Kale.World
Maximize your nutrients, minize your calories

Cream cheese vs Peanut butter
CALORIC DENSITY
Cream cheese
Peanut butter, smooth style, w/ salt
3.42
5.88
1017
16098

First, let's take a look at the macros. Each of these are listed in grams and as usual, normalized to 200 calories for easy comparison, so we're always comparing apples to apples.

*All our data comes from the USDA Nutrient Database.
Cream cheese
Peanut butter
Protein = 3g
Protein = 9g
Carbohydrates = 2g
Carbohydrates = 7g
Fat = 20g
Fat = 17g
Fiber = 0g
Fiber = 2g
Monounsaturated = 5g
Monounsaturated = 8g
Polyunsaturated = 1g
Polyunsaturated = 5g
Saturated Fat = 11g
Saturated Fat = 4g
Nutrient cream cheese peanut butter
Protein 3g 9g
Carbohydrate 2g 7g
Fiber 0g 2g
Fat 20g 17g
Monounsat. Fat 5g 17g
Polyunsat. Fat 1g 5g
Saturated Fat 11g 4g
Note: the chart below maxes out at 20, so you can see better.

Next, let's take a look at the Vitamin density. These values are shown in units of percent of recommended daily intake. And since we're showing 200 calories worth, this means anything above 10% is good.

Choline = 4%
Choline = 5%
Vitamin A = 34%
Vitamin A = 0%
Vitamin C = 0%
Vitamin C = 0%
Vitamin E = 3%
Vitamin E = 25%
Vitamin K = 2%
Vitamin K = 0%
Nutrientcream cheesepeanut butter
Choline4%5%
Vitamin A34%0%
Vitamin C0%0%
Vitamin E3%25%
Vitamin K2%0%

Cream cheese have significantly more Vitamins A than peanut butter. Peanut butter have significantly more Vitamins E than cream cheese. Cream cheese are a good source of Vitamin A. Peanut butter are a good source of Vitamin E, Niacin, Phosphorus.

And here we see the B-vitamins: B1 (Thiamin), B2 (Riboflavin), B3 (Niacin), B5 (Pantothenic Acid), B6 (Pyridoxine)

Vitamin B1 = 1%
Vitamin B1 = 3%
Vitamin B2 = 7%
Vitamin B2 = 3%
Vitamin B3 = 1%
Vitamin B3 = 38%
Vitamin B5 = 7%
Vitamin B5 = 7%
Vitamin B6 = 2%
Vitamin B6 = 17%
Vitamin B12 = 7%
Vitamin B12 = 0%
Nutrientcream cheesepeanut butter
Vitamin B11%3%
Vitamin B27%3%
Vitamin B31%38%
Vitamin B57%7%
Vitamin B62%17%
Vitamin B127%0%

Now, lets look at mineral density. Here we have a lot of important electrolytes and minerals. Once again, units are in percent of RDI, thus for this 200 calorie serving anything above 10% would considered high.

Sodium = 13%
Sodium = 10%
Potassium = 2%
Potassium = 6%
Calcium = 11%
Calcium = 3%
Magnesium = 2%
Magnesium = 15%
Phosphorus = 11%
Phosphorus = 21%
Iron = 4%
Iron = 11%
Manganese = 0%
Manganese = 22%
Selenium = 3%
Selenium = 4%
Copper = 1%
Copper = 16%
Zinc = 3%
Zinc = 11%
Nutrientcream cheesepeanut butter
Sodium13%10%
Potasium2%6%
Calcium11%3%
Magnesium2%15%
Phosphorus11%21%
Iron4%11%
Manganese0%22%
Selenium3%4%
Copper1%16%
Zinc3%11%

Rank foods/recipes by Nutrients

You can use the Nutrient based Food and recipe finder, to rank foods based on nutrients:

And get results like this:

COMPARE FOODS

vs
Kale.world
X

ABOUT THIS SITE

Kale.World is all about nutritional density – all our findings are normalized on a per calorie basis, making it easier to compare various foods.

COMPARE FOODS

vs

RECENT POSTS

=
=