Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies — These are hands down the best peanut butter cookies I’ve ever made. Know that I don’t say that lightly! They’re melt-in-your mouth soft and chewy, and extremely moist!
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BEST EVER Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies
I’m not one to throw around labels like ‘The Best’ or ‘Best Of’ if I really don’t think something is. When people talk and every other thing is amazing, life-changing, or the best, I tend to not take them seriously.
But I can proudly say, these peanut butter chocolate chip cookies get my vote as “The Best” peanut butter cookies I’ve ever made.
They’re the easiest cookies you’ll ever make, with only six ingredients, and one of them is vanilla, which hardly counts. The recipe is naturally gluten-free because there’s no flour, and it’s one egg away from being vegan.
Instead of granulated sugar, this peanut butter chocolate chip cookie recipe uses all brown sugar. Why? Because it helps baked goods stay moist and soft, and it adds greater depth of flavor than granulated sugar!
The cookie dough itself is as robustly peanut butter flavored as you can get. There’s no butter and no flour to take away any of the intensity of flavor. Just pure peanut butter intensity.
The edges have a bit of chewiness to them, the interior is so soft and tender, the peanut flavor is distinctly present, and chunks and rivers of dark chocolate ooze everywhere.
It’s hard to believe there’s no butter, no flour, and no granulated sugar in them. They’re my definition of the perfect cookie.
Ingredients in Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies
Here’s what I used in these chocolate chip peanut butter cookies:
- Creamy peanut butter
- Light brown sugar
- Egg
- Vanilla extract
- Baking soda
- Chocolate chips or chunks
A Note About the Amount of Vanilla Called For
I am a vanilla fiend and added it amply enough to matter — 1 tablespoon, to be exact. No more of this 1/2 teaspoon business!
However, if you’re one of those people who prefer less, go with less. I go with more.
How to Make Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies
Making soft and chewy peanut butter cookies with chocolate chips is so easy! Just make sure you plan ahead, because the cookie dough MUST be chilled before baking it.
Here’s an overview of the recipe steps:
- Add the peanut butter and light brown sugar to the bowl of a stand mixer. (Spraying the measuring cup with cooking spray will help it plop out easier.)
- To the peanut butter and brown sugar, add an egg, vanilla extract, and baking soda. Mix all the ingredients until well-combined.
- Add the chocolate and beat momentarily to incorporate.
- As tempting as it is to bake the cookies right away because the dough is just so good, it must be chilled for at least 2 hours before being baked for thicker, puffier cookies.
- Using a medium-sized two-inch cookie scoop, form the dough mounds. This translates to almost 2 tablespoons of dough, or about 1.60-ounces by weight.
- Place the dough onto baking sheets about two inches apart, about 8 per tray. Prior to baking, flatten the mounds slightly. If your dough is very well-chilled, you can flatten them a bit more so they don’t stay mounded up in little puffballs while baking, just don’t over-flatten them.
- Bake at 350ºF oven for 8 to 10 minutes.
A Note About the Bake Time
I recommend baking the cookies at the lower end of the bake time range. The cookies in the photos were baked for 8 minutes exactly, with the trays rotated once at the 4-minute mark.
The chocolate chip peanut butter cookies will look underdone at 8 minutes, but firm up as they cool. Let them cool on the baking trays for 5 to 10 minutes before moving them.
If you like crispy and crunchy peanut butter cookies, this probably isn’t the recipe for you since these are all about soft, chewy, and melty. But if you prefer slightly more well-done cookies, bake them for 9-ish minutes, maybe 10.
I would not bake them longer than 10 minutes or they’ll set up too firm and crunchy as they cool, and you’ll miss out on the ooey, gooey, melt-in-your mouth qualities, which are make these the best chocolate chip peanut butter cookies!
Recipe FAQs
Of course! The honey roasted peanut butter makes for a slightly sweeter cookie than using regular peanut butter, and it’s a great contrast to the bittersweet dark chocolate. However, use what you have!
For my version, I used 1 cup Peanut Pan Creamy Honey Roasted Peanut Butter and I don’t advocate using natural or Homemade Peanut Butter.
