confessed that the reason he was dumb was because he had a carrot in his brain." "A couple of years before, I'd done a really shitty attempt at a slight of hand trick. I pushed a carrot 'into his head,' but actually pushed it up my sleeve. It never even occurred to me that he thought it was real. He'd spent the last couple of years literally thinking he had a carrot in his brain, and that was the reason he sucked at spelling..." —uncle_monty 2."My older sister got glasses when she was in 4th grade, and I was in 2nd, and I wanted a pair too, so I told my parents that I had vision problems. They took me to an eye doctor who accused me of lying (I was), but my parents believed me, and I ended up getting glasses. Flash forward over 10 years and I now have a heavy prescription and cannot see for shit and it's probably because I messed up my eyes early on for no reason and didn't want to admit I was lying." —whatstherlworld 3."I used to sneak out of the house in the middle of the night as a teenager. We had a rickety back screen door that my parents both loved the sound of because it reminded them of an old country screen door. I required this door to commence my nighttime shenanigans. I WD40ed the hinges to make it quieter. What I did not intend was for it to silence the country creakiness entirely. I felt terrible because I also liked the creaky door, but my selfish ass carried on. Never heard a word from my parents." "Around ten years later, my dad was telling some stories about his own father and the narcissistic antics he used to get up to. One of these stories was about the time my parents confronted my grandfather for lubricating the door hinges on this screen door. He talked about how a huge argument ensued about how my grandfather thinks he knows better than everyone else, and that he couldn't just mind his own business and let my parents enjoy THEIR OWN stupid creaky door IN THEIR OWN STUPID HOUSE. As this was absolutely characteristic of my grandfather, my plan turned out to be accidentally genius because they were in town from California at the time. No one suspected dummy teenage-me, because OF COURSE GRANDPA DID IT. 'Dad, I feel safe confessing this now because of how long it's been. That was me. I lubed up the door hinges.' Shocked silence for about ten seconds, and then one of the hardest belly laughs I've ever heard out of my dad." —amandemic 4."I so adamantly pretended I thought my doll was real and could hear her telling me to do things that I had to be evaluated by a therapist." —LeftStatistician7989 "'Pretended.' Just like the doll told you to say." —darkpigeon1 5."This was around 1991 in Chicago, so my sister and I were 7 and 9 years old, respectively. There was this hysteria at the time about Homie the Clown, which was a character on TV, but supposedly there was a man in the area dressed as him and trying to lure kids with candy into his van. There were 'sightings' reported all over the city by children, and the cops and local news were all over it. One day during class, my sister claimed she saw Homie hiding in a bush by the school, so they put the school on lockdown until the police could investigate. She did not, in fact, see Homie, or any other clown, lol." —Iwantitallthensum 6."For the record, I really was a twin. HOWEVER, I was a fraternal twin. Boy-girl pair. We had a substitute teacher one day, and one of my bullies was picking on me for something or other again. I decided that I had had enough, and I poured clear glue on her chair. She sat down on it, and her skirt got all sticky and stiff. Her tights stuck to the chair; it was a mess. The substitute asked who did it, and obviously, someone ratted me out. When I was asked about the incident, I said, 'I'm not Phantom, I'm Maria. I'm her twin. We switched places today. I'm supposed to be in the other 4th grade class.'" "The substitute left a note that said, 'Phantom's twin switched places and glued a girl's skirt, no complaints about Phantom except that she was not in class like she was supposed to be, but another teacher said there was no issue for one day.' My teacher was back the next day, and she pulled me aside, telling me it wasn't funny to switch places with my twin because there are a lot of safety issues and school rules we are breaking by switching. She went next door to the other 4th-grade class and told the other teacher about the glue incident. He got in trouble for it. My twin was already a troublemaker while I was the nerdy, goody-goody twin. When we got home and argued about me getting him in trouble, our mom marched right up and asked us to explain. She, of course, did not believe that a teacher would fall for the twin switching story because we were a fraternal boy-girl pair. He got grounded at home, too. From that moment on, whenever I did something I wasn't supposed to, he would sarcastically say, 'Oh, was it MARIA?!' which just ended up backfiring because our classmates ended up thinking I had a twin named Maria and that my twin brother was a really year older but got held back. It wasn't until high school that one of our classmates, who was also part of a Boy-Girl twin pair, was complaining that she never got to pull the twin switch thing, and he got snarky and said, 'Ask Phantom how to do it, I bet she'd looooooove to share.' I had to confess because he sounded so upset, and he had my back about something earlier that day." —PhantomIridescence 7."When I was 11, I had a book report due. I didn't do it, and pretended to be sick that day with a handful of vague symptoms, intending to cram through the book report while I was absent. Instead, my mom took me to the doctor, and it turned out I had mono for real. I was out of school for 6 weeks and still never got around to doing that book report. It was assumed that the tutor the school sent to my house had misplaced it." —NymphaeAvernales 8."After we completed a module on red brown color blindness in middle school biology, I told my classmates that I was red/brown color blind in one eye. They would have me close my 'good' eye and have me guess the color... it was incredibly dumb but seemed harmless. Unfortunately, they