Peanut butter is junk food, isn't it?
emergencytennis
Posts: 864 Member
I see all these posts from North America listing peanut butter as a healthy, calorie-dense food.
I reckon some is. In Australia, **** Smith and Sanitarium is peanutty, and correspondingly expensive. The cheaper brands are cut with palm oil or bad transfats, and counts as junk food to me - high calories for not many nutrients.
Is all the peanut butter in the US the good kind? Or is most junk food?
Edit Ah haha, the common diminutive for the name "Richard", as used by one of Australia's most successful entrepreneurs, is banned.
I reckon some is. In Australia, **** Smith and Sanitarium is peanutty, and correspondingly expensive. The cheaper brands are cut with palm oil or bad transfats, and counts as junk food to me - high calories for not many nutrients.
Is all the peanut butter in the US the good kind? Or is most junk food?
Edit Ah haha, the common diminutive for the name "Richard", as used by one of Australia's most successful entrepreneurs, is banned.
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Replies
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In the USA, typical budget peanut butter is mostly peanuts and sugar. No trans fats, and just enough (<2%) hydrogenated oil to give it a smooth texture.0
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Peanuts are plentiful and relatively cheap in the US. Most commercial peanut butters here are (mostly) just peanuts, salt, and/or sugar. However, unless you buy the "all natural" varieties, most of them have a little bit of hydrogenated oils (no trans fats, though) added so you don't have to stir.0
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All peanut butter is relatively high calorie.
Probably not the best idea except in extreme moderation when trying to lose, but its one of the better mass calories sources when bulking (fair amount of protein).0 -
I eat a tbsp or two a day and have lost 28 pounds since 1/14/13. I find it helps satisfy my sweet cravings.0
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In the USA, typical budget peanut butter is mostly peanuts and sugar. No trans fats, and just enough (<2%) hydrogenated oil to give it a smooth texture.Peanuts are plentiful and relatively cheap in the US. Most commercial peanut butters here are (mostly) just peanuts, salt, and/or sugar. However, unless you buy the "all natural" varieties, most of them have a little bit of hydrogenated oils (no trans fats, though) added so you don't have to stir.
Unfortunately both of these statements are incorrect. Though the trans fat is listed as 0 on the nutrition facts label, if there are partially hydrogenated oils in the ingredients, the peanut butter DOES have trans fat. There is a loophole in the labeling law that allows for a serving size of less than half a gram of trans fat to be listed as 0. It's a lie, but one that makes uninformed consumers much, much more likely to buy the product.0 -
To respond to the OP, "natural" peanut butter, which should contain only peanuts and (if you want) salt, is becoming more and more common in the US. It's a little pricier, but well worth it. IMO peanut butter doesn't need and shouldn't have sugar, and it certainly shouldn't have partially hydrogenated oils.0
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I eat pb almost daily...i think I workout just to "earn" it. LOL Well, that and bacon.0
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Thanks for the replies.
What I hear through my prejudice is
Peanut butter has salt, sugar and extra fats added, some of which are dangerous, unless you pay extra for the one that is healthy.
It is like supermarket baked beans - miracle food, if you could get some without the sugar and salt.
I am not a health food freak, but I am unfamiliar with the idea that peanut butter is a calorie-dense health food comparable to avocado or eggs.0 -
Thanks for the replies.
What I hear through my prejudice is
Peanut butter has salt, sugar and extra fats added, some of which are dangerous, unless you pay extra for the one that is healthy.
It is like supermarket baked beans - miracle food, if you could get some without the sugar and salt.
I am not a health food freak, but I am unfamiliar with the idea that peanut butter is a calorie-dense health food comparable to avocado or eggs.
As I mentioned on the other concurrent PB thread (http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/991009-peanut-butter), you can just make your own by food processing raw peanuts. Goodbye to any ingredient worries from the store-bought varieties that do indeed contains loads of questionable and unnecessary crap. This reduces your question to whether or not peanuts are junk food (and I don't think they are in any way).0 -
Though the trans fat is listed as 0 on the nutrition facts label, if there are partially hydrogenated oils in the ingredients, the peanut butter DOES have trans fat. There is a loophole in the labeling law that allows for a serving size of less than half a gram of trans fat to be listed as 0.0
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Ta, vampire, but I am not dissing peanuts or any other nut (healthy), but processed peanut butter.0
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Thanks for the replies.
What I hear through my prejudice is
Peanut butter has salt, sugar and extra fats added, some of which are dangerous, unless you pay extra for the one that is healthy.
