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Building the Perfect PBJ Sandwich

Posted Wed, Apr 30, 2008, 11:43 am PDT
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When you decide to get the fixin's for a PBJ sandwich, the choices you're confronted by can be vexing, even bewildering. And here at Serious Eats we try to simplify your food life, so we decided to test peanut butters, breads, and more, to honor all the PBJs that have sacrificed their lives in order for us to enjoy total PBJ freedom. After all, the PBJ has everything we want and need in a food: It's creamy, sweet, smooth, or crunchy. It's fruity, satisfying, filling, relatively inexpensive, and pretty good for you to boot. 

BREAD

Let's start with the choice of bread. Rye or pumpernickel are not good delivery vehicles for PBJ. We stuck to Pepperidge Farm plain white bread for our taste test, although some people might argue that it's too soft to stand up to the heaviness of the peanut butter and the goopiness of the jam. But even after the bread issue is settled, you then have to face the PB and the J decisions.

PEANUT BUTTER

So let's get to the peanuty heart of the matter here. First of all, to simplify our lives, we decided to limit our testing to creamy peanut butters. We like crunchy peanut butter just fine, but even our stomachs have limits, so to save ourselves from supreme and profound discomfort, we just tasted creamy. Maybe we'll taste crunchy peanut butters next week or next month.

We tasted four processed peanut butters and four "pure," no-sugar-added peanut butters. Serious Eats general manager Alaina Browne was the designated sandwich-maker. She made one sandwich with each peanut butter, using Smucker's strawberry jam for the J component. Now we love Alaina here at Serious Eats world headquarters, but her PBJ sandwiches were too damn dainty. There wasn't enough peanut butter or jelly on them. What she made were PBJ tea sandwiches. When our tasting panel complained, Alaina blamed it on her mother: "My mom would have killed me if I put too much peanut butter on a sandwich." Her mother doesn't work at Serious Eats, so we sent Alaina back into the kitchenette to make the first set again.

So we decided that once we figured out which peanut butters we liked most, we would try to scientifically construct the perfect PBJ sandwich, one that was perfectly balanced, with the proper ratio of bread to peanut butter to jelly.

The four regular creamy peanut butters we tried were:

-Jif
-Reese's
-365 Organic (the Whole Foods house brand)
-Skippy

We searched high and low for Peter Pan in Manhattan but could not find it.

Interestingly, the 365 Organic was cheaper than the other three. More important, it was the best-tasting peanut butter in the bunch. It had the freshest peanut taste and seemed to us as if it had less sugar and more salt than the others. Jif was the second place finisher. It had the smoothest texture and the most pleasant mouthfeel. It stuck to our mouths a little less than the others. Adam Kuban, Serious Eats's managing editor, sheepishly admitted that he liked the Reese's peanut butter as much as Jif, if not quite as much as 365.

We tasted the following no-sugar-added peanut butters:

-Arrowhead Mills Organic Creamy Valencia Peanut Butter
-Peanut Butter & Co. Smooth Operator 100% All Natural Peanut Butter
-Santa Cruz Organic Dark Roasted Creamy Peanut Butter
-Teddie Smooth Old Fashioned Peanut Butter 

The clear winner in this category was the Santa Cruz Organic. It tasted like very lightly salted, fresh-roasted peanuts. Not far behind was the Smooth Operator. Interestingly, it didn't taste quite as fresh as the Santa Cruz, even though it's made in a plant in Brooklyn, a few miles from Serious Eats world headquarters rather than 3,000 miles away, in Chico, California. So in this case, local didn't trump everything else.


AND JELLY

Jellies and jams are so complicated and there are so many choices that I decided to let Serious Eats's Meg Hourihan tackle that question with her tech-savvy brain percolating away mightily. The whole story on (and Preserves and Conserves) is at SeriousEats.com

FINAL THOUGHTS

A day later we got down with some hardcore science class/Harold McGee-like activity trying to come up with the proper ratio of bread thickness to peanut butter to jam.

Armed with measuring spoons and a knife, I discovered, much to my surprise, that the suggested servings printed on the peanut butter (2 tablespoons) and jelly (1 tablespoon) jars were perfect when spread on two slices of the Pepperidge Farm white bread. As you can see here, we were using classic scientific techniques in our serious PBJ experiment.

Adam and Meg pointed out that the Pepperidge Farm bread we had purchased was sliced thinner than many other brands. If thicker slices of bread were used instead, they cautioned, the same volumes of PB and J would not produce comparable results. They advised me to measure the relative thickness of all components with a ruler to determine a ratio that could be used with any bread thickness. That ratio is 1 : 0.6 : 0.3 : 1, as seen in the illustration here.

Still, even after quasi-scientific analysis, Alaina was unrepentant. "My mother would have never let me put that much peanut butter or jam on my sandwich."

And even as Meg chomped contentedly on my perfect-ratio PBJ sandwich, she agreed with Alaina. We were clearly experiencing a gender divide when it comes to PBJ sandwiches. "Yeah, same with my mom. But, damn, this sandwich is good."

