OhNuts! sent me candy-coated almonds and I didn’t want to bake with them because I was fearful that the pink, blue, orange, and green pastel-colored candy shells would bleed and run during baking, creating a big ugly mess on whatever I made.
So I decided to go the no-bake route and I stuffed them into no-bake peanut butter cookie dough.
A 10 minute project which results in great little peanut butter cookie dough bites.
Creamy peanut butter, slightly sweet, and a hint of cinnamon and vanilla make for perfect cookie dough.
I thought these were fun for Easter. You know, “Easter eggs”, the nests, the pastel spring colors. I tried anyway.
If you don’t want to color real eggs for Easter, you could do this little project instead. Less mess, a one-bowl, mix-it-by-hand special, rather than boiling water, boiling eggs, and red dye #40 staining your hands.
Plus these candy-coated almonds taste better than hard-boiled eggs and don’t stink up your house.
[print_this]
“Egg”-in-a-Nest Stuffed Peanut Butter Cookie Dough Bites (No-Bake, Vegan, Gluten Free)
Makes 12 to 14 small cookie nests
1/4 cup peanut butter (I used store-brand, inexpensive, non-”natural”, creamy peanut butter*)
1/8 cup butter or margarine, softened (2 tablespoons)
1/4 cup brown sugar
1 tablespoon white sugar
1/4 cup powdered sugar
1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/4 cup all-purpose flour (to make gluten free, use a gluten free flour blend of your choice)
pinch salt, optional
1/4 cup pastel Jordan Almonds (or use plain almonds, peanuts, macadamia nuts, Peanut M&Ms, Whoppers, ball-shaped candy, diced candy bar pieces)
In a small bowl, whip the peanut butter and butter until creamy. I did this by hand but you can do it in a mixer if desired. Tip: microwave the peanut butter and butter in a microwave-safe bowl for 15 seconds, taking care not to melt them but just soften them, and they will combine easier. Add the sugars and whip until smooth. Add the cinnamon, vanilla extract, salt, flour (add the flour slowly in case you need slightly less than recipe indicates) and stir until combined.
The dough should be easy to work with and form into balls at this point, but if the dough is dry or crumbly and is not coming together, add a touch more peanut butter and mix until desired consistency is achieved. Conversely, it dough is too wet or sticky, add slightly more flour. Also, chilling the dough in the freezer for 10 minutes or refrigerator for 20-30 minutes prior to shaping it into balls can be helpful if the dough is a little wet or sticky.
After appropriate dough consistency is reached, roll the dough into 1 inch golf ball-sized shapes. After the balls are rolled, gently push in and insert an almond or candy. After inserting the almond, I raised the sides of the cookie up by “pulling” the dough up a bit, creating more of a nest appearance. Treat the dough like clay and form the shapes and sides as you see fit. Store extras in the refrigerator for weeks, or in the freezer for up to 3 months for longer term storage. I have successfully stored batches of no-bake cookies and cookie dough balls for many months in the freezer but do as you see fit and use common sense.
Notes: I recommend using non-natural peanut butter. Something like Jif, Skippy, or similar. Peanut butter that separates into a solid and oil is not recommended for these cookies.You could likely make these with almond butter, cookie butter, cashew butter, sunflower seed butter, or alternate nut butter or spread but you may need to play around with the ratio of dry ingredients (increase them) since most other nut butters tend to be runnier than peanut butter and you will need more dry ingredients in order to get the dough to come together.
[/print_this]
You don’t have to stuff candy-coated almonds into the cookie dough.
You could use plain run-of-the-mill almonds, peanuts, macadamia nuts, Peanut M&Ms, Whoppers, ball-shaped candy, diced Snickers bars, diced candy bar pieces, the skies the limit.
Or just use jelly.
I’m a fan of peanut butter recipes in general…
cookie dough in general
and any dessert that has something stuffed into it…
…So these were a natural progression.
Housekeeping details:
1. I was nominated to The Kitchn’s Best Food Photography on a Blog list.
If you want to vote for me, I’d love it. You can sign in with your Facebook or Twitter name to register and voting is anonymous. Takes about 1.18 seconds to do. Wait for the page to load (it’s a bit slow and you may need to scroll “up” to see the names). Click to Vote and of course, Vote for anyone who’s work you love. There are so many extremely talented photographers, professional photographers, and fabulous bloggers on the list, so to even make the list and be nominated, I was honored.
