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ChatterBank1 min ago
I read a comment from on older person blaming vaccines for peanut allergies. No child was allergic to peanuts when she was at school.
I'm trying to remember if peanuts were popular snacks in the 40s and 50s, and if peanut butter was a thing.
I can remember peanuts sold in their shells (pods?) but I didn't eat them. I didn't have peanut butter either.
Was it a common ingredient in food?
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Why are peanut allergies becoming more common?
The main theory to explain a rise in allergic disease, including food allergy, is the "hygiene hypothesis" that generally suggests that "clean living" with less farm living and the use of medications to prevent and quickly treat infections leaves our immune system in a state that is more prone to attack harmless ...
Rate of Childhood Peanut Allergies More than Tripled Between 1997 ...
Peanut butter was around in the 50's; I loved it and "Children thrive on it".
I heard recently that exposure to peanuts from a very early age reduces the possibility of an allergy later on. Since peanut allergy became known, I bet that parents are less likely to let tots eat peanuts, resulting in more allergy cases.
Peanut butter is an American abomination. Peanuts we called monkey nuts, but they're not actually nuts;
Are peanuts and groundnuts the same thing?
'The peanut, also called groundnut, oil nut or monkey nut, is, despite all these names, botanically speaking not a nut, but a legume containing two or three seeds. Like all leguminous plants, the peanut belongs to the family Fabaceae, which includes a number of important agricultural and food plants.'
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