As lovely as homemade peanut butter is for eating with a spoon, spreading on toast, or making pans of bars with, it lacks the structure that store-bought peanut butter has.
Because these cookies have no flour, which would lend structure, using peanut butter that’s oily, natural, and loose is going to result in cookies that are loose and may not bake up as thick.
You could try using natural peanut butter — and I’ve seen some people have success with it — but I get much better results with commercial. Good old-fashioned Jif, Skippy, or Peter Pan are my recommendations.
I don’t care for nuts in cookies, generally speaking, and creamy peanut butter is the only way for me, but if you like little pebbles in your cookies, go with crunchy.
Use whichever you have on hand to make these accidentally gluten-free peanut butter chocolate chip cookies!
I like the darkness and slight bitterness of chopped chocolate, contrasted with the honey in the peanut butter, and with molasses that’s naturally found in brown sugar. Most semi-sweet chocolate chips are in the 50 to 55% range, and I relish the extra bump in dark chocolate intensity.
However, chocolate chips are definitely the easier and quicker option since you don’t have to chop them up before throwing into the dough. In short: use what you have!
You probably can, but I’ve never tried it myself so I can’t say for sure. But I imagine substituting chopped nuts for part of the chocolate chunks would be fine.
Yes, pre-baked peanut butter chocolate chip cookies will keep in the freezer for up to 4 months.
Alternatively, unbaked cookie dough can be stored in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 5 days, or in the freezer for up to 4 months, so consider baking only as many cookies as desired and save the remaining dough to be baked in the future when desired.
Storage Instructions
These flourless peanut butter chocolate cookies will keep airtight at room temperature for up to 1 week. You can also freeze the baked cookies for up to 3 months.
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Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies
Ingredients
- 1 cup creamy peanut butter, I prefer creamy honey roasted; plain or crunchy may be used; do not use natural or homemade peanut butter – see below *
- 1 cup light brown sugar, packed
- 1 large egg
- 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 6 ounces semi-sweet, dark, or bittersweet chocolate, chopped (1 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips may be substituted)
Instructions
- To the mixing bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, combine peanut butter, brown sugar, egg, vanilla, and beat on medium-high speed until well-combined and the sugar is fully incorporated and is mixture is no longer gritty or granular. Stop to scrape down the bowl as necessary.
- Add the baking soda and beat to incorporate.
Add the chocolate and beat to just incorporate; don’t overmix or the nice chocolate chunks will break down. - Using a medium 2-inch cookie scoop, form two-tablespoon mounds. If chocolate is falling out of dough since there is an abundance, roll ball between palms to encourage it to stay in the dough.
- Place mounds on a large plate, flatten mounds slightly, cover with plasticwrap, and refrigerate for at least 2 hours, or up to 5 days, before baking. Do not bake with warm dough because cookies will spread and bake thinner and flatter.
- Preheat oven to 350F, line a baking sheet with a Silpat or spray with cooking spray.
- Place mounds on baking sheet, spaced at least 2 inches apart (I bake 8 cookies per sheet) and bake for 8 to 10 minutes, or until edges are set and tops are barely set, even if slightly underbaked in the center. Watch them very closely after 7 minutes and I recommend not baking longer than 10 minutes. Cookies firm up as they cool, and baking too long results in cookies that become too crisp and hard. The cookies in the photos were baked for 8 minutes, with trays rotated at the 4-minute mark, and have chewy edges with pillowy soft centers.
- Allow cookies to cool on the baking sheet for 5 to 10 minutes before removing and transferring to a rack to finish cooling.
Notes
- *Although natural peanut butter or homemade peanut butter may work, I recommend using storebought peanut butter like Jif, Skippy, Peter Pan or similar so that cookies bake up thicker and spread less. Using natural or homemade peanut butter tends to result in thinner and flatter cookies that are prone to spreading.
- Cookies will keep airtight at room temperature for up to 1 week, or in the freezer for up to 4 months. Alternatively, unbaked cookie dough can be stored in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 5 days, or in the freezer for up to 4 months, so consider baking only as many cookies as desired and save the remaining dough to be baked in the future when desired.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
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I tried making these cookies twice, since you said they were the greatest. Both times, they came out much different from your pictures and were very average. This is not the greatest peanut butter chocolate chip cookie that you say it is. Very disappointed!
