Nutella Peanut Butter Chocolate Chunk Cookies

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Nutella Peanut Butter Chocolate Chunk Cookies – The cookies, made largely from Nutella are some of the fudgiest, richest, and most intensely chocolaty cookies Iโ€™ve ever had. You will devour them!

Nutella Peanut Butter Chocolate Chunk Cookies averiecooks.com

I’ve made quite a few chocolate-peanut butter cookies in my day.

But had yet to bake Nutella into cookies until now. What was I waiting for.

They turned out moist, soft, chewy, and are some of the fudgiest, richest, and most intensely chocolaty cookies I’ve ever had.

The Nutella is the star of the show, and trumps the peanut butter flavor, which is more subtle.

Nutella Peanut Butter Chocolate Chunk Cookies averiecooks.com

I got the inspiration from my Peanut Butter Chocolate Chunk Cookies. Those cookies don’t use any flour, butter, or white sugar. I was going to just swap Nutella for peanut butter, but realized that wouldn’t be a good idea. Nutella is about twice as runny as peanut butter, and I was afraid of spreading issues. It’s also sweeter than peanut butter.

 To compensate, I cut the brown sugar amount in half, added a bit of flour, and supplemented the Nutella-dominant dough with just one-quarter cup of peanut butter since it’s thicker and provides more structure. And there’s NO butter and NO white sugar used, and very little flour.

I was so pleased when these came out of the oven and my strategies worked.

Nutella Peanut Butter Chocolate Chunk Cookies averiecooks.com

To make the cookies, cream together one egg, Nutella, peanut butter, dark brown sugar (or light if that’s what you have), vanilla, and let your mixer really work this dough over. In my stand mixer, I let this beat on high power for about 5 minutes. The batter goes from granular, gritty, and sloppy to smooth and oily-looking. It should look like a big, greasy ball of Play-Doh. If it’s not, keep beating and creaming until it is.

Add the flour, baking soda, and this causes the mass of dough to separate into tiny balls about the size of larger non-pareils sprinkles. The dough is not pretty, not combined, and you’ll think you’re on the wrong track. You’re fine.

Nutella Peanut Butter Chocolate Chunk Cookies averiecooks.com

 Add the chocolate chunks and beat momentarily. A tip when chopping chocolate is to put a piece of parchment on your cutting board before chopping it, which contains the chocolate sawdust, making cleanup a snap. The whole dusty mess slides easily off the parchment and into your mixing bowl.

I used Trader Joe’s 72% Pound Plus Bar. Use your favorite level of chocolate intensity. I wanted something dark, rich, and very intense and it delivered.

Trader Joe's 72% Pound Plus Bar

Using a medium 2-inch cookie scoop, form 15 mounds and place them on a large plate, or use your hands. If you’re using a cookie scoop, after the mounds are formed, squeeze and compact them in your hand.

The dough comes together when squeezed, yet is crumbly and loose without pressure as it lays in the mixing bowl. It’s oily yet crumbly, all in one.

Nutella Peanut Butter Chocolate Chunk Cookies averiecooks.com

Cover the plate with plasticwrap and chill it for at least two hours, up to 5 days, before baking. Bake for 9 to 10 minutes, or until tops have just set. Don’t overbake, which is easy to do with dark-colored cookies. They set up as they cool so don’t be afraid to pull these out when they’re still on the loose and jiggly side.

Biting into one of these dark beauties, with a sea of melted chocolate chunks scattered throughout the rich, Nutella-based dough, is just pure bliss.

Nutella Peanut Butter Chocolate Chunk Cookies averiecooks.com

Nutella lends a fudgy, gooey quality to the cookies, unlike other types of chocolate cookies that are made with cocoa powder, which I find are prone to turning dry and cakey.

Although there are hints of peanut butter flavor that come through, these are for chocolate lovers.

Nutella Peanut Butter Chocolate Chunk Cookies averiecooks.com

The edges are chewy, and the center is squishy soft, supremely moist, and ultra chocolaty.

In comparison to some of my other chocolate cookie recipes, these are a slam dunk. There’s no chocolate to melt nor having to wait for it to cool before beating into the other dry ingredients, making them so much faster and more foolproof.

Nutella Peanut Butter Chocolate Chunk Cookies averiecooks.com

I’m glad the recipe only makes 15 small cookies.

Having a big batch of these around would be dangerous.