2. I was nominated to Fitness Magazine’s Blogs We Love: Best Healthy Eating Blogs list. I’m the first to admit, my blog’s focus has changed from where it was three years ago and I’ve moved from posting about raw vegan food and yoga and onto decadent desserts and comfort food, but I’m still honored to be nominated. If you want to vote for me, I’d be grateful.
3. Thanks for the Yoga Mat Giveaway entries. Winner announced tomorrow.
Do you have memories of coloring Easter eggs as a child or plans to color eggs this year? Participating in Easter Egg hunts?
Are you prone to losing things in your own kitchen and having to hunt them down?
These cookie dough bites are my kind of “Easter Egg hunt”. As in, go into the kitchen and “hunt” for one of these. Hide them just well enough that the family doesn’t know where they’re at but not so well that I can’t find them in a peanut butter-craving “emergency”. Yes, I have lots of those.
I’ve been known to stash sprinkles, cupcake liners, a small jar of vanilla, or small packages of things in random places in my kitchen cupboards and then weeks later, I’m unable remember exactly which drawer, cupboard, or overstuffed cabinet I put it and have to tear apart my own kitchen on a sprinkles hunt or a cupcake liner hunt. Whoops.
Have a great week!
left you details about the jam on my original reply
These are adorable!! I love Easter- it means SPRING is here. And I still get reminded of wearing white sandals on Easter every year as a kid. I’d always put together an egg hunt for my cousins on Easter Sunday, despite being only about 2 months older than the next in line. I had more fun planning than hunting. Such a precocious little kid…
I love the way you ask your readers questions at the end of a post – what a terrific way to connect!
Like we talked about yesterday, if someone only wants recipes, they can go to allrecipes. If they want more story, more interaction, more than just the recipe, they probably read blogs…such a huge part of is a two-way connection! :)
These are so darn cute! They make me excited for Easter!! Your no bake goodies always look fabulous. YES- we always used to color easter eggs. I’m kind of thinking about doing it again this year!
Those little nest things are cute! I have to make treats for my students this Easter … I think I am going to make cake pops, but not sure.
OMG I love sugar almonds and I love peanut butter these must be a match made in heaven!!!
So cute! Love the idea! I’m still hoping a good idea pops into my ahead for the almonds.
Oh, you got some, too? I have to say, I was STUMPED with what to make and it took me a long, long time to figure this out…the running, bleeding, issue and the fact that the nut itself is pretty big…when you get your post up, I’d love to see it. Remind me :)
I haven’t had Jordan almonds in years and those are really cute Easter cookies! I don’t have young children so no Easter egg hunts at my house this year. Btw, the instant pectin worked well for a quick batch of mango jam. So easy–mix pectin with sugar, add fruit and stir 3 min. and let it set for 30 min. ‘Twas very good on my sourdough bread!
So all you did was combine fruit, pectin, sugar, stir and let sit and in 30 mins you had jam? Are you saying you didn’t put it on heat or boil it? Sorry…I am extremely new to this whole process and read what is written quite literally yet! Clarify b/c I am thinking you have to have heated it at some point and boiled the fruit..for how long, etc…details please!
Hi again–the jam really was that easy. The pectin was instant pectin so no cooking/boiling required!! I used Ball brand Real Fruit Instant Pectin. There are probably other brands out there but as long as it is instant it should work the same. Website on the packet is FreshPreserving.com for more info.
I’ve used this too and it works exactly like it says – instant, no boil. Its great!!
I’ve never heard of this no-boil method and you still get jam in the end?! Where have I been? Boiling vats of water engrained in me from childhood apparently!
Those are just darling! This is really getting me in the mood for Spring!
GREAT idea! LOVE this!!!
Brooke
http://www.MarvelousLoveBlog.com
This is a great idea! It would be pretty simple to make a vegan version as well. I will definitely give it a try :)
Yes, they are vegan already!
Well technically not, due to the butter but oh well:)
OMG, what an adorable idea! Another must try!!! :)
Thanks, Kelli. LMK if you do!
I LOVE anything peanut butter! What a cute idea!
Super easy to handle those PB cravings :)
So cute! I think I might make the balls and then get my preschoolers to nest their own egg!
I think like a 5 year old b/c I have one :) Always trying to come up with things she can do, that don’t make a mess or require me to “babysit” the project, and that are FAST!