Pumpkin Peanut Butter Oatmeal Bars

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If you haven’t tried the combination of peanut butter and pumpkin, you need to.

It’s a match made in thick, gooey heaven.

Pumpkin Peanut Butter Oatmeal Bars

I’ve been eating these bars like there’s no tomorrow.

Or like there’s no pumpkin shortage.  Did you know about that?

pumpkins

But there’s no shortage of full-on pumpkin flavor in these.

Pumpkin Peanut Butter Oatmeal Bars

Between the homemade pumpkin spice lattes and these bars, I’ve been converted to the other side the pumpkin side.

 

These were so easy to make.

 

No need to slave away on these bars.   Or slave away in the kitchen, ever.

For me, cooking and baking should be fun and not a chore, and I highly doubt you’ll find these bars to be a chore.

Pumpkin Peanut Butter Oatmeal Bars

I love it when I don’t dirty every dish in the house and don’t have a total mess going on.  That’s actually been known to happen from time to time.  Shocker, I know.

The good thing about the peanut butter pumpkin bars is that your kitchen won’t look like a cyclone hit it when you’re done.

Ingredients for Pumpkin Peanut Butter Oatmeal Bars

One bowl + One spoon + Oven = Bars in about a half hour

They’re vegan and gluten free (see this post about Oats near the bottom for a discussion on oats and gluten)

And they make me just wanna chomp

Pumpkin Peanut Butter Oatmeal Bars

The pumpkin flavor really shines through.  Between the pumpkin puree and the pumpkin pie spice, pumpkin lovers can rejoice.

The peanut butter is nicely balanced with the pumpkin and the flavors complement each other, but these are definitely pumpkin-peanut butter bars, not peanut butter-pumpkin bars.

Thanks to my relationship with FoodBuzz as a Featured Publisher, I received this Planters Peanut Butter and put it to use in these bars.

Peanut Butter

The peanut butter eaten by the spoonful on it’s own is also great.

Doesn’t everyone eat PB by the spoonful at midnight standing in your kitchen in front of the refrigerator when you’re too lazy to make anything but you’re feeling snacky?

Well now I’ve got these to snack on.

Pumpkin Peanut Butter Oatmeal Bars

You not only get both peanut butter and pumpkin in these bars (and I love a good two-for-one deal), but the brown sugar caramelizes when baking and makes these bars slightly chewy and caramely. If you underbake them by a touch like I prefer to do with my baked goods, it’s the perfect marriage of barely crispy on the outside with a caramelized, moist inside.

Pumpkin Peanut Butter Oatmeal Bars

If I was in charge of writing The Rules You Must Bake By, I think that all cookies, brownies, and bars all should have a slightly crispy edge with soft centers.

And never be dry.  Dry = not worth my chew

And the pumpkin peanut butter oat bars deliver if held up to my self-created Rules You Must Bake By.

 

Pumpkin Peanut Butter Oatmeal Bars (Vegan, Gluten-Free)

1/2 c peanut butter

1 c pumpkin puree (i.e. Libby’s in a can and if you don’t have pumpkin puree in your market, use sweet potato puree either canned or sweet potatoes that you boil/puree yourself)

2 c oats (whole rolled, not quick cook; use certified gluten-free if necessary)

1 c light brown sugar, packed

1/2 c granulated sugar

1 tbsp pumpkin pie spice (reduce/increase to taste)

1 tsp cinnamon (reduce/increase to taste)

1 tbsp vanilla extract

Optional: Add raisins, nuts, chocolate/white/peanut butter chips to the mixture.  I’d suggest starting with 1/3 to 1/2 c and going from there based on taste preference.

