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A New View of Peanuts

Peanuts and Diabetes - Eating Peanuts and African Recipes

Peanuts have been a cocktail or bar snack for decades, and are often referred to as almost a joke, as in “that’s worth peanuts.”

Turned into a smooth sandwich spread, peanuts have long been a school-lunch panacea for fussy kids.

But for ages, health- and diet-conscious adults have avoided peanuts because of their high-fat content. Fortunately, we have since learned that peanuts contain many health benefits.

Peanuts contain healthful monounsaturated fat, which does not raise cholesterol levels, as well as a health-protective phytochemical called resveratrol, which helps protect us against serious chronic health problems like cancer and heart disease. Finally, peanuts are beginning to get respect.

Eating peanuts as a snack is easy, but stopping at the recommended handful (an ounce to one and one-half ounces) is challenging for most of us.

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One way of avoiding mindless snacking on peanuts is to use them as a garnish a sprinkling of chopped peanuts on salads, for example or using them as one more ingredient to add to stir-fries.

Cooking with peanuts is another easy way to enjoy them without overdoing the quantity. In Asian cooking, a peanut-based sauce is frequently used for noodles or entrées.

You can expand your culinary peanut repertoire with the following African dish. Peanut butter enhances the flavor of its spicy tomato sauce and adds creamy texture.

African dishes have lots of heat, but feel free to modify or even omit the chile pepper.

African Chicken Stew

More from our magazine:  Hazelnut Biscotti
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Makes 4 servings.

Ingredients

Directions

  1. Place the chicken in a 1-quart resealable plastic bag. Combine the garlic, ginger, oregano, and broth in a small bowl. Add the seasoning mixture to the bag and massage it to coat the chicken with the seasonings. Marinate in the refrigerator for 6 hours to overnight.
  2. Coat a large Dutch oven with cooking spray and set it over medium-high heat. Sear the chicken pieces until they are white on all sides, about 5 minutes. Transfer them to a plate and set aside.
  3. Coat the pot again with cooking spray. Sauté the sliced onion until limp, 5 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add the tomatoes with half their liquid, the chile pepper and ketchup. Bring to a boil, reduce the heat and simmer the sauce 10 minutes, breaking up the tomatoes with a wooden spoon.
  4. Blend the peanut butter in the remaining tomato juice until smooth. Add it to the pot. Return the chicken to the pot. Simmer until the chicken is white in the center, about 15 minutes. Serve, accompanied by cooked brown rice.

Nutritional Information Per Serving (1/4 of recipe):
341 calories, 11 g. total fat (2 g. saturated fat), 25 g. carbohydrate, 33 g. protein, 5 g. dietary fiber, 563 mg. sodium

Diabetic Exchanges: 4 Medium-Fat Meat, 2 Vegetable

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