Everyday blends of nuts, seeds, and fruits simple, satisfying, and ready to enjoy anywhere.

A green ribbon on a nut gift tray reads differently than a red one. Green is naturally quieter and works across more contexts without signaling a specific holiday. Spring birthdays, St. Patrick's Day, Earth Day gestures, housewarmings into a garden, corporate gifts where red would feel too festive, and general year-round gifting all land better with a green ribbon than a holiday-red one.
Our Mixed Nuts Gift Tray with Green Ribbon is built around that idea. A round 4-section tray holding four premium nut varieties, wrapped in a decorative green ribbon, presented in a sturdy cardboard gift box. Hand-packed at our Monroe, NY facility, kosher certified, ready to gift with no wrapping required.
What's Inside
Four nut varieties, each in its own compartment so flavors stay distinct:
Whole roasted almonds
Honey-glazed peanuts
Roasted cashews
Whole roasted pistachios
Total weight lands between 12 and 16 oz depending on variety fill. The mix runs 3 savory roasted to 1 honey-glazed sweet. Almonds, cashews, and pistachios cover the classic savory nut trio; honey-glazed peanuts are the sweet accent.
Same contents as our red-ribbon version of this tray. The difference is purely presentation: green ribbon works better for certain occasions and aesthetic preferences, red ribbon works better for others. The internal nut quality and roast standard are identical across both.
The Sectional Tray and Green Ribbon
The tray is a round 4-section format, transparent enough that the color contrast between nuts shows through the ribbon. Each variety sits in its own compartment so flavors stay distinct during shipping. The ribbon wraps the tray before the outer box closes, so when the recipient opens the cardboard, the first thing they see is the ribbon-wrapped presentation underneath.
Green as a ribbon color signals spring freshness, natural aesthetics, and non-holiday gifting. Where red and gold carry heavy holiday or Valentine's association, green reads cleaner for contexts where you don't want the gift to feel seasonal.
Who This Is For
Spring gifters pick this one a lot. Mother's Day, Father's Day, spring birthdays, graduation. A red ribbon in May just doesn't land the same way, and a green one stays appropriate from April through July without reading as holiday leftover.
For St. Patrick's Day, this is the subtle option. You get a direct tie to the holiday without putting shamrocks on the wrapping or leaning into novelty territory. If you're sending something to coworkers or clients on March 17 and want it to be an adult gesture rather than a party prop, green ribbon does the work for you.
A lot of our corporate buyers pick green over red for a reason most people don't think about: their clients and partners get stacks of gifts in December, and a red-ribbon anything disappears into the pile. Green stands out in Q4 and doesn't feel out of season the other eight months of the year. Works for B2B accounts you gift quarterly, industries where red reads too consumer-y, or any account relationship where you want your gift to get noticed.
Housewarmings and garden-themed gifts are a natural fit. The green ribbon plays well with plant-filled homes, garden enthusiasts, and anyone whose aesthetic runs earthy.
For year-round thank-you gifts and small gestures that aren't tied to a calendar event, this keeps the presentation clean and non-seasonal. You're not accidentally signaling Christmas in July.
Environmental or sustainability-themed moments work too. Earth Day, an eco-focused work event, a gift to someone in conservation or green-building work — green ribbon carries the association without anyone having to explain it.
How This Compares to Our Other Ribbon Variants
We offer this 4-section tray in multiple ribbon colors because different occasions call for different presentations. The red ribbon version works for Valentine's Day, Christmas, anniversary, and general celebratory gifting. The green ribbon version works for spring, St. Patrick's, year-round, and neutral professional gifting. Same contents, same tray, different vibe.
Choose based on the occasion rather than treating the color as arbitrary. The ribbon color is the main way the recipient reads the gift's intent before they open it.
Dietary and Allergen Notes
kosher certified. Contains tree nuts (almonds, cashews, pistachios) and peanuts. Not suitable for anyone with a peanut or tree nut allergy. Honey-glazed peanuts include added sugar. Other varieties are lightly salted. Check individual packaging inside the tray for specifics.