It is like supermarket baked beans - miracle food, if you could get some without the sugar and salt.
I am not a health food freak, but I am unfamiliar with the idea that peanut butter is a calorie-dense health food comparable to avocado or eggs.
As I mentioned on the other concurrent PB thread (http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/991009-peanut-butter), you can just make your own by food processing raw peanuts. Goodbye to any ingredient worries from the store-bought varieties that do indeed contains loads of questionable and unnecessary crap. This reduces your question to whether or not peanuts are junk food (and I don't think they are in any way).
This. ^^^0 -
To respond to the OP, "natural" peanut butter, which should contain only peanuts and (if you want) salt, is becoming more and more common in the US. It's a little pricier, but well worth it. IMO peanut butter doesn't need and shouldn't have sugar, and it certainly shouldn't have partially hydrogenated oils.
This.0 -
I don't care if people say its "junk" or not..
its delicious, a great source of protein/carbs/fats and I get LOADS of energy from it!!
So Peanut Butter me ALL DAY!0 -
totally agree and I've lost 21 lbs. so far.0
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It's a calorie dense food because nuts have a lot of fat. You need dietary fat. If you're worried about the trans just by natty pb.0
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I eat a tbsp or two a day and have lost 28 pounds since 1/14/13. I find it helps satisfy my sweet cravings.
Nope! Just get natural ingredients and it's sooo good, and a good source of healthy fats
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I love peanut butter! I think the key is moderation.
What about **** Clark or **** Van *kitten*?
Nope.0 -
I wouldn't think of eating anything but natural peanut butter, so if I talk about eating peanut butter, I mean the kind without added sugar or fat. IMO the kind with sugar and/or partially hydrogenated oil IS junk food.
eta: Sadly, a lot of the peanut butters labeled "natural" don't fit my eating plan. I guess I'm using natural in the wrong context. I mean that I eat peanut butter that only contains peanuts and maybe salt.0 -
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In the USA, typical budget peanut butter is mostly peanuts and sugar. No trans fats, and just enough (<2%) hydrogenated oil to give it a smooth texture.Peanuts are plentiful and relatively cheap in the US. Most commercial peanut butters here are (mostly) just peanuts, salt, and/or sugar. However, unless you buy the "all natural" varieties, most of them have a little bit of hydrogenated oils (no trans fats, though) added so you don't have to stir.
Unfortunately both of these statements are incorrect. Though the trans fat is listed as 0 on the nutrition facts label, if there are partially hydrogenated oils in the ingredients, the peanut butter DOES have trans fat. There is a loophole in the labeling law that allows for a serving size of less than half a gram of trans fat to be listed as 0. It's a lie, but one that makes uninformed consumers much, much more likely to buy the product.
That's not a loophole, that's just math.0 -
PB is ambrosia....*drool*0
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To the OP....in the US D i c k is a profanity. I think it's interesting how profanity is different among cultures.....you might have already known though.0
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I buy Smucker's Natural No Salt Added peanut butter. Ingredients: Peanuts
Best **** ever - but kind of addictive, like crack, only it's good for you.0 -
I haven't purchased peanut butter in ages. We have a friend who makes the most amazing peanut butter, it's actually rather spicey and amazing, whenever we go to Haiti we come back with jars of it (that and Haitian vanilla - holy delicious). Have you tried making it yourself?0
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I don't understand why some people are against PB...maybe if it's a trigger for you, then I understand, but I never saw it as junk food......I eat PB&J and I've lost plenty of weight. If you're really worried about the calories..use 1 T (90cals) instead of 2 T, get low sugar jelly(10cal), and low calorie wheat bread(70 cal for two slices).. boom my pb&j sammich is 170 calories and I use it as a snack sometimes.0
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Actually in the USA peanut butter, can legally only contain 90% peanuts and like 4-5 approved additives, salt, peanut oil, honey dextrose and not more than 55% fat
if it contains anything else it must be labeled "Spread"
http://www.fda.gov/AboutFDA/WhatWeDo/History/ProductRegulation/ucm132911.htm
is it "health food" yes, based on single or minimal additional ingredients and a lack of unrecognizable additives.
is it low calorie, no.
is it good for you , yes, mostly...0 -
NO0
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Most peanut butters I see are full of sugar, molasses, palm oil or other oil, and of course salt. I choose one that is merely peanuts and a little salt.0
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I don't understand why some people are against PB...
Some peanut butter is loaded with sugar0
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