Nutella Peanut Butter Chocolate Chunk Cookies averiecooks.com

Nutella Peanut Butter Chocolate Chunk Cookies - Nutella, PB & big chocolate chunks are guaranteed to put a smile on your face or anyone you make them for! Easy recipe at averiecooks.com

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Nutella Peanut Butter Chocolate Chunk Cookies

By Averie Sunshine
The cookies, made largely from Nutella are some of the fudgiest, richest, and most intensely chocolaty cookies Iโ€™ve ever had. They're moist, soft, chewy, and Nutella is the star of the show. It dominates the peanut butter flavor, which is much more subtle. Based on ease of recipe and overall taste and result, if you're looking for an easy but very chocolaty chocolate cookie recipe, this one is a shoe-in.
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 10 minutes
Total Time: 20 minutes
Servings: 15
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Ingredients 

  • 1 large egg
  • ยพ cup Nutella
  • ยผ cup creamy peanut butter or chocolate peanut butter, do not use natural or homemade, it's too runny and cookies could spread
  • ยฝ cup dark brown sugar, packed (light may be substituted)
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
  • ยฝ cup all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • pinch salt, optional and to taste
  • 5 ยฝ ounces dark chocolate, chopped (I used Trader Joe's 72% Pound Plus Bar)

Instructions 

  • To the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment (or a large mixing bowl and hand mixer), combine the egg, Nutella, peanut butter, brown sugar, vanilla, and beat on high power to cream ingredients, about 5 minutes. Stop and scrape down the sides of the bowl as necessary. The dough will go from very granular, gritty, and loose to smooth, oily, and well-formed in a large mound. If your dough has not come together or is at all gritty, continue to mix until it smooths out.
  • Add the flour, baking soda, optional salt and beat to incorporate. Dough will not look like normal cookie dough and will be tiny balls and flakes that seem almost feathery in the bowl. This is okay. Add the chocolate chunks and beat momentarily to incorporate.
  • Using a medium cookie scoop (about 2 tablespoons) or your hands, scoop out 15 mounds of dough and place them on a large plate. Using your hands, gently squeeze and compact each mound so that it's tightly packed together. Dough will be both crumbly and oily, but when squeezed, it should stay together. Cover plate with plasticwrap and refrigerate dough for at least 2 hours, up to 5 days, before baking.
  • Preheat oven to 350F, line 2 baking sheets with Silpat Non-Stick Baking Mats
  • parchment, or spray with cooking spray; set aside. Space dough 2 inches apart (8 per tray) and bake for 9 to 10 minutes, or until top have just set, even if slightly underbaked in the center. It's difficult to discern if they're done or not because they're dark, but watch them very closely and don't overbake. Cookies firm up as they cool, and baking too long will result in cookies that set up too crisp and hard (The cookies shown in the photos were baked for 9 minutes, with trays rotated at the 5-minute mark, and have chewy edges with pillowy, soft centers).
  • Allow cookies to cool on the baking sheet for about 10 minutes before removing and transferring to a rack to finish cooling. Store cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 1 week, or in the freezer for up to 3 months. Alternatively, unbaked cookie dough can be stored in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 5 days, so consider baking only as many cookies as desired and save the remaining dough to be baked in the future when desired.

Nutrition

Serving: 1, Calories: 201kcal, Carbohydrates: 25g, Protein: 3g, Fat: 10g, Saturated Fat: 6g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 3g, Cholesterol: 13mg, Sodium: 135mg, Fiber: 2g, Sugar: 18g

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

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Comments

  1. These cookies look amazing. It seems a little inaccurate to claim that “thereโ€™s NO butter and NO white sugar used” as Nutella and the peanut butter you recommend both contain bucket loads of sugar. But desserts aren’t meant to be healthy so I’m not going to worry about it.

  2. These cookies truly seem to embody the description: sinfully delicious! I really appreciate that your recipe directions are so thorough. I’m really excited to try this out!

  3. These are so good! I just made them, completely forgot to put them in fridge. They did spread a lot, but the end results were utterly delicious. Thanks a lot for sharing the recipe. I can always count on your recipes.

    Will blog about the cookies soon. :)

    1. So glad you made them and that you had luck with them, even though you didn’t chill the dough. Yes, do that next time – it will make them so much thicker and puffier! :) Thanks for LMK you tried the recipe!

  4. I was very excited to look at this recipe when a friend pinned it because it touted a lack of white sugar. I am constantly on the lookout for such recipes because white sugar does weird things to my system; I get wobbly, although it’s not diabetes. I was a little heartbroken when I looked through your ingredients as brown sugar is white sugar mixed with molasses. It even says so on the bag.

  5. Just saw YOUR recipe on Trish’s link party! All of your cookie recipes look absolutely incredible and I can’t wait to try them , especially these and the PB recipe they were based off of :)

  6. This is why I am more of a cook than a baker. Baking is such a science! I would never know to increase flour or cut the sugar. I’d just substitute Nutella for peanut butter and it would be a disaster. I totally admire people who are able to do that. And oh my gosh, do these look perfect!

    1. Well, my brain automatically thinks of these things, and then re-thinks about them, 100x a day until I make the recipe and see if my thoughts would be confirmed or not. Hypothesis testing you could call it :)