Who invented chunky peanut butter




















He launched the Lambert Food Company, selling nut butter and the mills to make it, seeding countless other peanut butter businesses. As manufacturing scaled up, prices came down. By World War I, U. Manufacturers sold tubs of peanut butter to local grocers, and advised them to stir frequently with a wooden paddle, according to Andrew Smith, a food historian. Without regular effort, the oil would separate out and spoil. This more stable spread could be shipped across the country, stocked in warehouses and left on shelves, clearing the way for the national brands we all know today.

Today, more than half the American peanut crop goes into the making of peanut butter, but surprisingly, the majority of peanut butter consumed in the United States is imported.

Federal law mandates that any product labeled as peanut butter must contain at least 90 percent peanuts, with the remaining 10 percent restricted to salt, sweeteners, and stabilizers. In , statistics showed Americans alone consumed million pounds of peanut butter or 3. An American-born favorite, peanut butter quickly became not only a nutritious food, but also a comfort food for most Americans born in the 's.

Now its popularity has spread throughout the world. October is Peanut Butter Lover's Month. Looks more like paint than peanut butter. Louis, Missouri, patented a peanut-butter-making machine. In , chemist Joseph Rosefield invented a process for making smooth peanut butter that kept the oil from separating by using partially hydrogenated oil.

In he licensed his invention to the company that created Peter Pan peanut butter. And in he began producing his own peanut butter under the name Skippy. News U. Politics Joe Biden Congress Extremism. Special Projects Highline. HuffPost Personal Video Horoscopes. Follow Us. Terms Privacy Policy. Altogether, the agricultural scientist came up with hundreds of peanut products before his death in , though many of them are novelty items that are more easily made from other substances.

It helps that his life story was already being described in mythological terms while he was still alive. While he didn't invent peanut butter, Carver still deserves kudos for the attention and aid he brought to the peanut industry as it was still expanding, particularly at a time when the contributions of African Americans were often overlooked. The African American agricultural scientist invented more than products from the peanut plant. The botanist and inventor was unlikely friends with some of the 20th century's most iconic men.

Dodging roadblock after roadblock, the "peanut man" was determined to leave a lasting legacy. Physical strength and courage made him a battlefield hero, but the Founding Father also impressed with his moral convictions and political instincts. The determination that fueled the first female African American aviator contributed to her demise at age The self-made scholar promoted "Negro History Week" as part of efforts to embed Black studies into the American education system.



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