were so fascinated that it became disruptive, and the teachers overheard." "The teachers told my parents that I was apparently losing color vision in one eye, and it spiraled to me continuing to fake the situation until I had to come clean to a neurologist who was about to send me for a (not covered by our insurance) MRI." —jantessa 9."I said I liked vegetables, so I wouldn't disappoint my grandma. Next family dinner: full plate of boiled Brussels sprouts. I cried. She cried. The Brussels sprouts won." —Personal-Pitch25 10."When I was probably four or five years old, my grandparents bought my sibling and me one of those electric keyboard pianos. It had a mode that would light up the keys red to teach you how to play the song. Little me discovered there was also a setting that plays the correct key regardless of what you press when it was on, and it also stopped the red lights from showing. I did my best dramatic pianist performance in front of my mother, she was FLOORED, thinking I was some sort of reborn Mozart, a piano prodigy out of nowhere." "She called all of our family members over to watch me perform and exclaimed to them, 'My baby is going to Juilliard!' I got nervous with all the people around and ended up confessing in front of 6+ family members that the piano was basically playing itself." —Kasanala 11."When I was 7, I told my neighbor that my family had a pet monkey. No idea why. Just blurted it out one day like it was totally normal. She got super excited. She wanted to come over and meet it immediately. I panicked and I made excuses. It turned into this whole soap opera of a story. She told her whole class about it. Eventually, my mom found out because someone asked her how the monkey was doing. She made me go back and tell the truth. It was so embarrassing, and my neighbor looked so betrayed." —Cherry_zsa 12."Some kid wanted to borrow $2 from me. The $2 was all I had. I didn't even like this kid and suspected I'd never see that $2 again. So after PE, I went back to my backpack and shoved the $2 into my sock, and then said it's gone, someone must have stolen it. He told the PE teacher, despite my saying, 'Nah, it's ok. It was just $2.' The teacher sent us to the principal's office. The principal was asking who we thought took it. I said I don't know." "The other kid listed off half a dozen bullies from class. Now there are eight of us in the principal's office. They made the kids empty their pockets and take off their shoes and socks. I was panicking because the $2 was in my sock. Luckily, as the victim, I didn't get searched. All these tough bullies started listing off more kids they thought did it. It was getting out of hand quickly. Finally, the principal was like I guess the money is gone. I learned how many of these tough kids were snitches and that nobody in that PE class had $2 to their name." —LacCoupeOnZees 13."When I was 7, I would make my lips look super dry because I just wanted to be allowed to wear my mom's lipstick. My parents thought the extremely chapped lips were a sign of something and took me to the doctor, and that led to me having surgery to get my tonsils out (and something else too, I don't remember). I didn't have the heart to tell them I just wanted to wear lipstick." —Substantial_Chip791 14."In second grade, I bragged that my uncle invented the Post-it note. It snowballed until the PTA tried to invite him for career day, so I claimed he'd moved to Antarctica to test glue in the cold. People were still asking about him when I hit middle school." —Recent_Painting_8150 15."My grandparents used to live one street over from us. One morning, I was walking to school, and a neighbour (who my family hated and he didn't like us either, nothing major, just clashed) pulled up next to me and asked if I needed a lift anywhere, and I said nah, because my grandparents' house was just up the road." "When I got to my grandparents', I told them some guy asked me if I wanted a lift somewhere, and they brushed it off. I didn't think about it again until that night, my parents found out and took me to the police station and made a report. I don't know why, but I doubled down and just described some random dude. Like, I made it up as I was talking, and it became a whole thing about me potentially being kidnapped. Now, like 20 years later, my mum still says how lucky I was to get away." —messy_fishy 16."I was probably in first grade or so. We had a punching bag in the basement of the house, and I was enjoying playing with it. Eventually, it got to be bedtime, and being 6 years old, I was protesting. I told my parents that [classroom jerk] had threatened to beat me up, and I had to learn how to protect myself. I didn't know how seriously my parents would take that threat." "They called off work and met with the principal first thing. I was always a good kid, and the other kid always got in trouble, so they took my word for it, gave him detention, rearranged the classroom seating arrangement, and instituted a buddy system for me for recess and lunchtime. All because I wanted to stay up an extra fifteen minutes." —thetroublebaker finally, "Was dating a girl who loved chocolate. She offered me some one day, and I humorously replied that I couldn't because I was allergic. She immediately ran to tell her mother, and the fun joke turned into three years of turning down chocolate that I so desperately craved. Not because I loved it that much, but because now I couldn't have it or the jig would be up. Time went on, and I felt more and more pressure that I couldn't come forward." "The anxiety was real. Really real. I would sometimes leave my girlfriend's house and immediately stop and get a chocolate bar on my way back to my parents' house. After 3 damn years of that, finally, I was exhausted of the lie and nearly broke down in tears in front of my girlfriend. I came clean. We're expecting our third baby in a few months. 18 years of marriage so far, and many more to come. 😘 Love ya, honey." —ohnomynono I think we all probably have a story like these, so if you're up for it, share yours in the comments below or via this anonymous form:

