A Nut in Name Only
Despite its English name and nutlike taste, the peanut is not a nut. This mighty legume is grown around the world for a variety of uses including human consumption, oil production, and animal feed. It also plays an important role in crop rotation due to the nitrogen-fixing bacteria in its root nodules. The taxonomic name of the cultivated peanut, Arachis hypogaea–hypo meaning under and gaea meaning earth–reflects this tropical plant’s ingenious means of reproduction: its aerial flowers undergo fertilization above the ground and burrow into the soil to bear their fruit.
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While the largest peanut-producing nations are now China, India, Nigeria, and the United States, the plant was first cultivated by Andean civilizations in South America.1 Its migration around the world altered global food production and supply forever, rendering it one of the most successful of New World plants disseminated via the Columbian Exchange. More than just a food source, the peanut has been a protagonist in histories of global trade, slavery, and colonization and has come to be imbued with rich cultural meanings.
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The Origins of Peanut Cultivation, Consumption, and Use
The peanut is one of many species of the genus Arachis with a native range spanning modern-day northern Argentina, Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay, and part of Brazil. More specifically, the peanut is a natural hyrbid of two wild species that originated in what is now Bolivia 10,000 years ago.2 The exact period of peanut cultivation by Andean civilizations is unclear but domesticated peanut remains have been dated back more than 7,000 years.3 The high protein content of the peanut made it an important calorie-dense feature of the Andean diet.
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In addition to being an important food source, peanuts were also a prestigious item for societal elites, and held symbolic and religious significance in pre-colonial Peru. The Moche civilization immortalized peanuts in metalwork and on ritual and funerary ceramics, and associated them with death, agricultural production, and fertility, in part because of the peanut’s subterranean growth process.4 They were also used in competitive events and as a ceremonial offering. The high status of peanuts is perhaps best immortalized in an elaborate gold and silver necklace from the royal tombs at Sipán where the warrior-priest leaders of the Moche were buried.5
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Mestizo chronicler Inca Garcilaso de la Vega (1539–1616) documented the presence of peanuts in colonial Peru. Born there and educated in Spain, de la Vega drew on direct experience and knowledge of Incan culture shared through his matrilineal relatives to offer a unique perspective on Inca cuisine. In his 1609 history of the Inca civilization, the author records peanuts–ynchic–being eaten toasted and, in combination with honey, used to make a kind of nougat. He notes peanuts cause a headache when eaten raw and that peanut oil can be extracted and used to cure many illnesses.6
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Peanuts gradually spread from Peru to Mesoamerica via Indigenous trade networks by the 1500s. In the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan, the location of present-day Mexico City, the peanut was known as tlalcacahuatl from the words tlalli (earth) and cacahuatl (cacao), giving rise to one of the Spanish words for peanut, cacahuate/cacahuete. This suggests that Nahuatl-speaking people may have been the first humans to combine these two now-ubiquitous flavors.7
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The Nahua also valued the peanut for its healing properties. Nahua methods of preparing and using the plant to treat illness are recorded in the codex Historia general de las cosas de Nueva España (General History of the Things of New Spain), completed in 1577. Compiled by the Spanish Friar Bernardino de Sahagún (1499–1590), in collaboration with Indigenous authors and artists, the twelve-volume codex provides a comprehensive account of Nahua culture, society, and natural history. Book Eleven describes the peanut, identified as tlalacacahuatl in Nahuatl, as a root that can be ground up into water and given to those with a fever, allowing them to expel the ailment through their urine.8
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Out of the Americas
The Spanish first encountered peanuts in the late fifteenth century on Hispaniola, the largest island of the West Indies, where they were called maní in the Indigenous Taíno language. Maní remains the predominant name in Latin America today, having been adopted into Spanish. Diverging from the appreciation of peanuts by many Indigenous societies, Spanish chronicler Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés (1478–1557) linked their consumption on Hispaniola to people of low social standing who were not “true Christians.”9 Because the Spanish associated peanuts with Hispaniola as well as the continental Americas, there was confusion about the plant’s origins until the nineteenth century, when peanut remains found in a pre-colonial tomb in Peru helped establish its origins in South America.10
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Spanish galleons transported peanuts westward from the Americas to China, the Philippines, and the Pacific Islands throughout the sixteenth century. Simultaneously, the Portuguese, who encountered the legume in Brazil around 1500, transported peanuts around the world to Portuguese enclaves on the west coast of Africa. From there, it spread across the continent. The peanut was often used as sustenance for enslaved peoples as it could be stored for long periods of time and its hard outer shell helped protect it from spoilage.11 From Africa, the peanut traveled to Portuguese enclaves in India and eventually to China.