What's Included with Every Order
Round 4-section sectional tray, 12 to 16 oz total nut weight
4 nut varieties (almonds, honey-glazed peanuts, cashews, pistachios)
Green decorative ribbon wrapping the tray
Sturdy cardboard gift box, ship-ready
kosher certification
Hand-packed in Monroe, NY
Health Benefits of the Four-Variety Nut Assortment
Heart Health: How All Four Varieties Support Cardiovascular Function ▾
- Almonds, cashews, and pistachios are all predominantly monounsaturated fatty acid sources, carrying oleic acid as their primary fat. Oleic acid is the same fat that defines olive oil's cardiovascular reputation. Clinical research on tree nut consumption consistently links this fat type to measurable reductions in LDL cholesterol, improved endothelial function, and lower systemic inflammation. A 2019 meta-analysis in Nutrients reviewing 19 randomized controlled trials found that regular tree nut consumption significantly reduced total cholesterol and LDL levels across all studies reviewed.
- Peanuts, though technically legumes, carry a fat and nutrient profile nearly identical to tree nuts. Their monounsaturated fat content, phytosterol load, and resveratrol content (a polyphenol also found in red wine) contribute to cardiovascular protection through independent mechanisms. Phytosterols in peanuts compete with dietary cholesterol for gut absorption, measurably reducing the amount that enters the bloodstream. The honey-glazed peanuts in this tray add a sweet element while preserving the underlying cardiovascular benefit of the peanut itself.
- Pistachios have been studied specifically for blood pressure effects. A 2012 meta-analysis published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that pistachio consumption reduced both systolic and diastolic blood pressure in controlled trials. The potassium content in pistachios supports blood pressure regulation directly through its effect on sodium excretion in the kidneys.
Almonds: The Most Fiber and Protein-Dense Nut in the Tray ▾
- Almonds provide 6 grams of protein and 3.5 grams of dietary fiber per ounce, the highest values of both among common tree nuts. The fiber is primarily insoluble, from the intact fibrous cell walls of the nut, which slows gastric emptying, extends fullness for 2 to 3 hours, and supports gut motility. The protein activates satiety hormone release, including cholecystokinin (CCK), which signals fullness to the brain independently of caloric content.
- Almonds are also the richest whole-food source of vitamin E among common nuts, providing approximately 7.3mg per ounce, which is nearly half the daily value from a single snack serving. Vitamin E integrates into cell membrane phospholipid bilayers and scavenges lipid radicals at the site of oxidative damage, protecting neurons, skin cells, and cardiovascular tissue from the lipid peroxidation that underlies chronic disease progression.
- USDA-funded research has also documented an incomplete calorie absorption effect in almonds. Because of the intact fibrous cell walls, approximately 20% fewer calories are absorbed from whole almonds than the nutrition label states. This means 164 label calories from almonds function as roughly 130 absorbed calories in practice, making almonds one of the most satiating calorie-for-calorie snacks available.
Cashews: Magnesium, Copper, and Stress Response Support ▾
- Cashews provide approximately 73% of the daily value for magnesium per ounce, one of the richest whole-food magnesium sources in any grocery aisle. Magnesium is involved in over 300 enzymatic reactions including ATP synthesis, insulin receptor activation, and cortisol regulation through the HPA axis. It is also required for serotonin synthesis from tryptophan, the neurotransmitter pathway that directly affects mood and sleep quality. Most American adults consume less magnesium than the daily recommended intake, and cashews are one of the most efficient dietary corrections available.
- Cashews also provide approximately 38% of the daily copper value per ounce. Copper is required for lysyl oxidase, the enzyme that crosslinks collagen and elastin in connective tissue and bone matrix. It is also a cofactor in the synthesis of dopamine and norepinephrine, the neurotransmitters that regulate focus, motivation, and executive function. Getting 38% of the daily value from a snack serving is a nutritionally efficient contribution most people do not achieve from other common foods.
Pistachios: Behavioral Portion Control and Carotenoid Antioxidants ▾
- Pistachios are among the lowest-calorie tree nuts at approximately 159 calories per ounce while providing 6 grams of protein, the same protein level as almonds. Their smaller individual size means a 1 oz serving contains approximately 49 nuts, the highest count of any tree nut per standard serving. That count matters psychologically: a larger number of individual pieces produces greater perceived satiety than a smaller count of higher-calorie nuts at the same total calorie load.