25 "Poor Person" Habits That Are Useful For Everybody
25 "Poor Person" Habits That Are Useful For Everybody

Buzz Feed

time4 hours ago

  • Buzz Feed

25 "Poor Person" Habits That Are Useful For Everybody

Recently, Reddit user FitCicada5037 took to the popular Ask Reddit page to ask, "What is a 'poor people' habit you'll never stop doing, no matter how rich you get?" and people had some seriously great answers. I want to see how relatable these are; so, here are some of the best: "Squeezing every last drop of toothpaste out of the tube." "The first step before any non-staple purchase is an argument from myself as to why it isn't necessary." "Leftover nuts and bolts (and other hardware/fasteners/tools) from new furniture kits, old broken appliances, etc. go to the garage so I can use them in 15 years." "Using grocery bags as trash bags." "Checking the clearance section at clothing stores first. Sometimes I find great things for really cheap. Also, wait for the highest possible percentage off on a going-out-of-business sale." "I'm never going to waste food if I can help it. The fact that people casually throw away half of a meal is crazy to me, especially when it's at a restaurant where they paid a $100+ bill." "Using every single last drop of any products and eating all my food. Lotion? I am cutting open the tube. Shrimp shells? soup time." "Checking the calendar for the two months with three paychecks! Though this only works if you're paid every other week." "Turning lights off when I leave the room." "Reusing containers, especially glass jars, for any kind of storage needs. Buttons, pens, coins, plant cuttings? They're all going in repurposed jars!" "I pick up any coins found on the ground. The penny jar is going strong." "I grew up with no money and now even though I have enough, I still really love eating my povvo meals: instant ramen with an egg, vegemite toast with that might just be childhood nostalgia." "Toast with butter, sugar, and cinnamon." "Buying meat when it goes on sale, portioning it into useful amounts, and then freezing it for later." "Putting a grocery bag in the bathroom trashcan as a liner." "Borrowing from the library." "Wearing shirts that still fit me, even several years later." "Making my own coffee." "Wearing a jumper instead of putting on the heating." "Current household income is over $200k, and we're still hand-washing our Ziploc bags clean." "Taking public transport." "Searching for a promo code before each online purchase." "Cutting my own grass. I enjoy it and it's therapeutic for me. I'll only stop when I physically can't." "Making my lunch for work. It's healthier, cheaper, and it must look good because I often get complimented, but it's seen as a poor person habit." And finally: "I'm never giving up peanut butter and jelly." So, what'd you think? Any habits of your own you want to share? Leave all your opinions and examples in the comments!