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The first mention of peanuts in a Chinese text dates to 1503, a mere decade after Christopher Columbus’ “discovery” of the Americas. The manuscript describes boiled or cooked peanuts as “delicious” and gives the origin of its Chinese name 落花生 luo hua sheng (commonly now just 花生 hua sheng), literally “born from a fallen flower,” which references how the peanut fruits below ground.12 Historical records related to Changshu county indicate that peanuts were cultivated there as early as 1538.13 Cultivation expanded to Guangdong by the seventeenth century and in the following century, to the Guangdong delta and Taiwan.
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In China, peanuts were a luxury food served at banquets and out of reach for many until the nineteenth century. The peanut came to be imbued with cultural meanings as well, as shown in this Qing Dynasty agate carving depicting a pair of peanuts alongside red dates. The carving is a play on words: the characters for red date (枣, zao) and peanut (生, sheng), are homophones for the first two characters of the auspicious greeting 早生贵子 zao sheng gui zi, an encouragement for newlywed couples to soon have children.
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African Diaspora Culture
Peanuts’ journey north from South America was circuitous—in fact, they were introduced to North America through Africa, crossing the Atlantic in the hulls of slave ships. This history is embedded in the language of peanuts—the common moniker “goober” entered American English from nguba in Kimbundu, a language spoken in Angola; “pinder,” another term for peanuts in the American South, derives from mpinda in the Kongo language.14 The adoption of these loanwords by colonial English speakers in plantation societies evidences the ingenuity and exploitation of enslaved Africans: they grew peanuts in their food plots and their knowledge of cultivation methods was in turn appropriated by slaveholders along with African names for the plant.15
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Mass Consumption: Peanuts as American Staple
In the early 1800s, peanuts were planted by communities of enslaved persons and were otherwise used as feed for livestock in the southern United States. It was during the Civil War that they became more widely popular among southern whites. Southerners turned to peanuts in the face of wartime food shortages, and the crop’s military utility was exploited as peanut oil replaced embargoed northern whale oil as machinery lubricant.16 The popularity of peanuts at the time is commemorated in “Goober Peas,” a folk song sung by Confederate soldiers. The lyrics and music are humorously attributed to “A. Pinder” and “P. Nut,” both puns on the peanut’s name.
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After the war, spurred on by advances in agricultural technology, the use of peanut spread throughout the country. Instrumental to this was George Washington Carver (c.1864–1943), the pioneering Black agricultural scientist who devoted much of his career to popularizing the crop in the South. Carver, who was born into slavery in Missouri and taught at the Tuskegee Institute during his scientific career, sought to promote crops that could be planted as an alternative to cotton. Carver proposed the cultivation of peanuts as a means to rectify the widespread nutrient depletion and erosion in southern soils caused by the monoculture of cotton. As nitrogen-fixing legumes, peanuts could return nutrients to the soil as part of a crop rotation that would boost the yield of future cotton plantings.
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An influential Black public figure during the age of segregation, Carver promoted peanut production on a local and a national scale.17 In 1922, he testified before Congress on behalf of peanut farmers for establishing protections for domestic peanuts against rising Chinese imports. He also invented a number of uses for peanuts, including products made from peanut oil. And a 1916 Tuskegee Institute report authored by Carver illustrates his creativity in devising 105 recipes for peanut-based foods.18 Peanuts were now associated with culinary innovation and agricultural advancement—and their star was still on the rise.
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Peanut Butter: A Distinctly North American Foodstuff
Peanut production in the United States increased with the advent and popularization of peanut butter in North America.19 While George Washington Carver is sometimes credited with the invention of peanut butter, U.S. patents for “peanut paste” and “nut butter” began to appear in the late nineteenth century. They included recipes calling for roasting and shelling the peanuts, and then grinding the nuts until they congeal into a paste, with salt and oil as optional additions. At first a tea-time delicacy, peanut butter was marketed as a protein-packed meat replacement during the food rationing of World War I, and its utility as a cheap energy source made it ubiquitous during the Great Depression.
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Throughout the first half of the twentieth century, a series of relentless American ad campaigns marketed peanut butter as suitable for all kinds of dishes, from peanut butter sandwiches and chocolate-peanut candies to savory roasts and soups. The American Empire shaped the peanut-related foodways of its colonies as well, including the Philippines.20 And the peanut is comparatively prevalent in Germany due to the historical and contemporary presence of American troops.
