It's clearly too much to expect kb's grandson to "get" these types of problem from a single example. All the same, the ability to spot that this is, in terms of set up, the same as the previous sweet problem, is a key skill, and one worth developing. To my mind, at least, it isn't developed by having somebody lay out the separate solutions, especially without some amount of input from the student. Where did it become unclear how to solve? Was it, for example, when we were asked about the yellow sweets, rather than the red? Was it somewhere later, when the heavier algebra got harder to work through? Or anywhere in between?
I'd dearly love to have this kind of input. It's a similar question to what prudie's asking, I suppose: *how* are our answers proving useful?