
This Easter, as you unwrap a peanut butter egg, you may be doing your mind a bigger favor than you realize.
Peanut butter is a quiet powerhouse for cognitive health, loaded with niacin (B3) and vitamin E. Though peanuts may be in the legume family, rather than a nut, its brain benefits fall in line with them. A recent and compelling study, published in November 2025 by Clinical Nutrition, and accessible through PubMed, is a randomized crossover trial that gave 31 healthy older adults 60g/day of skin-roasted peanuts for 16 weeks. Using MRI scans as a guide, the authors concluded: “Daily consumption of skin-roasted peanuts for 16 weeks improved brain vascular function in healthy older men and women. These favorable effects may underlie the observed improvements in verbal memory.”

The implications run deeper than better recall, as studies have long proven. A 2024 review, prepared under a Defense Health Agency contract, found that, “preclinical studies and early human trials suggest that specific nutrients and diets may offer neuroprotection or benefit during mild TBI rehabilitation.” Peanut butter’s niacin is among the compounds flagged by PubMed research as exhibiting neuroprotective properties by reducing lesion volume, oxidative stress, and neuronal damage after TBI.
The brain benefits of dark chocolate have also been widely proven. So, year-round, if you’re browsing the candy aisle, try looking for dark chocolate peanut butter cups for a brain boost.