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Selling Peanuts in Public Spaces
A characteristic feature in the history and contemporary life of peanuts is their presence in public spaces. The peanut vendor sells peanuts: roasted or boiled, shelled or de-shelled, in street carts or on the roadside, in cones of newspaper or in paper bags. It is a global practice with similarities and differences specific to geographic and temporal context. Indeed, journalist Jori Lewis has explored the significance of peanut vendors working in the United States after the Civil War. According to Lewis, vendors faced public scorn due to pejorative associations of the peanut with enslaved persons and stereotypes of race and class.21
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In contrast to the peanut vendor’s low social standing in the late nineteenth-century United States, the popularity of the street vendor in 1920s Havana is brilliantly conveyed in the song “El Manisero” (“The Peanut Vendor”) by the Cuban composer and songwriter Moisés Simons.22 The 1927 composition is sung from the perspective of the seller and is a blending of the son and pregón genres. The lyrics tell of a vendor trying to tempt a housewife to buy a cone of peanuts: his repeated sales cry of “maní, maní, maní” is a typical feature of pregones. Like the song “El Manisero,” fusing African and Hispanic musical traditions, the peanut vendor and peanuts in 1920s Cuba would have held a blend of different cultural associations.
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Besides selling peanuts on streets and roadsides, vendors in the United States also were working in other public spaces like circuses, zoos, theaters, and fairs at the end of the nineteenth century. Because the vendors mainly sold peanuts in the shell, it became commonplace for purchasers to eat the delicious nuts and discard the shells on the ground. By the mid-1920s, many cities prohibited the sale of in-shell peanuts to curb littering.23 While peanut shells were considered litter in public spaces, the hull and broken peas left over from the industrial de-shelling process were used in the preparation of livestock feed, especially during years of low-quality crops or poor prices.
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The Groundnut Scheme in East Africa
Peanuts played a critical role in the British Empire, as well, as demonstrated by the Tanganyika groundnut scheme. In 1946, British businessmen and officials developed a plan to clear vast areas of vegetation in Tanganyika for establishing a groundnut monoculture. The aim was to produce enough peanuts to supply Britain, still under government-enforced World War II rationing, with cooking oil and improve food provisions in colonial territories. Historical and environmental geographer Martin Mahoney has explained how officials repurposed military technologies to wage a “war” against nature.24 Because the British government failed to adequately consider environmental conditions in Tanganyika, crops did not yield as expected and the project was abandoned in 1951.
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Multispecies Consumption
Humans and livestock are not the only consumers of the peanut plant for its nutrients. Insects, fungi, and bacteria feed on peanut foliage, subterranean parts, and pods. According to National Fertilizer Association symposium proceedings published in 1951, the “Indian meal moth, almond moth, saw-toothed grain beetle, [and] flour beetles” were pests found in the southeastern United States that consumed peanuts when they were in storage.25 Today peanut insect pests cause crop damage worldwide, posing a risk to the food security and foodways of many. To safeguard world peanut production, the Global Crop Diversity Trust has developed a conservation strategy with recommendations for protecting the peanut and its wild relatives from pests, diseases, and climate change.26
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No Meager Legume
Despite the use of the word peanut to denote a small or meager amount in the English language, we have seen over the course of this essay that the peanut has a rich history that is intricately tied to histories of global trade, slavery, and colonization. From luxury food to livestock feed, the social, cultural, and economic life of this legume has taken on many incarnations. Yet its importance to humans and its ecosystems is hard to overstate. The peanut plant heals and replenishes soils and has therefore been cultivated as a global environmental intervention method to maintain soil health. Highly nutritious and protein-packed, it is beneficial to the many life-forms that consume it–including to humans in their varied culinary preparations.