I love them and lots of other people do too, but everyone has different tastes and preferences and best of luck in your search finding your perfect cookie.
Can you use Cookie butter instead of peanut butter?
I’ve made these…try this recipe! https://www.averiecooks.com/softbatch-cookie-butter-brown-sugar-cookies/
I had a bunch of Natural Peanut Butter to be used up before September and was looking for recipes. Came across this but saw everyone comment about the crumbly texture if it were Natural. I added coconut oil to the batter and it helped and was super yumm!
Glad natural PB and a dash of coconut oil worked great for you!
I’m so happy! These peanut butter cookies worked out great for me! I was worried because so many people were having various issues and I have a tendency to mess up even fail proof recipes….but these cookies are amazing!!! I mean, the dough was a little oily but nothing I couldn’t work with (I used creamy Skippy) and the cookies are yummy so I guess it all worked out in the end. I’m SOOO glad I found your blog! I’m off to college tomorrow but come winter break, I want to try as many as your recipes as possible! Thank you for your amazing recipes!
Thanks for trying them, glad they came out great, glad you’re looking forward to trying more recipes and good luck at school!!
Have you ever tried using a different type of butter other than peanut butter? Like Almond, Walnut, Cashew, or Sunflower? Just wondering if the results are good or not as I’m supposed to stay away from Peanuts.
Thanks!!
I haven’t personally. I know that other people have done cookies using other nut/seed butters but the issue is that those tend to be either homemade or organic, and thus, they’re very runny. Nothing like the consistency of say Jif or Skippy. So you can try and see what happens but I don’t know if the cookies will spread. You may have to add flour at which point they’re not GF but that may not be a consideration for you. Good luck!
What would happen if I completely let out the sugar? Is there something I could sub it with to keep the texture in tact? I love them the way they are, but am doing a month long “dessert-free” challenge and need a dessert for a work function…oh, the cruelty!
You could possibly try using one of those Splenda-like or stevia-based ‘baking blends’ that have the bulk and texture of white sugar but aren’t. These use brown sugar though. And I’m not sure what will happen when you bake them since I’ve never used those blends. LMK how it goes.
I have a stand mixer, but no paddle attachment, can I still make these cookies? Can I just use the regular beaters?
I’ve never tried mixing this dough without a paddle attachment but you could try. If all else fails, just stir by hand.
Thanks so much for this recipe….was looking for something new to try for a bake sale. It is definitely for peanut butter lovers!!! I used skippy creamy peanut butter and didn’t have any problem with an oily dough at all…. in fact my dough was so solid I thought I’d try to bake one without chilling the dough first and it still turned out puffy and chewy and had no problems of spreading too much… I’ve now put the rest of my dough in the fridge to bake for later..
In fact my dough was so not oily/not spreading I actually wondered if I did anything wrong…or maybe coz skippy’s peanut butter has no real peanuts in it? haha…
I am so happy to hear you made these with great success! I swear by Skippy and Jif (and storebrand/generic el cheapo) peanut butter for baking. Glad you loved these as much as I do!
Just made these! Yum!! Thanks for sharing! This is my go-to PB chocolate cookie recipe now!
Thanks for trying these and glad they’re your new go-to PB cookie recipe! That’s wonderful!
First off, these look delicious and I am definitely going to make them at some point! But I think there is “white sugar” in them from the peanut butter. The Peter Pan Creamy Honey Roast Peanut Spread nutrition facts show 8g of sugar in 2 TBL and the recipe calls for 1 cup which is 16 TBL which equals 64g of sugar.. yikes! It’s a shame that natural/homemade PB doesn’t bake as well!
I really don’t worry too much about it to be honest…I run a lot. I don’t mind eating PB which has sugar!
Hi there,
Thanks so much for the super easy, super yummy recipe! I have now made these twice and they are just perfect (though i am fairly certain i have consumed my body weight in PB!) the 2nd time around, i added 1/2 cup of dessicated coconut; it makes them a little less peanutty tasting but adds to the ‘cookie-like’ consistency that normal flour would give :)