Ingredients & portions
Base (1 serving)
- Roasted peanuts, unsalted: 2 tbsp (≈ 16–18 g) (~1 small handful)
- Fresh fruit (choose one): ¾–1 cup sliced apple, pear, papaya, banana, or berries
- Optional: ½ tsp roasted cumin or cinnamon for dusting
- Optional soft swap: peanut butter (unsalted, no added sugar): 1 tbsp
Scale for 2 servings: double fruit, keep peanuts at 2–3 tbsp total if watching calories.
What to buy
- Dry-roasted, unsalted peanuts (or roast at home).
- Fruit that’s easy to chew and not overripe-slippery.
- For spreads: natural peanut butter, no added sugar or hydrogenated oil.
Roasting methods
Air fryer
- Preheat to 160–170°C.
- Add raw peanuts in a single layer; cook 6–9 min, shake halfway.
- Cool completely; store airtight. Add spices after cooling.
Skillet (dry roast)
- Warm a heavy pan on low–medium.
- Roast peanuts 8–12 min, stirring often till fragrant/lightly browned.
- Cool fully before storing; dust with cumin/cinnamon if desired.
Oven
- Preheat to 170°C. Spread peanuts on a tray.
- Bake 10–14 min, stirring once. Watch edges.
- Cool completely; store airtight up to 2 weeks.
Best fruit pairings
- Apple or pear wedges + cinnamon dust
- Papaya cubes + squeeze of lime
- Banana slices (smaller portion for diabetes)
- Mixed berries (strawberry/blueberry)
- Orange segments (if not sensitive to acid)
Soft-texture alternatives
- Peanut butter 1 tbsp spread on soft apple/pear slices
- Fruit + peanut powder sprinkle
- Fruit + yogurt + crushed peanuts (fine chop)
For dentures or chewing trouble, choose softer fruit and finely chop or grind peanuts.
Swaps by condition
Diabetes (Type 2)
- Keep peanuts at 2 tbsp; choose lower-GI fruit (berries, apple, pear).
- Pair with plain yogurt/curd for extra protein.
- Banana/orange portions smaller; eat slowly and monitor response.
Heart & BP
- Use unsalted peanuts; avoid fried or honey-coated options.
- Flavor with cinnamon/cumin instead of salt.
- Mind portions (calorie-dense); combine with high-fiber fruit.
CKD (Kidney)
- Peanuts have potassium & phosphorus—stick to 1–2 tbsp if restricted.
- Pick lower-potassium fruits (apples, berries) if advised.
- Discuss nut frequency with your renal dietitian.
Reflux (GERD)
- Choose non-acidic fruit (banana, papaya, ripe pear).
- Keep portions moderate; avoid eating right before bed.
- Skip spicy dustings; use mild cinnamon only if tolerated.
Safety & choking prevention
- Allergy: Avoid if you have any peanut allergy (or unclear history). Do not “test” at home.
- Choking risk: If you have dentures, swallowing issues, or Parkinson’s—finely chop or use peanut butter. Sit upright; take small bites; sip water.
- Salt & sugar coatings: Skip salted, candied, or masala-coated nuts.
Nutrition snapshot (per serving, approx.)
| Nutrient | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Calories | 210–260 kcal | 2 tbsp peanuts + ~1 cup fruit |
| Carbohydrate | 20–28 g | Varies by fruit choice |
| Protein | 7–9 g | From peanuts; add yogurt to increase |
| Fat | 12–15 g | Mostly unsaturated |
| Fiber | 4–7 g | Higher with berries/pear |
| Sodium | <40 mg | Unsalted nuts |
| Potassium | 250–450 mg | Choose apples/berries to lower |
Estimates only; brands and fruit type/size vary. Follow your clinician/dietitian guidance.
Quick answers (FAQ)
Are peanuts good daily?
In small portions (2 tbsp), unsalted peanuts can fit many plans. Rotate with other nuts/seeds for variety.
Peanut butter vs whole peanuts?
Both work. Peanut butter may be easier to chew/swallow. Choose unsalted, no-sugar-added jars.
Best time to have this snack?
Mid-morning or mid-afternoon. For diabetes, spacing snacks evenly helps; pair with protein (yogurt/curd).
Storage tips?
Keep roasted peanuts in an airtight jar in a cool, dark place for up to 2 weeks. Refrigerate in warm weather.
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