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FiberglassRV > Around the Campfire > Food and Recipes
Gina D.
I HATE stale dry roasted peanuts! But just try and buy a small jar of them... no such thing anymore. Subsequently, I end up throwing half of them away because they don't get eaten before they go stale.

I didn't know this, but I bet the rest of the world did..

Nuke em! I was advised by someone to put them on a paper plate or towel and zap em for 30 seconds.. it works! Just as fresh as when the jar is first opened.

Placing them in the oven for a short period of time will do it.. re-roasting, so to speak.
Donna D.
I love peanuts! When I buy a jar it never sits around long enough to get stale.

Never-the-less this is good to know... bet it works on the less popular nuts I may buy 53.gif
Raya L.
Wait, you mean those jars aren't single serving?

Whoopsie! cool.gif
Gina D.
I have to limit my intake because of the "C" word... (Cholesterol) so eating the whole jar at once isn't a smart option.

I could do it easily tho!
Donna D.
Umm Gina... peanuts are VERY high in fat, but have ZERO Cholesterol. I eat the Unsalted Dry Roasted Peanuts from Planters so I don't have to worry about sodium either.

Of course the 24 oz jar I'm staring at says Servings Per Container about 24... I'm thinking like Raya.... hahahahaha, that equals 24 handfuls all for me in my book.
Bobbie Mayer
Putting on my chemist's hat...

You can zap many stale foods and make them taste better, especially bread. Microwaves break the hydrogen bonds that form in stale foods. Microwave energy does nothing to remove substances that form that result in bad tastes, though, such as molds.

HOWEVER...it is not a good idea to eat old peanuts even if you can make them taste good. Peanuts can have a mold on them that produces aflatoxin, which causes cancer. Its recommended that you not store peanuts too long (or corn or grain products unless you can store them in the freezer or another very dry place.)

Buy smaller amounts, eat them fresh, or store them in the freezer.

Bobbie

Bobbie Mayer
PS, I don't know if you can get these molds on roasted peanuts... they may be safer. But I would check it out before eating them.
Jeanne and Steve
Thanks for the interesting and somewhat alarming info Bobbie... Time to clean out my pantry!

Jeanne
Raya L.
I always have slight second thoughts when I eat peanuts or peanut butter because of aflatoxins. That said, I don't know enough about them. I do try to buy freshly ground peanut butter at the co-op, but I don't know if the preservatives in pre-made peanut butter ward off the aflatoxins or what...

One of those things I should find out more about.
Bobbie Mayer
The fungus won't grow in peanut butter- it has to have been on the peanuts already. So if the peanuts are good, you are safe with old peanut butter. It WILL grow on peanuts but I did read that roasting is believed to make them safer.

Raya L.
Thanks, Bobbie,

So I guess the trick is to be able to ascertain whether or not the peanuts used to make the peanut butter were fresh or not.

Do you know if the aflatoxins are visible, or detectable in any way that you could practicably use in, say, a grocery store? (For example, when they have the peanuts there along with a grinder so you can grind your own peanut butter.)

Raya
james kent
I was going to mention buying the amount that you want from a Bulk Food store, But, with all this scary talk, I don't know how long the stuff has been in that bin. Wouldn't nuking it in the Micro wave kill any bad stuff anyways?
Bobbie Mayer
Obviously you'd want to avoid rotten peanuts, but otherwise, no, you can't tell. If the aflatoxins are already there, roasting doesn't destroy them, but it may keep the fungus from growing on the peanuts.

Supposedly Consumer Union did a study.

QUOTE
A few years ago, Consumers Union looked into the question of aflatoxins in peanut butter and found that the amounts detectable varied from brand to brand. The lowest amounts were found in the big supermarket brands such as Peter Pan, Jif and Skippy. The highest levels were found in peanut butter ground fresh in health food stores.


from http://www.drweil.com/drw/u/id/QAA115491 so second-hand info to me.

That would make sense to me, though, because big peanut butter makers probably have standard methods of storing and know they will get tested on occasion.
Raya L.
Thanks again for the info, Bobbie. It's something I'd always felt I should check into, but hadn't.
Gina D.
Donna, the "Nutritionists" they made me go to had peanuts at the top of their list of things NOT to consume, I just assumed they contributed to the C problem. Heart problems run in my family. My grandfather and father both died relatively young of massive heart attacks.. and my uncle has had a triple bypass.

Great Bobbie.. you have shot down one of the few little vices left to me! Thanks a BUNCH! I can't smoke, I don't drink much, my drug days are over.. I suppose you are going to tell me coffee is going to kill me too! Ugh!

I only eat Planters dry roasteds.. and rarely do I find any jars under 1lb. As salty as they are, I might eat 1/2 cup at a sitting, and I sometimes mix them in with popcorn, but chuck the jar after about two weeks.. 1/2 full.

sigh.
Lizbeth
Gina, I say eat your peanuts and enjoy. They ain't kilt you yet!

I only take peanuts camping, Eric and friends will eat a whole jar in one sitting. A handful or two is all I want. I get the low salt Planters.
Frederick L. Simson
QUOTE (Gina D. @ Sep 20 2009, 10:41 PM) *
I only eat Planters dry roasteds.. and rarely do I find any jars under 1lb.

Convenience stores sell peanuts in single serving bags...
Gina D.
not planters.. or I should say, its very rare to run into them anymore.

BIG BIG BIG... thats the world today.
David Craig
I tried it today for pistacios, having seen your solution for peanuts, and it worked great. You know, they always leave them out in a bin at the store where the humidity can get to them, so 2-3 minutes in the microwave makes them nice and crunchy again.
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