Lumpy? Seriously, I can't imagine you do. You will need to remove the shells.
To make peanut butter remove the nuts from their shells, and add them to a blender and chop. Then add a few tablespoons of vegetable oil and blend until desired texture
Peanut butter is made by simply grinding up 'peanuts'. Peanuts are the fruit (a pea) of the peanut plant which occur in a pod on the end of a long shoot which pushes itself underground for the peanut to develop (hence groundnut which is another name for a peanut).
An infinite number of things. Ex peanut butter, peanut oils used in cooking many foods, peanuts in candy bars, peanut sauces in Asian and Indian foods. Really it is limitless.
Reese' are chocolate shells with peanut butter in the middle. You can buy them at some grocery stores for only about 90 cents.
Yes, you can put peanut shells in compost. Peanut shells are a good source of carbon and will break down over time to enrich the compost with nutrients.
Yes, you can compost peanut shells. Peanut shells are a good source of carbon for composting and will break down over time to create nutrient-rich compost for your garden.
Once the peanuts have been harvested, there are brought into the factories where the workers clean and then organise the nuts in order of size. They are then put into the peanut cases which are then glued shut. The peanuts which do not fit into the cases are sent off and are used in things such as peanut butter.
Peanut shells can take up to two years to decompose in the environment.
Yes, peanut shells are biodegradable, meaning they can be broken down by natural processes in the environment over time.
Peanut shells can take up to two years to decompose fully, depending on environmental conditions.
Well, this is a new one on me. The government sets purity standards for foodstuffs, and the inclusion of a certain amount of "foreign matter" is permissible as long as it poses no actual health hazard, under the grounds that it's pretty much impossible to make something absolutely pure at an affordable price. That said... it's hard to imagine how pig hairs could get into a peanut butter cup. Rodent hairs in chocolate, sure; peanut shells or insect parts in peanut butter, okay; pig hairs in bacon, maybe; pig hairs in chocolate or peanut butter, though, is a bizarre combination. They certainly aren't intentionally included, if that's what you were asking.
yes