DIY PB

I Made Peanut Butter

A few weeks ago Laura Careless talked about making her own peanut butter. As someone who worships at the altar of the peanut in buttery form I had to try this. So today, having written off doing anything interesting due to a touch of the knackeredness, I gave it a go. The results, shown above, are very satisfactory. Here’s how you do it.

Throw a bunch of peanuts in a bowl or similar vessel.

Add some olive oil. Laura suggests 2tbsp per 200g of peanuts. Who am I to argue?

Blend the fucker til it looks like peanut butter should look like. You may find you need to cover the bowl for the first bit to stop the peanuts flying about the room.

And that’s it! If you buy your peanuts in 200g bags (as I did today given this was an experiment) then it’s not much cheaper than by the jar, but I suspect a catering bag of nuts would slash the cost a lot. And, as Laura says, you can experiment with variations on the peanut butter theme. Hmm…

7 Comments on “DIY PB”


  1. 1 Shona

    “Blend the fucker til it looks like peanut butter should look like. You may find you need to cover the bowl for the first bit to stop the peanuts flying about the room.”

    I think that culinary blogging is something you should consider doing more often. From the above, I see the potential for you to carve out another niche blog through a refreshingly honest approach to cooking. Had me in bits! :)

  2. 2 Marv

    I very much enjoy your cooking posts too. I liked the one about ratatouille which ended: ‘I don’t like ratatouille much anyway’.

  3. 3 little old me

    bloody doors game as drove me mad, I have been playing ages and can’t get the second door on level three open to save my life.

  4. 4 Antonio

    It looks… odd…

  5. 5 jim

    I suppose you could blend jam, honey or what not into it. I try this!

  6. 6 Trav28

    I wonder what variations of oil would be like, ie sesame and the like. Looks fab!

  7. 7 Jez

    Go easy on your blender or it will surely die. Even then world’s classiest handblender (which yours doesn’t look like) should only be run for about five minutes before being allowed to cool down. They’re also mainly designed for squishy watery things like soup, not thick gloopy things like peanut butter.

    A long time ago I actually owned a peanut butter making machine. (No, I didn’t buy it, I was given it by a well-off stupid person who’d bought it before they realised they didn’t actually like peanut butter very much.) It made splendid peanut butter. It burned out in under a year.

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