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Hello! During late June, July and some of August, I'm working on a paid project sponsored by the National Trust to review and enhance coverage of NT sites. You can find the pilot edits here, as well as a statement and contact details for the National Trust. I am leaving this message when I make a first edit to a page; please do get in touch if you have any concerns. Lajmmoore (talk) 08:53, 29 July 2022 (UTC)[reply]
There is an American made spread that is made under the name Bovrite. Due to US import laws, Bovril cannot be imported, so this product is for, largely, the UK expat market. Thoughts on sourced inclusion? Surv1v4l1st ╠Talk║Contribs╣ 02:40, 17 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]
The article seems to regard Bovril only historically. Bovril is still available to buy and consume today and available from many supermarket web-sites. Its nutritional statistics and points of interest of the nutritional data would probably be of interest to many.
Of particular note is its protein content. Each teaspoon (making 1 cup of drink) has around 5g animal protein for example, which is very high. Typical modern commercial (milk-based) protein shakes today have 20g, so 4 teaspoons of bovril would compete with modern drinks.
Never heard it called that. Is there a reference? 2A01:4B00:F642:E200:6CF3:DC80:7573:2F64 (talk) 15:55, 9 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]