Miso-Peanut Spread Recipe (2024)

By Martha Rose Shulman

Miso-Peanut Spread Recipe (1)

Total Time
About 10 minutes
Rating
4(145)
Notes
Read community notes

Use this nutty, sweet and salty spread as a stand-in for peanut butter, or serve with crudités. I like to pipe it onto rounds of cucumber and slices of jicama.

Featured in: Miso, for So Much More Than Just Soup

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Ingredients

Yield:⅔ cup

  • 1ounce peanuts (heaped ¼ cup), roasted
  • 1ounce unsalted, unsweetened smooth peanut butter (3½ tablespoons)
  • 2tablespoons white or yellow miso
  • 1tablespoon honey
  • 1tablespoon mirin
  • 1teaspoon grated orange zest (optional)

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (4 servings)

162 calories; 11 grams fat; 2 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 5 grams monounsaturated fat; 3 grams polyunsaturated fat; 11 grams carbohydrates; 2 grams dietary fiber; 7 grams sugars; 6 grams protein; 321 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Miso-Peanut Spread Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Place the roasted peanuts in a plastic bag or a pastry bag and place on your work surface. Roll over the bag with a rolling pin until the peanuts are crushed.

  2. Step

    2

    Combine the crushed peanuts, peanut butter, miso, honey, mirin and orange zest in a bowl and stir together until smooth. Refrigerate until ready to use.

Tip

  • Advance preparation: This will keep for several weeks in the refrigerator but you may want to thin it out a little with water or a little orange juice.

Ratings

4

out of 5

145

user ratings

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

EW

I recommend adding the crushed peanuts after you’ve stirred the other ingredients until smooth. That way you can tell when your miso is fully incorporated and smooth. Incredible flavor with the salty funk of the miso with the natural sweetness of the peanut butter and honey.

Jillian

This was great as a dip! I made the mistake of using grind-your-own peanut butter, so it was far too thick. Didn't have orange juice, so I watered it down with a little water and lime juice. Lime gave it a nice kick. Would make again, and try the proper version!

Rebecca

I added about two tablespoons of shredded coconut to this and it was divine! Next time, I'd like to try adding a tablespoon of tahini as well to give it a deeper flavor.

Doug Mc

For expediency, I used a cellophane-wrapped snack pack of roasted peanuts rather than crack a mess of peanuts or open a large can or jar. This worked ok but I would recommend rinsing off the nuts to remove the extra salt. That said, I could taste all the individual components well and they were well balanced and a nice change from the one note of peanut butter.

Kim

I found this to be too sweet. Even my kids said it was too sweet. However, this recipe has potential...will try again with less honey and a little tamari.

Sue

Mirin is sweet, not vinegary, so it's not surprising that it came out tasting sharp! They taste very different, but a spoonful of orange juice is probably your best bet if you don't have mirin around; it will add similar sweetness and a bit of dimension. (Or, you could just leave it out w/ no harm done.)

Liz Edits

For peanut dipping sauce, I used this as a base, but no crushed peanuts. Added:Addl 1/2 Tbsp mirin (1.5 T total)2 tsp orange juice (left out orange zest)1 tsp gochujang

Lee MacMorris

Made this according to the recipe. Use shiro miso which like any miso is salty and the salt dominated. Strongly recommend finding no salt peanuts and peanut butter. Really crush the peanuts. Thanks for the tip about adding them last.

lotsadogs

Wonderful! I followed the advice to rinse the salt off the peanuts--still plenty salty from the miso (I have red miso on hand, and it works just fine). I also added a 1/2 tsp of Sriracha (more if you like it hotter), and it really kicked it up a notch! I served it with inch long flat sliced carrots. Will try it with cucumber when I go to the store next. Thanks, Martha!

TeeKay

Agree—just OK. Satay sauce dip/sauce is better.

Jen

This sounds like a fancy version of the red miso/tahini spread I eat on rice cakes when I need a salty, savory snack.

c1

Can you substitute 2oz of chunky peanut butter for the roasted peanuts and smooth peanut butter?

Danny V

Having only red miso on hand, the spread came out way too sharp for my taste. Also I didn’t have any mirin so I used some homemade red wine vinegar. I can see how if I followed the directions here (ingredients, quantity/ratio) this could be a more palatable addition to my pantry and I look forward to trying THAT version. :)

Sue

Mirin is sweet, not vinegary, so it's not surprising that it came out tasting sharp! They taste very different, but a spoonful of orange juice is probably your best bet if you don't have mirin around; it will add similar sweetness and a bit of dimension. (Or, you could just leave it out w/ no harm done.)

Barb

I have also substituted medium dry sherry for the mirin

EW

I recommend adding the crushed peanuts after you’ve stirred the other ingredients until smooth. That way you can tell when your miso is fully incorporated and smooth. Incredible flavor with the salty funk of the miso with the natural sweetness of the peanut butter and honey.

Sarah

I usually make this according to the recipe. Today I substituted roasted almonds and smooth almond butter. Good!

Brooke

Made as-is, and then added a little orange juice to loosen it up, a drip of fish sauce and sambal.

Kim

I found this to be too sweet. Even my kids said it was too sweet. However, this recipe has potential...will try again with less honey and a little tamari.

Rebecca

I added about two tablespoons of shredded coconut to this and it was divine! Next time, I'd like to try adding a tablespoon of tahini as well to give it a deeper flavor.

Meta

Just OK. Reminds me of marmite.

Doug Mc

For expediency, I used a cellophane-wrapped snack pack of roasted peanuts rather than crack a mess of peanuts or open a large can or jar. This worked ok but I would recommend rinsing off the nuts to remove the extra salt. That said, I could taste all the individual components well and they were well balanced and a nice change from the one note of peanut butter.

Jillian

This was great as a dip! I made the mistake of using grind-your-own peanut butter, so it was far too thick. Didn't have orange juice, so I watered it down with a little water and lime juice. Lime gave it a nice kick. Would make again, and try the proper version!

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Miso-Peanut Spread Recipe (2024)
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