Optional frosting ideas (they really don’t need frosting, but I love frosting and wish I would have added some but was too in a hurry to just eat them):

Cream Cheese Frosting; add a pinch of pumpkin pie spice + cinnamon if you’d like

Chocolate Peanut Butter Frosting

Caramel Sauce, either jarred or homemade Dark Rum Caramel Sauce

Directions: Combine all ingredients into a mixing bowl and stir by hand.  Spread batter (it will be pretty moist) into a foil-lined and spayed 8 x 8 or 9 x 9 pan.  Bake at 350F for 22-25 minutes or until toothpick inserted in center comes out clean.  The bars may still look underdone, but that’s ok because they will continue to set up as they cool.  Allow to cool very well before slicing.  Store extras on the countertop, refrigerator, or in the freezer for long term storage.

Notes: All measurements are approximate and if you love peanut butter or pumpkin puree, add a bit more of either.

Reduce the sugar amounts if you wish or even attempt a sugar-free version by making with stevia, stevia “baking blends” such as NuNaturals Baking Blend (enter code AVE630 to save $5 at checkout) or try other powdered forms of nonsugar sweeteners.

Adjust baking time as necessary based on your own recipe substitutions.

If you don’t enjoy pumpkin pie spice, cinnamon, or vanilla extract as much as I do, scale them back.  However, both pumpkin puree and peanut butter are very strong flavors and I find can stand up to lots of spices and vanilla extract and are complemented well by them.

A Visual Guide

Gather your ingredients

Ingredients for Pumpkin Peanut Butter Oatmeal Bars

Combine all Ingredients & Mix

Ingredients Pumpkin Peanut Butter Oatmeal Bars

Ingredients Pumpkin Peanut Butter Oatmeal Bars

Press into the foil-lined and sprayed pan

Pumpkin Peanut Butter Oatmeal Bars in foil lined baking pan

Bake, Cool, Slice & Serve

Frost them if you desire.  Or have patience and can refrain from immediately chomping down the minute they are cool enough to devour.

I had no such patience and just dug in.

 Pumpkin Peanut Butter Oatmeal Bars

These bars made a pumpkin liar outta me

One Pumpkin Peanut Butter Oatmeal Bars on parchment paper with bite taken outBut I promise not to hoard Libby’s

Pumpkin Peanut Butter Oatmeal Bars

Need other Pumpkin Recipes?

Check my Pumpkin Recipes Compilation Post

Pumpkins in wooden bin

Or try No Bake Pumpkin Pie Donut Holes (Vegan, GF)

No Bake Pumpkin Pie Donut Holes on white plate

No Bake Pumpkin Pie (Vegan, GF)

No Bake Pumpkin Pie in white dish with whipped topping

Pumpkin Spice Latte (Vegan, GF)

Mug of Pumpkin Spice Latte

My last bar recipe, Caramel Apple Bars, don’t have pumpkin in them but are an easy, seasonal recipe for the apple lovers in case you’re more into apples than pumpkins.  It’s okay, I used to be like you and not “that into” pumpkin.

Stacked Caramel Apple Bars

Questions:

Do you like pumpkin?  In what forms?  Pie, Coffee/Lattes, Breads, Donuts, Smoothies, Other Forms?

Do tell!

I’d love to hear what your fave ways to use and enjoy pumpkin are.

And if you don’t like pumpkin or are just meh about it, that’s ok.

I like it, and these bars did make me eat some pumpkin crow with my words.

I love Christmas baking and the flavors of Christmas even more though. I think.  i.e. Barks, Brittles, Cookies, and Holiday Candies.  <– Those things really excite me

P.S. Reminder to enter the Bella Bars Giveaway.  Winner announced next post.

Have a great start to your week!

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Please note: I have only made the recipe as written, and cannot give advice or predict what will happen if you change something. If you have a question regarding changing, altering, or making substitutions to the recipe, please check out the FAQ page for more info.

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Comments

  1. Yum–these look really good.

    I love pumpkin, but I haven’t starting making anything with it yet–need some colored leaves and a bit cooler weather for me to feel like its Fall. I did, however, get some pumpkin spice gelato from Ciao Bella the other day and it was INCREDIBLE!

