I mean carbs in the bread, proteins and fat in the peanut butter. Use wholemeal bread for fibers.

Or are proportions off compared to recommendations?

  • @BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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    4428 days ago

    Define “balanced meal”.

    My general answer would be no. Bread is a pretty simple carb, and you’re looking at 200+ calories from 2 slices of bread, all simple carbs. The glycemic response from that would be: not good.

    At least the fat in peanut butter will reduce the glycemic load.

    And then most peanut butter has added sugars unless you specifically buy peanut butter without sugar.

    • @whereisk@lemmy.world
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      2128 days ago

      More than that, most peanut butter has a lot of hydrogenated vegetable fats which are likely much worse than a bit of sugar.

      If the package doesn’t have a tablespoon of peanut oil or so pooling at the top when you first open it, that you then need to mix it in, it’s hydrogenated.

      • folkrav
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        2328 days ago

        Raw/natural PB tastes so much better anyways. I can’t buy anything else since I’ve tasted it.

      • @howrar@lemmy.ca
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        28 days ago

        You can also check the ingredients. It should have exactly one ingredient, and that’s peanuts. Maybe salt too.

      • @Krudler@lemmy.world
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        28 days ago

        Don’t forget that the valuable peanut oil is separated hydraulically which fractures the peanut meal, and then they add back cheaper soybean oil.

        (Side note: That’s why it separates, and that’s why even organic peanut butter separates, it’s because it’s been hydraulically fractured)

        In my opinion, the only peanut butter that is worth a damn is fresh crushed from unsalted roasted peanuts.

    • @Muscar@discuss.online
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      828 days ago

      It will never stop being disturbing that there’s sugar in peanut butter in the US. If I didn’t know it was true I’d think it was a joke. Outside the US peanut butter is just peanuts and salt, that’s it.

      • @QuizzaciousOtter@lemm.ee
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        427 days ago

        In my experience it’s usually just peanuts. That’s the only kind I buy. You can find it with sugar and / or salt but that’s a minority.

        It really is weird how US has to ruin every kind of food to make it more unhealthy. All this while not having a real healthcare too.

      • @jqubed@lemmy.world
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        127 days ago

        It’s not nearly as much sugar added as I expected. Jif, which seems to be the most popular brand, has 2 grams of added sugar in a 33 gram serving, for a total of 3 grams of sugar (peanuts seem to naturally produce some sugar). Comparing that to Costco’s Kirkland Select natural peanut butter, which only has peanuts and salt for ingredients, a 32 gram serving has 1 gram of total sugar. So the total sugar Jif adds is twice as much as would naturally be present, but still makes up only 6% of the serving. It’s sweeter, but not dramatically sweeter. It’s not like it’s been turned into Nutella, which has 19 grams of added sugar in a 37 gram serving, or 51% of the serving.

      • @Hugh_Jeggs@lemm.ee
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        127 days ago

        The bread has about three times as much sugar in it too

        So basically to answer OP’s question -

        No. That’s dessert 😂

    • @bionicjoey@lemmy.ca
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      728 days ago

      What nutritional goals are you assuming? Not everyone is trying to minimize caloric intake. Personally I need to make sure I actually eat enough in a day due to appetite curbing effects from my neurodivergence and medication. PB&J is in my experience the highest calories for cost and effort. It’s dirt cheap, almost effortless to make, and has a decent number of calories.

    • classic
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      428 days ago

      I make a peanut butter concoction subbing a whole grain like spelt for the bread and using pb that is just peanuts. Would that be considered any better?