Boiled Peanuts

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All you need is shelled peanuts and salt to make this traditional Southern boiled peanuts recipe. The peanuts are boiled to the texture of your choice and are the perfect homemade salty snack to enjoy with an ice-cold glass of beer or soda.

Boiled peanuts.

Boiled peanuts have been popular in the South since at least the Civil War when our troops used to carry them as a large part of their rations. With salt being a natural preservative, the boiled peanuts could be carried and eaten for up to a week, providing a quick nutritional source on the go and helping to make up for the piteous lack of meat in the Southern soldier’s diet.

The first time I ever had traditional boiled peanuts was when I was a girl, not more than seven or eight. My family and I took the first of many trips to the Smokey Mountains. We were driving up these winding roads and stopped at a roadside vendor. I was curious about the cup of wet peanuts that had steam coming from them and the most delicious smell that set my stomach to grumbling. I definitely had more than one that day!

Nowadays, as soon as the slightest chill hits the air in Georgia, little tents, trucks, and roadside stands start setting up on street corners for one purpose: to sell boiled peanuts to fortunate passersby. With over 45% of the country’s peanut crop grown there, it’s no wonder boiled peanuts are in such abundance.

Now, if you can’t make a mad dash to Georgia right now, rest assured it’s super easy to make boiled peanuts from the comfort of your home. All you need for my Southern boiled peanuts recipe is raw peanuts and salt. Are you ready for the instructions? Place them in a pot with water, bring to a boil, and then simmer for 3 hours. Yep, that’s it. The easiest boiled peanut recipe you ever did see. Keep scrolling to learn exactly how to eat boiled peanuts because yes, it’s EVERYTHING.

Labeled ingredients for boiled peanuts recipe.

Recipe Ingredients

  • Raw or fresh green peanuts
  • Salt

How to Make My Boiled Peanuts Recipe

Place peanuts and enough water to cover them in large pot.

Place dried peanuts in a large pot and add enough water to cover the peanuts.

However, don’t stress too much as they’ll float to the top for now anyway.

Add sugar to pot.

Add the salt to the pot.

Stir together peanuts and salt.

Give that a good stir.

Cover pot with lid and simmer.

Now cover the pot with a lid, cook on medium heat until it comes to a good boil, then simmer.

Ladle full of boiled peanuts.

These are going to need to cook for about three hours but can cook longer if you like.

I cook mine most of the day. The texture you are going for is just slightly firmer than a cooked bean.

Remove from heat, drain, and eat!

Bowl of boiled peanuts.

How to eat boiled peanuts

Let me just say, the way you eat a boiled peanut is EVERYTHING!

Place the entire, uncracked peanut shell in your mouth. Yes, I am serious. Don’t get all fretful about germs and such, my goodness you just boiled them for several hours. Now do like I said and pop that entire peanut in your mouth.

With your mouth closed (unless you want to squirt your neighbor in the face with salty peanut juice), crack the shell open and drink the juice out of it. Then open it the rest of the way and take the shell out of your mouth, while eating the soft peanuts inside.

After a few of these, you’ll understand why the roadside vendors always give you a plastic bag or cup to hold your shells. My mouth is watering just thinking about it!

Plate of boiled peanuts.

Enjoy your traditional boiled peanuts!

Storage

When stored in their shells in an airtight container in the fridge, boiled peanuts will last up to 10 days. You can store them in the cooking liquid or drain them dry. You can also store them in the freezer for several months. Thaw at room temperature before serving.

Recipe Notes

  • You can easily double, triple, or quadruple the recipe ingredients.
  • For the salt, you can use plain old table salt or kosher salt, whatever you have on hand. Southerners don’t get fancy with this stuff. It’s part of our charm!
  • If you use fresh green peanuts, the cooking time can be shorter. Check-in after an hour.

Recipe FAQs

How do I make my boiled peanuts more or less salty?

Once they’re cooked, if they are too salty for you (personally, I don’t believe in such a thing as “too salty” when it comes to these), simply add a few more cups of water to dilute the cooking water and cook for half an hour more or so.

If they are not salty enough (you go, you), add a bit more salt and give it 30 minutes as well to get good and incorporated. The amount of salt I am listing here is what I have found perfect to replicate the roadside peanuts I love so much.

But if this is your first time making boiled peanuts, it’s all about trial and error to work out the best salty balance and your desired tenderness. As a general rule of thumb, the longer they simmer, the softer and saltier the peanuts become. I recommend starting with a cup of salt and then tasting it after a few hours, adding a few more tablespoons if you want a saltier peanut.

Can I use roasted peanuts in this boiled peanuts recipe?

No, you can’t make boiled peanuts with roasted peanuts, they have to be raw (or green as they’re sometimes called).

No, you don’t have to soak the peanuts before boiling them. Some recipes do this to reduce the simmer time and it helps them settle in the pot before boiling them, but I don’t think it’s necessary. If you want to though, add the shelled peanuts to the pot, cover them with water, and place a dinner plate on top to keep them submerged. Soak for 8 hours or overnight before continuing with this recipe from the top in the morning.

Can I make boiled peanuts in the slow cooker?

Absolutely! Follow the directions but place the ingredients in the crock pot instead. However, crock pot boiled peanuts take a lot longer to cook (like at least 22 hours if not longer).

Why do boiled peanuts get slimy?

Boiled peanuts can get slimy if they’re overcooked or sit in the brine for too long. Ensure you cook the peanuts just until tender and then drain them shortly after cooling to avoid them getting soggy.

What seasonings can I add to my boiled peanuts recipe?