- Pistachios are the only major tree nut to provide meaningful amounts of lutein and zeaxanthin, carotenoid antioxidants that accumulate in the macula of the eye and are associated with reduced risk of age-related macular degeneration. These compounds are not found in almonds, cashews, or peanuts at comparable levels. A 2021 randomized trial found that daily pistachio consumption significantly increased macular pigment optical density in adults, a direct measure of eye-protective carotenoid status.
- Pistachios also have the most favorable arginine-to-lysine ratio of any common tree nut, a factor studied for its potential role in nitric oxide production and vascular health. Higher arginine availability supports endothelial nitric oxide synthesis, which relaxes blood vessels and supports healthy blood pressure. This mechanism is separate from the MUFA-driven cholesterol effect and adds an additional cardiovascular dimension specific to pistachios.
Honey-Glazed Peanuts: Protein, Folate, and Resveratrol ▾
- Peanuts are technically legumes but carry a nutritional profile nearly identical to tree nuts: high in monounsaturated fat, protein-dense at 7 grams per ounce, and rich in niacin (vitamin B3) at approximately 22% of the daily value per serving. Niacin is required for NAD and NADP synthesis, the coenzymes involved in hundreds of metabolic reactions including energy production, DNA repair, and cell signaling. Getting 22% of daily niacin from a snack-sized serving is significant.
- Peanuts also contain resveratrol, the polyphenol compound associated with cardiovascular protection in red wine research. The resveratrol in peanuts activates sirtuin proteins involved in cellular stress resistance and longevity signaling. Peanuts are one of the few non-grape, non-berry food sources that deliver resveratrol at a meaningful dietary level. The honey glaze adds approximately 3 to 5 grams of added sugar per serving, which is the honest trade-off: the sweet coating improves palatability but does add to the total sugar load.
- Peanuts are also among the highest folate-containing foods in the nut and seed category, providing approximately 27 mcg per ounce, about 7% of the daily value. Folate is required for DNA synthesis and repair, amino acid metabolism, and is the nutrient most critical in early pregnancy for neural tube development. For the general adult population, adequate folate intake supports cardiovascular health through its role in homocysteine regulation.
Weight Management: Why Four Nuts Work Better Than One ▾
- Long-term population studies consistently show that regular nut eaters have lower BMIs and smaller waistlines than people who avoid nuts, despite nuts being calorie-dense. The mechanisms are well-documented: satiety hormones triggered by protein and fat, incomplete calorie absorption from intact cell walls, and a mild thermogenic effect from digesting high-protein foods. A systematic review in Obesity Reviews (Nishi et al., 2021) examining prospective cohorts and randomized controlled trials concluded that tree nut and peanut consumption does not contribute to weight gain and may support weight management.
- The four-compartment sectional format of this tray also serves portion control practically. Each section holds one variety, making it easy for the recipient to take a serving from a single compartment rather than combining everything at once. The visual separation naturally slows consumption and helps people track how much of each variety they have eaten, which is a behavioral advantage over a mixed-together bulk bag where individual variety intake is invisible.
Blood Sugar Stability Across Three of the Four Varieties ▾
- Almonds, cashews, and pistachios all have glycemic index values near zero and produce minimal post-meal blood sugar response. Their fat, protein, and fiber profile slows gastric emptying and blunts glucose absorption. For anyone managing blood sugar through diet, these three varieties are among the most compatible snacks available in the nut category.
- The honey-glazed peanuts carry approximately 3 to 5 grams of added sugar per serving from the glaze, which raises the glycemic load of that specific compartment compared to the plain roasted varieties. Eating honey-glazed peanuts alongside the plain roasted almonds, cashews, or pistachios from adjacent compartments moderates the blood sugar effect of the glaze through the fat and fiber in the unsweetened varieties. The sectional format makes this pairing practical without requiring any deliberate effort.
Antioxidant Coverage Across All Four Varieties ▾
- Each of the four varieties delivers distinct antioxidant compounds that do not overlap significantly. Almonds provide gamma-tocopherol (vitamin E), which protects cell membranes from lipid peroxidation. Pistachios provide lutein, zeaxanthin, and anthocyanins concentrated in their green-purple skin. Cashews provide proanthocyanidins and anacardic acid with demonstrated free-radical-neutralizing activity. Peanuts provide p-coumaric acid and resveratrol, polyphenols associated with anti-inflammatory and cellular stress-protection pathways.