Mom Refuses to Let Daughter Sleep Over at In-Laws' House. But They Don't Take ‘No' for an Answer
Mom Refuses to Let Daughter Sleep Over at In-Laws' House. But They Don't Take ‘No' for an Answer

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Mom Refuses to Let Daughter Sleep Over at In-Laws' House. But They Don't Take ‘No' for an Answer

A mother on Reddit is wondering if she's wrong for not letting her in-laws have overnight sleepovers with her 5-year-old daughter Though she's insistent that it's not allowed, partly because they're struggling to get their daughter on a good sleep schedule, her in-laws keep asking Commenters on Reddit pointed out that this could be a red flag for more concerning behaviorA mother on Reddit is wondering if she's in the wrong for continuously denying her in-laws' request to have her 5-year-old daughter over for sleepovers. The mom took to Reddit's r/AmIOverreacting forum to explain the situation, noting that she and her husband "have been together almost 20 years" and welcomed their first child five years ago. "Since basically day one, my in-laws (but specifically FIL) have asked to have sleep overs with her," the mother explains in the post. "FIL is a step parent to my husband so already a bit removed for a grandparent sleepover in my opinion," she continues. "They moved their entire lives to be closer to us after our daughter was born which I initially loved. But they have no sense of boundaries and can be a lot." The decision to deny her in-laws the right to a sleepover isn't just out of concern for her daughter's well-being. The poster explains that her daughter has had issues adjusting to a sleep schedule, and she's worried about throwing it off by allowing sleepovers. "My partner and I are on the same page that we have spent a lot of time on getting her into a good sleep routine but it's not great," she writes. "We'd rather stick with her schedule and let her spend as much time as she wants with them basically." Despite the couple's firm stance, her in-laws "won't leave me alone about the sleepovers." "They stopped asking my husband 'because he said no' yet continue to hound me," she shares. "Am I crazy for thinking it's weird af for adults to be asking/demanding a sleepover with my child?" Regardless of her in-laws' insistence, she clarifies that she's "firmly in the 'no sleepovers for anyone' camp," regardless of family relation. "I'm going to keep her safe first and foremost. But they also make me feel like an a-hole so I guess I'm checking myself." The comments on the post are squarely on the mother's side, with many pointing out that her in-laws' repeated requests to get her daughter alone could be a sign of something more sinister. "When it comes to abuse, the clearest red flag is inisistence and/or manipulation to get alone with a child," one user cautions in the comments. "That is quite often the only red flag you get." Even if the worst-case scenario isn't true, other commenters pointed out that the continued asking is still an indicator that their boundaries won't be respected. "Well I can speak from my experience, my mother is exactly like this. It wasn't abusive in a worst-case scenario, but her insistence on sleep overs and everything happening at their house is because she does not like to be told what to do," another commenter shares. "She does not respect what we say." Read the original article on People

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