Key Takeaways
- Good peanut butter starts with good groundnuts — graded and screened for moisture and aflatoxin before anything else.
- The core process is simple but precise: roast, blanch, grind, blend/stabilise, quality-test, then pack.
- Smooth vs crunchy is just the last step — chopped peanut pieces are added back after the final grind.
- A stabiliser is what stops the oil separating; natural peanut butter skips it, so it separates and needs a stir.
- At Insight Food Private Limited, we manufacture peanut butter in a BRCGS & USDA-Organic certified facility, so every batch stays consistent and food-safe.
Peanut butter looks simple — but turning raw groundnuts into a smooth, shelf-stable, food-safe spread is a precise, multi-stage manufacturing process. This guide walks through every stage of the peanut butter manufacturing process, the quality controls that keep it safe, and what separates an industrial, export-grade line from a home blender.
What is peanut butter made of?
At its core, peanut butter is simply roasted groundnuts ground into a paste. Commercial peanut butter may also include a small amount of salt, a sweetener, and a stabiliser (such as fully hydrogenated vegetable oil or palm oil) to stop the natural oil from separating. A clean-label or natural peanut butter keeps the ingredient list to just peanuts — and sometimes salt. The quality of the finished spread is decided long before grinding: it starts with the groundnut itself.
The peanut butter manufacturing process, step by step
1. Sourcing & grading the groundnuts
Manufacturing begins with sourcing the right variety of groundnut (peanut) — typically Java, Bold or runner types depending on the flavour and oil profile required. Incoming lots are graded for size, moisture and damage, and screened for aflatoxin, a naturally occurring mycotoxin that food-safety standards strictly limit. Only lots that pass are accepted into production.
2. Roasting
The cleaned peanuts are dry-roasted, usually between 160–180 °C. Roasting develops the characteristic flavour and colour through the Maillard reaction and reduces moisture. Roast time and temperature are tightly controlled — under-roasting leaves a raw, beany note, while over-roasting turns the paste bitter and dark.
3. Cooling & blanching (de-skinning)
Roasted nuts are rapidly cooled, then blanched to remove the thin red skins and the heart (germ), which can add bitterness. De-skinning gives a cleaner colour and smoother mouthfeel in the final product.
4. Grinding & milling
The blanched peanuts are ground — generally in two stages. A first coarse grind creates a base paste; a second fine grind (often in a colloid or stone mill) reduces particle size to the target smoothness. The friction heats the paste and releases the natural peanut oil, which is what gives peanut butter its creamy, spreadable texture. For crunchy peanut butter, a portion of chopped peanut pieces is metered back in after milling.
5. Blending & stabilising
Salt, sweetener and (for conventional, non-separating products) a stabiliser are blended in. The mix is then cooled in a controlled way — for stabilised peanut butter, careful crystallisation locks the oil in place so the jar doesn’t separate on the shelf. Natural peanut butter skips the stabiliser, which is why its oil rises to the top.
6. Quality testing
Before filling, batches are checked for moisture, particle size, texture, flavour, colour and food-safety parameters (including aflatoxin and microbiological limits). Metal detection and, on modern lines, X-ray inspection guard against foreign bodies.
7. Filling & packaging
The finished peanut butter is hot-filled into jars, pails, drums or bulk aseptic packs, sealed, labelled, date-coded and cased. Export orders are typically packed to the buyer’s specification — retail jars for private-label brands, or 5–20 kg pails and bulk drums for industrial users.
Peanut butter manufacturing process at a glance
| Stage | What happens | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Sourcing & grading | Select variety, screen for moisture & aflatoxin | Food safety & flavour baseline |
| Roasting | Dry-roast at 160–180 °C | Develops flavour & colour |
| Blanching | Remove skins & germ | Cleaner colour, less bitterness |
| Grinding | Two-stage milling to target texture | Smoothness & spreadability |
| Blending/stabilising | Add salt/sweetener/stabiliser, controlled cooling | Shelf stability, no oil separation |
| QA testing | Texture, flavour, aflatoxin, micro, metal/X-ray | Safety & consistency |
| Packaging | Jars, pails, drums, bulk | Retail or industrial supply |
Smooth vs crunchy: what’s the difference?
The base process is identical. Smooth peanut butter is milled to a uniform fine paste; crunchy peanut butter has chopped peanut pieces added back after the final grind. Texture, particle size and the ratio of pieces are all controllable on an industrial line, which is why a contract manufacturer can match a brand’s exact specification.
Quality & food-safety controls in commercial production
This is where industrial peanut butter manufacturing differs most from making it at home. A certified facility operates under a documented food-safety management system — for example BRCGS and HACCP — with controls for allergen management, traceability, aflatoxin testing, metal detection and hygienic design. For organic peanut butter, a USDA Organic chain of custody keeps certified organic groundnuts segregated from conventional stock. These systems are what let a manufacturer supply retailers and export buyers with confidence.
Industrial vs home-made peanut butter
At home you can roast and grind peanuts into a rough paste in minutes. What a home blender can’t replicate is consistency batch-to-batch, controlled particle size, validated shelf life, allergen and aflatoxin control, and the packaging formats that retail and export supply chains require. That gap — repeatable quality at scale, backed by certifications — is the core of commercial manufacturing.
At Insight Food Private Limited, we manufacture peanut butter and nut butters in a BRCGS & USDA-Organic certified facility in Deesa, Gujarat — for retail private-label brands and bulk/export buyers worldwide.
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Frequently asked questions
u003cstrongu003eHow is peanut butter made step by step?u003c/strongu003e
Peanuts are sourced and graded, dry-roasted at 160–180 °C, blanched to remove skins, ground in two stages into a paste, blended with salt/sweetener and (optionally) a stabiliser, quality-tested for safety and texture, then filled and packed.
u003cstrongu003eWhat is added to commercial peanut butter?u003c/strongu003e
Beyond peanuts, commercial peanut butter may contain a little salt, a sweetener, and a stabiliser to prevent oil separation. Natural and clean-label products limit this to just peanuts (and sometimes salt).
u003cstrongu003eWhy does natural peanut butter separate?u003c/strongu003e
Natural peanut butter has no stabiliser, so the natural peanut oil rises to the top over time. Stir it back in before use. Stabilised peanut butter stays uniform on the shelf.
u003cstrongu003eHow is crunchy peanut butter made?u003c/strongu003e
It follows the same process as smooth peanut butter, but chopped peanut pieces are metered back into the paste after the final grind to create the crunchy texture.
u003cstrongu003eWhat certifications should a peanut butter manufacturer have?u003c/strongu003e
Look for a documented food-safety system such as BRCGS and HACCP, allergen and aflatoxin control, and — for organic lines — USDA Organic certification with a segregated chain of custody.










