Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton on Monday waded into one of America’s most-divisive public debates—pumpkin spice lattes: pro or con—leaving the matter no less settled when she was done.

“Hillary,” asked a Facebook user during an online Q&A, “are you a pumpkin spice latte kind of gal?”

“I used to be until I saw how many calories are in them,” the candidate responded. That answer, perhaps predictably, led to a flurry of responses that hit notes ranging from appreciative to quizzical and angry. One reader politely offered pumpkin advice—“just eat the seeds ma’am they’re good for you”—to the former secretary of state.

Getty Images

Read:Hillary Clinton’s anti-pumpkin-spice stance may be out of sync with America

Is the “PSL” a problem worthy of presidential attention? Perhaps not, though Clinton also addressed more serious questions about health insurance, paid family leave and campus sexual assault, among others. And, as online nutritional information from Starbucks SBUX, +0.07% —the company that has become virtually synonymous for the drink—shows, it’s not even the most fat-packed drink on the menu.

A Starbucks Pumpkin Spice Latte—espresso, milk, whipped cream and other flavorings—with 2% milk runs from 5 grams of fat (and 240 calories and 38 grams of carbohydrates) in the 12-ounce size, to 9 grams of fat (and 400 calories and 64 grams of carbohydrates) in the 20-ounze size. The large size is good for 25% of your recommended daily fat intake, according to the company.

Read: Six ways to profit from Hillary Clinton’s $132 billion tweet

But it’s possible to do a good bit worse by those measures, especially if you end up choosing the White Chocolate Mocha—espresso with white chocolate sauce, steamed milk and whipped cream—with 2% milk.

That beverage brings 9 grams of fat, 300 calories and 46 grams of carbohydrates to the 12-ounce version—and 15 grams of fat, 500 calories and 76 grams of carbohydrates to the 20-ouncer. The latter size, the company says, is be good for 34% of your recommended daily fat.

It goes without saying, perhaps, but nobody’s making anyone consume these—certainly not repeatedly, though the PSL’s seasonal nature may make some people more enthusiastic consumers while it’s available. And modifications like nonfat milk and “hold the whipped cream” would also lighten the load.

And there’s always black coffee.