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By Food52
Mamba (Spicy Haitian Peanut Butter)
In the States, there are generally two peanut butter camps: sweetened, so it’s satiney like frosting, and unsweetened, so the natural oils slop and splash. In Haiti, there’s another camp— spicy!—and it’s called mamba (the Creole word for peanut butter) and usually eaten with toast or cassava crackers. f you add some brown sugar and kosher salt, you’ll have a mamba that jelly can get excited about (try it paired with apricot). Or try it in banana smoothies, nut butter cups, seedy granola, crisscross cookies, and ice cream. I love mamba as a way to offset sweetness. But it’s just as good in savory contexts, anywhere you would use natural peanut butter or tahini. Think sesame noodles, peanut stew, even hummus or snack mix. Featured in: The Spicy-Hot Peanut Butter Your PB&J is Longing For,
Updated at: Mon, 09 Dec 2024 08:52:26 GMT
Nutrition balance score
Great
Glycemic Index
25
Low
Glycemic Load
24
High
Nutrition per serving
Calories2808.6 kcal (140%)
Total Fat239.4 g (342%)
Carbs96.4 g (37%)
Sugars42.5 g (47%)
Protein118 g (236%)
Sodium1950.2 mg (98%)
Fiber39.5 g (141%)
% Daily Values based on a 2,000 calorie diet
Ingredients
1 servings
Instructions
View on Food52
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