- Consuming a mix of these four varieties across a single tray means the recipient gets antioxidant coverage from four non-overlapping chemical families simultaneously. No single nut covers all of these pathways. The combination produces broader protection against the oxidative stress implicated in cardiovascular disease, neurodegeneration, and cellular aging than any one variety alone could provide.
Bone and Connective Tissue Support from the Tray ▾
- Almonds provide the highest calcium content of any tree nut at approximately 8% of the daily value per ounce. Cashews provide 38% DV copper per ounce, required for lysyl oxidase activity and collagen crosslinking in bone and connective tissue. Without adequate copper, absorbed calcium cannot be incorporated into properly structured bone matrix regardless of how much calcium is consumed. Peanuts contribute manganese, which supports cartilage formation and bone mineral density through separate enzymatic pathways from calcium.
- The magnesium in cashews also contributes directly to bone health. Approximately half of the body's total magnesium is stored in bone tissue, where it plays a structural role in the hydroxyapatite crystal lattice and helps regulate calcium flux in and out of bone cells. Adequate dietary magnesium is one of the most commonly overlooked factors in bone mineral density, particularly in adults over 50 where magnesium absorption efficiency declines.
Why a Four-Variety Tray Is a Better Gift Than a Single-Variety Bag ▾
- A single-variety bag of mixed nuts satisfies one craving and repeats it until the recipient tires of it. A four-variety sectional tray gives the recipient genuine choice at every snack moment across multiple days or weeks. They can rotate based on what they are eating, what they feel like, or what pairs with what they are drinking. That range is what makes the gift last and stay interesting rather than becoming repetitive after the second serving.
- The four varieties also deliver broader nutritional coverage than any single nut can provide. The combination of vitamin E from almonds, magnesium and copper from cashews, lutein and zeaxanthin from pistachios, and resveratrol and folate from peanuts covers cardiovascular, neurological, visual, skeletal, and metabolic health through independent mechanisms simultaneously. A gift that tastes good across multiple sittings and delivers genuine health value is a more complete choice than one that does either of those things alone.
Nutrition Facts and What They Actually Mean
This tray contains four varieties across four separate compartments. Each variety has a distinct nutritional profile. The table below shows per-ounce values for each variety individually so the recipient knows exactly what they are eating from each compartment. Values are based on USDA FoodData Central data. For precise batch values, check the individual packaging inside the tray.
| Nutrient | Per 1 oz | %DV |
|---|---|---|
| Calories | 165 | -- |
| Total Fat | 14g | 18% |
| Saturated Fat | 1.5g | 8% |
| Trans Fat | 0g | 0% |
| Cholesterol | 0mg | 0% |
| Sodium | 98mg | 4% |
| Total Carbohydrate | 8g | 3% |
| Dietary Fiber | 2.5g | 9% |
| Total Sugars | 3g | -- |
| Added Sugars | 2g | 4% |
| Protein | 6g | 12% |
| Vitamin E | 3.5mg | 23% |
| Magnesium | 55mg | 13% |
| Copper | 0.4mg | 44% |
| Phosphorus | 140mg | 11% |
| Zinc | 1mg | 9% |
| Iron | 1.2mg | 7% |
| Potassium | 220mg | 5% |
| Calcium | 35mg | 3% |
Frequently Asked Questions
We’re More Than Just Snacks
Everyday blends of nuts, seeds, and fruits simple, satisfying, and ready to enjoy anywhere.
Beautiful assortments made to delight perfect for birthdays, holidays, & heartfelt thank yous.
Pure and certified organic — clean, natural ingredients for mindful snacking.
Limited-edition assortments inspired by every season and celebration.
Chocolates, brittles, and confections that turn any snack break into a special moment.
Protein-packed combinations of nuts, seeds, and fruits crafted for energy and wellness.
Thoughtful boxes filled with joy and flavor — send care to friends, family, or colleagues.
Elegant, customizable boxes designed to impress teams, clients, and partners.