For delicious peanut butter recipes click here.

Average (2181 Ratings): 3.5 out of 5 stars

  • 1. Posted by Leila on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:03 pm PDT

    chicken!

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  • 2. Posted by zdubz2009 on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:03 pm PDT

    libertycitycentral.com

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  • 3. Posted by tashmin0000 on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:05 pm PDT

    Haha. "We sat down with scientists"

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  • 4. Posted by brikissfrog on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:05 pm PDT

    wow i never knew that u could make the perfect pb&j

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  • 5. Posted by brikissfrog on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:05 pm PDT

    wow i never knew that u could make the perfect pb&j

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  • 6. Posted by masamune008 on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:05 pm PDT

    its all about the crunchy peanut butter! screw this creamy stuff...and throw some berry jam/apple butter on that sandwich. the more peanut butter and jelly the better...make it like a sloppy joe. Now THATS a peanut butter sandwich. Ive had one every day for about 3 years now. love it.

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  • 7. Posted by echo on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:05 pm PDT

    Sour dough bread with strawberry jam and skippy peanutbutter either creamy or nutty. Yummy!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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  • 8. Posted by mary on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:05 pm PDT

    I have always liked my PBJ with grape jam or apple butter, I don't like strawberry with my Peanut Butter at all!!!

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  • 9. Posted by Barbara D on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:06 pm PDT

    For Peanut Butter I am a Die Hard Skippy Fan. And nothing beats Welchs Grape Jam. For the best PBJ in the world grab a jar of Goober Grape and Some Wonder Bread!

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  • 10. Posted by mentisthemagnificent on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:06 pm PDT

    Forget peanut butter, and jelly. It's so childish, and plebeian. Peanut butter and mayo is where it's at...high protein, high calorie, and high fat...great IF you use it as an energy boost before a workout; not so hot if you just lounge around after eating it.

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  • 11. Posted by feigndeaf on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:06 pm PDT

    Must be nice while in a recession to get paid to eat peanut butter and jelly......

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  • 12. Posted by terrence_mcclusky on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:06 pm PDT

    Is this for real? Someone got paid to tell us how to make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich? Really??

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  • 13. Posted by diane_s78 on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:06 pm PDT

    I went on a PB&J kick last summer. Easiest way to gain 20lbs in 3 months.

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  • 14. Posted by blueghettogirl8 on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:06 pm PDT

    THE best bread that I've ever had a peanut butter and jelly sandwich on was on harddough bread, esp. Golden Krust's harddough bread. I was addicted to PBJ on that bread 4 like a year, breakfast, lunch, and dinner. =P'

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  • 15. Posted by lebernhardt on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:06 pm PDT

    This article made me want some PB&J.

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  • 16. Posted by RotSman on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:07 pm PDT

    Haven't I seen this article before? _

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  • 17. Posted by Ike on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:07 pm PDT

    OMG, I hate these idiots and their spam! what a waste of %!$#!$ time.

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  • 18. Posted by Tyler D on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:07 pm PDT

    the article is the worst thing ever done, this man shouldnt even payed for writing it, and the people doing the experiment should get there licenses removed, this is a joke

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  • 19. Posted by Pat on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:07 pm PDT

    You did not specify what FLAVOR jelly would be best. Thats what I was looking for - did I miss it? I prefer Grape to any other kind.

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  • 20. Posted by jastillana_addisonluis on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:07 pm PDT

    you just make it harder than it seems you don't have to meaere it!

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  • 21. Posted by cw4rw00 on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:07 pm PDT

    You people need to get a real job.

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  • 22. Posted by gary w on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:07 pm PDT

    well..finally i will be able to sleep at night with this vital PBJ info. and to think i was distracted by th economy, global warming and the crises i9n Darfur.

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  • 23. Posted by Susan S on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:07 pm PDT

    I believe grape jelly should have been the standard that you tested. A shame Peter Pan wasn't in the running. That is the one I was raised on. ;-)

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  • 24. Posted by izzy3o3o on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:07 pm PDT

    2 much 2 do for a pb&j.

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  • 25. Posted by andrea.valle81 on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:07 pm PDT

    ha ha ha ha

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  • 26. Posted by KENNETH P on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:08 pm PDT

    THEY ALL HAVE PARTIALLY HYDROGENATED OILS IN THEM. NO WAY I WOULD EVEN CONSIDER THOSE BRANDS, I DON'T CARE IF THEY TASTE LIKE HEAVEN!!!!

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  • 27. Posted by drunkn_penguin on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:08 pm PDT

    haha, this was interesting

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  • 28. Posted by timlybarger on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:08 pm PDT

    A taste test that leaves out Peter Pan is not worth my time reading.

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  • 29. Posted by erric s on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:08 pm PDT

    what does this have to do with PB&J???????????????

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  • 30. Posted by kkosto333 on Sun, May 04, 2008, 12:08 pm PDT

    You are missing the final and best part...the PBJ needs to be GRILLED!!! so good!!!

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