Ground peanuts bars. 8 Bars. Individually Wrapped.
Ground peanut bars — barras de maní — are the crumbly, caramelized peanut bricks that Cuban kids grew up unwrapping after school. Eight bars, individually wrapped, made from ground peanuts bound with cooked sugar into a dense, snappable bar that's somewhere between brittle and fudge.
The texture is the whole point: ground fine enough to feel almost sandy, sweet without being cloying, with that earthy roasted-peanut backbone that pairs naturally with strong coffee. No chocolate, no coatings, no fillers — just peanut and sugar, the way the Cuban corner store sold them for decades.
Common Uses: afternoon merienda with cafecito, lunchbox snack, crumbled over vanilla ice cream or flan, broken into pieces as a dessert garnish.
Pantry Role: pantry staple, cultural marker.
Common In: Cuban-American households nationwide, diaspora pantry restocking, care packages sent to family up north.
Cultural Context: Barras de maní sit alongside turrón de maní in the Cuban candy lexicon — the unfussy everyday version, not the holiday one. For many in the diaspora, finding these bars is finding a specific childhood texture that doesn't exist in American candy aisles.
Pairs With: Café Bustelo, Café La Llave, Materva, Ironbeer, a glass of cold milk.
Ships nationwide. Hard to find outside South Florida bodegas.