  2. These look great. Hey, you should make a whole post about “Rules to Bake By.”

    I love pumpkin. A couple of years back, I made a pumpkin lasagna, based on a butternut squash lasagna recipe by Giada de Laurentiis. It was super excellent, and really wowed everyone. Pretty easy to make, too. Now that I think of it, I’d better bust out that recipe soon.

  3. I believe the pumpkin shortage must officially be over: yesterday when I went to Costco they had 3-packs of Libby’s 29-oz cans for $7.59. (And they FINALLY got in the giant sacks of frozen cherries!)

    1. you’re the one who tipped me off about the shortage a few months ago! glad it’s done. And that you found cherries!

  4. oh! these look AMAZING! i’m totally bookmarking this for all of the upcoming festive holidays that are in desperate need of pumpkin treats :) what pumpkin shortage? guess i should start hoarding libbys..

    1. I thought of you when I posted these. They are so easy too girl. 3 mins to dump it all in 1 bowl, spread in pan, bake. Done :)

  5. “Doesn’t everyone eat PB by the spoonful at midnight standing in your kitchen in front of the refrigerator when you’re too lazy to make anything but you’re feeling snacky?”

    I truly believe this [unless something crazy like a nut allergy]

    NEED to make this asap!! Looks amazing and so easy to make! All ingredients I have on hand too!!!!

    Question…been trying to figure this out FOREVER…how did you get the “print this” code for your site?

    1. you install a Print This widget.

      There are tons for WP blogs, just google it from your widgets/dashboard and download and install one.

  6. These look incredible. I am in the middle of a 28-day cleanse right now, but I plan to make this as soon as I’m done. I can’t wait. Thanks for sharing.

  7. I WANT ONE OF THOSE FAIRY TALE PUMPKINS! yea.. kinda just because of it’s name, but how fun do those seem! I really like how they have a bunch of varieties to choose from…i guess not just for eating but decoration too, huh. Okay, but onto more fantastic things: these delicious pumpkin peanut butter oatmeal bars! i love that you kept the ingredients pretty simple and in their basic form :) definitely would pair it with the pumpkin latte, would be hard to resist that combo ;)

    xoxo <3

  8. You are awesome. Both for creating these luscious-looking bars, and for spelling “complement” correctly. Thank you for that! :P

    1. their and there

      compliment and complement

      yes, I try to get it right but sometimes ppl will write in criticizing my grammar with a long email and I’m like…whoa, it was on the fly blogging…ha!

      1. Hey, I’m a linguist and I’ve never had a problem with your grammar. :) There’s a difference between personal voice and incorrect grammar. Words are meant to be sculpted to represent the writer’s meaning. Sometimes that means imperfect sentence structure, punctuation, etc…and there’s not a thing wrong with that.

      2. I know you “get me” and you read tons of blogs like I do…and sometimes it’s nice to read prose that sounds like it’s being spoken right out of someone’s mouth vs. more formal prose….it’s so hard to “find your voice” and not get too wordy (or overthink it) sometimes!

        Have a great week my friend :)

  9. Until last year when I had Pumpkin Bread for the first time, I hated pumpkins. I am going to beg and beg my boyfriend to make these! My 5 month old son does not allow me to make anything, unless it’s for him. So many of your recipes are saved for me to make when I can find time.

    Looks soooo yummy!

    1. fellow mommy friend…throw this all in a bowl, stir, and spoon in into a pan. I am serious when I say the active work time is LESS than 3 mins. I am not kidding, just find 3 mins and you’re set :)

  10. Total yes to the spooning PB. In class the other day I was hungry and all I had on me was a jar of PB, no spoon. (Doesn’t everyone carry around a jar of PB with them?) So what did I do? PB fingers to the rescue. I was stealth about it until the smell of PB went wafting into the air hahaha.

    1. the smell of PB on fingers lingers…you can wash your hands like 5 times with strong soap and still smell it. Not that that’s awful but ya know.