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Peanut butter

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Peanut butter is a food product usually consisting of roasted and ground peanuts, sometimes sweetened. It is commonly sold in grocery stores, but can be made at home. Many styles are available; the most popular are creamy (smooth) and crunchy, but honey-roasted or wholenut varieties can also be found. Creamy peanut butter is made by grinding all of the mixture very finely. The crunchier styles add larger pieces of peanut back into the creamy mixture after grinding.

Used in sandwiches (particularly the classic peanut butter and jelly sandwich), candy (for example Reese's Pieces), cookies and pastry, it is a good source of protein, and is popular with children. For people with nut allergies, the intense concentration of nuts in peanut butter can cause fatal anaphylactic shock. The peanut plant is susceptible to the ground mold which produces aflatoxin, and contamination in peanut butter is possible.

History

In 1890, George A. Bayle Jr., began to sell ground peanut paste as a protein substitute for people with no or bad teeth. In 1893, Dr. John Harvey Kellogg originated an early variety of peanut butter at the Battle Creek Sanitarium in Battle Creek, Michigan. Kellogg, along with his brother, W.K. Kellogg, patented a process for making peanut butter in 1895, but it used steamed peanuts rather than roasted peanuts. Contrary to popular belief, the renowned botanist, George Washington Carver had no hand in inventing this food in addition to the numerous uses for the legume he developed. Peanut butter was widely introduced in 1904 by C.H. Sumner at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition (Saint Louis World's Fair) which also popularized the ice cream cone, hot dog and hamburger.

In 1922, Joseph L. Rosefield developed modern peanut butter by using finer grinding, hydrogenation and a way to keep the oil from separating. This created a creamy texture unlike the earlier peanut butter described as gritty, or pasty. He received a patent for stable peanut butter which had a shelf-life of up to a year. Swift & Company adopted the technology for their E.K Pond peanut butter which they had introduced two years earlier. In 1928 they changed the name to "Peter Pan". Peter Pan was originally packaged in a tin can similiar with a turn key and re-closable lid but switched to glass during World War II. In 1932, Rosefield left and formed his own company selling "Skippy" peanut butter.

Peanut butter became a very profitable business in the United States. Currently, the best-selling American brand is Jif, a Procter & Gamble product first sold in 1958. The oldest surviving brand is Krema peanut butter, first sold in 1908.

Peanut butter also makes a superior mouse trap bait to cheese. Not only do mice prefer it to cheese, but its sticky texture reduces the mouse's ability to steal the bait and not get caught.

In 2002, an intentionally irreverent pseudo-scientific paper was published establishing that "Peanut Butter has no effect on the rotation of the Earth". (See also Ig Nobel Prize)

See also

External links