Many boiled peanut recipes include seasonings using dried herbs and spices. We’re keeping things simple today, but here are some suggestions. Just add about 2 tablespoons of any of these options when you add the salt:

  • Old Bay seasoning
  • Cajun seasoning (Cajun peanuts are very popular).
  • Creole seasoning
  • Lemon pepper seasoning
  • 2 cups of apple cider vinegar for salt and vinegar peanuts.

Check out these other snack-sized treats:

Peanut Butter Candy

Candied Pecans Recipe

Cream Cheese Mints

Candied Peanuts (2 Ingredients Only)

Potato Candy Recipe Made The Ole Fashioned Way

Chocolate Peanut Butter Balls (No Baking Necessary)

Boiled peanuts.

Boiled Peanuts

All you need is shelled peanuts and salt to make this traditional Southern boiled peanuts recipe, a homemade salty snack best enjoyed with a glass of beer or soda.
Prep Time: 5 minutes
Cook Time: 3 hours
Total Time: 3 hours 5 minutes
Course: Snack
Cuisine: American
Keyword: boiled, peanuts

Ingredients

  • 1 pound raw or green peanuts
  • 1 cup salt

Instructions

  • In a saucepot, cover dried peanuts with water and add salt.
    1 pound raw or green peanuts, 1 cup salt
  • Bring to a boil and then reduce heat and simmer for at least 3 hours or more if you like.
  • Place the entire peanut in your mouth to eat. Crack it open with your teeth, drink the juice, and eat the peanut while discarding the peanut shell.
Tried this recipe?Mention @southernplate or tag #southernplate!

 

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84 Comments

  1. LOVE BOILED PEANUTS!! and have to say that I DO NOT want the cajun seasonings…I want PURE ole boiled peanuts!! peanuts,water& salt!! can’t get any better than that!! I Agree with others that the best in fresh green peanuts to boil..I guess I am very lucky to live about 30 miles from the PEANUT CAPITAL OF THE WORLD–Dothan,AL. There is even the PEANUT FESTIVAL held every year in the Fall here. Lots of farmers grow peanuts around this area and can get them at a very good price but visitors driving thru to the beach need to be careful of the roadside stands cause they jack up the price triple!! We have always bought extra at farmers market/local grocery stores,etc. and froze them and when we need a “fix”, just take them out & re-boil them until hot. not as good as fresh but good anyways!

  2. It’s important that your foreign and northern readers know that they can get bad boiled peanuts. A lot of people have tried them and disliked them because they weren’t getting the real thing. For a true boiled peanut aficionado the only peanuts to use are fresh green peanuts. The difference is night and day. I have tried dry raw peanuts and frozen peanuts (e.g. Sam’s sells frozen raw peanuts) but forget it – they’re awful. It’s hard to find green peanuts and they are only available certain months of the year. Publix sells them in season but they are expensive. The best way may be to freeze them as one reader recommended, but I have never tried that. When you go to a roadside stand ask whether the peanuts are raw or green. Big difference. I have had roadside peanuts that weren’t worth eating. Bottom line – it’s like other seasonal vegetables – enjoy them while in season and look forward to next year.

  3. I live in SW Missouri and we just got back from a very long road trip to Orlando. I grabbed a cup at a roadside stand on the way down. See this was much looked forward to as I had not had a boiled peanut since the first time in 2000. A friend’s family brought some back from their trip home to Florida over the Thanksgiving holiday.

    On the way back I bought a pound to bring home and they are currently in my fridge waiting for me to find out the correct way to heat them up.

    On a sidenote: On the trip home Saturday we were heading up 78 in Alabama and I could have swore I saw a gal that looked just like you driving along and chatting it up with her mother maybe. Yeah, I know, he thought I was crazy, too. LOL

  4. On behalf of the Georgians…Thank you kindly! We love our state too. 🙂 When it comes to boiled peanuts, MAN DO I LOVE BOILED PEANUTS! My grandmother lived in the North Georgia Mountains in a cove of Lake Burton. Half the people up there make their living off of Boiled Peanuts. Any way, I have been eating these since before I can remember. My mom used to tell me that they would give me a tummy ache and they never did! Then when I got pregnant, I found a convenient store that sold them and that was all she wrote! Boiled peanuts and Nestley Strawberry Milk…Now that I’m not pregnant that kinda sounds grose but at the time that was all I needed to be in heaven! I have always wondered how to make them and well, it sounds exactly like waht the’re called!! Thank you so much and I will try this soon!!
    By the way, I have tried many of your recipes and LOVE EVERY ONE! Now when I tell my husband that I’m trying something new for supper he asks me, “Is it one of Christy’s?”
    So there you have it…You are a house hold name according to my house! Thank you and Good wishes to you, Ashley & Family

  5. http://www.hardyfarmspeanuts.com/

    Coming from a (ahem) boiled peanut expert, I have to say these are the best and they are available now in grocery stores! (I am sure yours are just as good, Christy! 🙂 )

    We bought a bag from Publix the other day, not knowing the stands were up a month early this year (they are usually only up Sept. and Oct.), and they were so fresh and just delicious. Our friends in the Tampa, FL area love them in the Cajun flavor. They were available IN THEIR GROCERY STORES before they were available in ours, and we are 30 minutes from their farms!

    I do have to disagree with you though, Ms. Jordan. I have never put the whole peanut in my mouth and sucked out the juice. I crack them open and pour the juice out, then pluck the peanuts from the shells. If I can’t open them with my fingers, only then will I put the whole things in my mouth. Goodness gracious.

    🙂

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