Yes you can, but it would make little difference to just refrigerating them. The reason is because peanuts are high in fats, and fats cannot freeze. Meaning, what is limiting the storage ability of raw peanuts is the oxidation on the unsaturated fats. Freezing will slow it down, but refrigerating will still give you about 9 months.
If you want long term storage, I would consider putting them in a vacuum pack along with a couple 2000cc oxygen and moisture absorbers.
For even longer term storage, put some dry ice in a brown paper bag and put it in a food grade bucket. Next, put your raw peanuts over the top of them along with a couple 2000cc oxygen and moisture absorbers. lay the lid over the top, and when you think all of the dry ice is gone, then just press the lid on firmly. If you see budges, then just lift one corner to let the excess out. This method should give you 2 to 3 years of storage.
Don't give them salted peanuts, give them unsalted ones.
Yes, you can store salted roasted peanuts in the freezer. Be sure to store them in a sealed container suitable for freezing or a plastic baggie.
Salted peanuts tend to burn faster than unsalted peanuts. This is because the salt in salted peanuts can act as an accelerant, making them more flammable compared to unsalted peanuts.
no
It depends on the size of the peanuts and whether they are raw, plain, honey roasted, dry roasted, oil roasted, or boiled. For example, one ounce of dry roasted large peanuts is usually about 28-30 peanuts; one ounce of dry roasted small peanuts is usually about 60 peanuts.
Roasted penuts are roasted
The purpose of a roasted peanut is to give the peanut a slightly different taste. Their are regular peanut's, salted peanuts and roasted peanut's. It just gives peanuts more of a variety to eat from.
No, dogs do not digest peanuts.
Roasted peanuts have 0 cholesterol.
yes
yes.
No, roasted peanuts are not alive. Once harvested and roasted, peanuts no longer have any living cells or biological processes. They are considered a food product.