Hella expensive cookie, bro. Could buy a lot of cookies for a tenner over here, but you'd still end up with change.
If I may be numismatistical, for a moment, until a couple of days ago when I spent some of them I could have paid for £20-worth of goods with the ten largest coins in my pocket. And that's just the largest of the commonly-circulated coins. A few years back I also accepted a £5 coin (the Diana commemoration one) in change, and I bought (for that aforementioned tenner!) the Dome's version of the Millenium £5 coin when I went there[1], just because. They are more expensive, these days, but I probably would have been better investing the money in more standard markets. Well, maybe not, given all the booms and busts since.
If it hasn't already been said, Simmura's "you can put into anything but zero piles" explanation
trivially fails when you try and put them into two-and-a-half piles (even though we know there's four whole coins in each, with the "half a pile" having half of that). But that's not actually an argument that having solved the non-integer number piles issue you can handle null piles.
[1] Yes, I went there. Depending on which press reports you believed, I was one of the few people who bothered. Only on the day I went there were far too many people in there to be able to see any of it...