Today is your lucky day.
Peanut butter is super viscous and not very sprayable.
PiccoloNamek / Creative Commons / Via en.wikipedia.org
It's actually a non-Newtonian fluid, which means it behaves a bit weirdly and appears to change its consistency depending on how fast you try to stir it.
The American Physical Society put it like this:
Stop reading right now and go try and stir your peanut butter. Not easy, eh? Stir slowly and you are fine, try and hurry up and it locks up on you. Fluids that act like this are called "sheer thickening" fluids.
Its viscosity is somewhere around 200,000 times that of water. Basically, you're not going to be pouring peanut butter any time soon.
So if you want to, say, spray it on to bread, you have to heat it (and also the spray nozzle) up.
This is exactly the kind of thing that food science equipment manufacturers have to think about. Which means that there are a ton of videos on YouTube showing how this equipment works, as io9 recently discovered.
Spraying Systems / Via youtube.com
Just look at the spray nozzle go.
Spraying Systems / Via youtube.com
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