fischersd
Meh
- Joined
- May 24, 2021
- Posts
- 1,943
It might be due to the oil that's added? Many of our modern cooking oils are bleached, or hexane (paint thinner) is used in the separation process. Cold pressed oils are more expensive - so rarely used in mass production unless they explicitly state so on the label.Anyone know why regular store bought peanut butter is supposed to be worse than roasted peanuts? It’s relatively high in protein, which I’ve become focused on lately. Btw, because of its protein, I may switch back to skim milk from almond milk, anyway…
Not “special healthy” peanut butter, just average grocery brand peanut butter? I have both peanut butter and peanuts, and they have practically the same specs. Maybe there was a time when peanut butter was made with trans fats?
Peanut butter 2 Tbs: Calories: 180, Total Fat: 15g, Saturated fat: 2g, Trans fat: 0g, Cholesterol: 0mn, Sodium: 150mg, Carbohydrates: 7g, Fiber: 2g, Sugar 4g, Protein: 7g.
Roasted, salted Peanuts 1 once: Calories 170, Total Fat 15g, Saturated fat 2.5g, Trans fat: 0g, Cholesterol: 0mg, Sodium 95mg, Carbohydrates: 4g Fiber 3g, Sugar: 1g, Protein: 8g.
Both Skippy as well as our Kraft peanut butter up here have Sugar and Hydrogenated Vegetable Oil (Cottonseed, Soybean, and Rapeseed Oil) in them.
People should also be on the lookout for Lecithin. That's the chaff that's left after they extract the oil. If it just says lecithin, then it's likely soy lecithin - which is prone to having unhealthy levels of hexane remnants. Sunflower lecithin is usually from a cold press process.