SunButter

SunButter is a brand of sunflower seed butter, promoted for use by people with nut allergies. It is an edible food paste similar to peanut butter, mainly used as a sandwich spread by people with peanut allergies and/or tree nut allergies. SunButter is manufactured by SunGold Foods, Inc. in Fargo, North Dakota.

SunButter
TypeSpread
Place of originUnited States
Created bySungold Foods
Main ingredientsSunflower seeds

History

Beginning in 2000, in cooperation with the Agricultural Research Service of the United States Department of Agriculture, SunGold Foods' parent company, Red River Commodities, began a two-year project to develop a substitute for peanut butter that would be made from sunflower seeds.[1]

At that same time, Red River Commodities invested in new sunflower seed hybrids and specialized production areas, formed SunGold Foods, Inc. and created a peanut-free and tree-nut free food processing, packaging, distribution and shipping environment at both companies' locations.[2]

The substitute for peanut butter, introduced in 2002, became known as SunButter.[1]

Health benefits

Sunflower seeds are a good source of protein, fiber, vitamin E, zinc and iron. SunButter is currently used as an added ingredient in a variety of foods, including energy bars from Enjoy Life Foods and EnerPro, granola, premade sandwiches and a no-peanut peanut sauce.[3]

Distribution

SunButter is now available in a variety of flavors, and is found in grocery chains and health food stores. It is used in many institutional foodservice programs, including public and private schools and school districts that have become peanut-free and tree-nut free as part of the Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Management Act (FAAMA), which calls for voluntary national guidelines to help schools manage students affected by food allergy and anaphylaxis.[4]

gollark: Ah, never mind, they're cancelled, it says.
gollark: Hmm, so the news says in some places GCSEs are cancelled, but the only actual quote I can find suggests they might just be postponed.
gollark: World health organisation.
gollark: Doesn't help that people are used to medical stuff being banned by *default*.
gollark: I'm inclined to believe it might be both.

See also

Notes

  1. "USDA Agricultural Research Service". "News & Events: SunButter". January 4, 2011. Retrieved December 12, 2011.
  2. "Red River Commodities". "SunButter". Retrieved August 9, 2012.
  3. "Lima, Isabel and Harmeet Guraya" (November 2010). "USDA Agricultural Research Service" (PDF). "Sunflower Butter". Retrieved June 11, 2012.
  4. "FAAN". "The Food Allergy & Anaphylaxis Management Act". Retrieved June 11, 2012.
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