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References
Trust, 2022), 3. https://cdn.croptrust.org/
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R. O. Hammons, “The Origin and History of the Groundnut,” in The Groundnut Crop: A Scientific Basis for Improvement, ed. J. Smartt (Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1994), 24–42. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-0733-4_2 ↩
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David John Bertioli, Steven B. Cannon, Lutz Froenicke, et al., “The Genome Sequences of Arachis duranensis and Arachis ipaensis, the Diploid Ancestors of Cultivated Peanut,” Nature Genetics 48, no. 4 (2016): 438–446. https://doi.org/10.1038/ng.3517 ↩
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Tom D. Dillehay, Jack Rossen, Thomas C. Andres, and David E. Williams, “Preceramic Adoption of Peanut, Squash, and Cotton in Northern Peru,” Science 316, no. 5833 (2007): 1890–1893. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1141395 ↩
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Lindi Jaclyn Masur, “Peanuts and Prestige on the Peruvian North Coast: The Archaeology of Peanuts at Huaca Gallinazo (V-59) and Huaca Santa Clara (V-67),” Master’s Thesis, The University of British Columbia, 2012. ↩
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Walter Alva and Christopher B. Donnan, Royal Tombs of Sipán (Los Angeles: Fowler Museum of Cultural History, 1993). ↩
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Inca Garcilaso de la Vega, Comentarios Reales, Vol. 1 (Caracas: Biblioteca Ayacucho, 1985). ↩
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Andrew F. Smith, Peanuts: The Illustrious History of the Goober Pea (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2002). ↩
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Fray Bernardino de Sahagún, Historia general de las cosas de Nueva España, Vol. XI: de las cosas naturales, 1577. ↩
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Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés, Historia general y natural de las Indias, islas y tierra-firme del mar oceano (Madrid: Imprenta de la Real Academia de la Historia, 1851). ↩
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Smith, Peanuts: The Illustrious History of the Goober Pea. ↩
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Judith Ann Carney, “Seeds of Memory: Botanical Legacies of the African Diaspora,” in African Ethnobotany in the Americas (New York, NY: Springer, 2012), 28. https://www.geog.psu.edu ↩
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杨子器 Yang Ziqi, (弘治)常熟縣志4卷 Hongzhi Changshuxian zhi si juan [Changshu County Local Gazetteer (Reign of the Hongzhi Emperor)], 1503, accessed via Beijing Airusheng shuzihua jishu yanjiu zhongxin 北京爱如生数字化技术研究中心. Zhongguo jiben guji ku 中国基本古籍库 [Database of Chinese Classic Ancient Books]. ↩
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Sucheta Mazumdar, Sugar and Society in China, Vol. 45, Harvard-Yenching Institute Monograph Series (London: Harvard University Asia Center, 1998), 256. ↩
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Jon Krampner, Creamy and Crunchy: An Informal History of Peanut Butter, the All-American Food, Arts and Traditions of the Table (New York: Columbia University Press, 2013), 7. ↩
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Judith Carney, “Seeds of Memory: Botanical Legacies of the African Diaspora,” in African Ethnobotany in the Americas, 27–30. https://www.geog.psu.edu/ ↩
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Jesse Rhodes, “The Legumes of War: How Peanuts Fed the Confederacy,” Smithsonian Magazine, April 19, 2012. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/the-legumes-of-war-how-peanuts-fed-the-confederacy-70737510/ ↩
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Mark D. Hersey, My Work Is That of Conservation: An Environmental Biography of George Washington Carver (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2011), 164. ↩
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George Washington Carver, “How to Grow the Peanut, and 105 Ways of Preparing It for Human Consumption,” Tuskegee Institute, 1916. https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/209426#page/17/mode/1up ↩
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In 2020, 56 percent of U.S.-grown peanuts was processed into peanut butter. See Percival Perry, “Peanut,” in The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture: Volume 11: Agriculture and Industry eds. Walker, Melissa, and James C. Cobb (Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 2014), 185. https://muse.jhu.edu/book/27386; American Peanut Council, “The Peanut Industry.” https://www.peanutsusa.com/about-apc/the-peanut-industry.html ↩
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Krampner, Creamy and Crunchy, 132–136. ↩
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Jori Lewis, Slaves for Peanuts: A Story of Conquest, Liberation, and a Crop That Changed History (New York: New Press, 2022), 60–61. ↩
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In 2005, the Library of Congress added “El Manisero” to the National Recording Registry in recognition of its influence in the history of Latin American music. See Moisés Simons, “El Manisero” (“The Peanut Vendor”), 1931. YouTube. Accessed August 11, 2021. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=essMVyS1Om0; Mark Kurlansky, Havana (New York: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2017), 163. ↩
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Harold J. Clay and Paul M. Williams, Marketing Peanuts (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, 1926), 47, 74. https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.108735 ↩
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Martin Mahony, “The Enemy Is Nature: Military Machines and Technological Bricolage in Britain’s ‘Great Agricultural Experiment,’” Environment & Society Portal, Arcadia (Spring 2021), no. 11, Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society. doi:10.5282/rcc/9191 ↩
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Frank Selman Arant, et al., The Peanut: The Unpredictable Legume; A Symposium. (Washington, D.C.: National Fertilizer Association, 1951), 245. https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.57505 ↩
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David E. Williams, Global strategy for the conservation and use of peanut genetic resources (Bonn: Global Crop Diversity ↩