These very chewy and soft granola bars taste like snickerdoodle cookies and are every bit as satisfying, but are healthier.
I’m a big fan of snickerdoodle cookies. And granola bars.
And I’ll never say no to granola bars that taste like cookies.
I decided to combine two favorites into one as I was leaving Aruba, figuring they’d make nice snacks for the twenty two hour journey back to California. And boy, did these extra chewy, no-bake granola bars ever hit the spot. They really do taste like snickerdoodles in all their cinnamon-and-sugar scented glory and the best part is that they come together in five minutes and are easily kept both vegan and gluten-free.
To make them, combine butter, brown and granulated sugars, and corn syrup in a large microwave-safe bowl and heat for three minutes total, stopping after each one-minute interval to stir the ingredients. After the first minute, not much will likely have happened and the butter probably won’t even have melted yet, but after the second burst it will have softened and liquified. Give everything a good stir and return the bowl for the third minute. Keep an eye on it because you’re essentially making caramel sauce in the microwave and the bubbling that occurs helps create a sticky sauce, which is key to the granola bars holding their shape and sticking together. I don’t anticipate the mixture bubbling over and mine was no where close, and I use this technique in other granola bar recipes without issue, but microwaves vary.
To the hot caramel sauce, add vanilla, cinnamon, cream of tartar, optional salt, and quick-cooking oats. I usually use old-fashioned whole rolled oats in my recipes, but for these bars, quick-cook is the way to go. The oats are smaller and broken down, and they stick together much better than larger old-fashioned whole oats. Give everything a good stir and then slowly add three-quarters cup of flour, stirring to incorporate it. The mixture will be thick and it will be moist, but it shouldn’t be fall-apart sloppy and gloppy.
It sets up very dramatically after being pressed into the pan as it cools but if necessary, add up to four additional tablespoons of flour, or one-quarter cup, if your batter seems very wet. Don’t exceed four additional tablespoons because that could dry it out too much and cause the granola bars to be crumbly and not hold their shape well.
It’s likely that substituting some vanilla or plain protein powder could replace some or all of the flour. However, because protein powders vary greatly in how they work; some bind things beautifully, some turn food into sludge, and some turn it crumbly, you’d need to experiment. I’d start with acouple tablespoons and work your way up if you’re feeling adventurous. I was not and needed to pack.
Transfer the mixture to an 8-inch square pan and spread it out, firmly packing it down and smoothing it with a spatula. Place the pan in the refrigerator for at least two hours so the bars can set up before slicing them or pop the pan into the freezer for a shorter duration.
Slice the bars into whatever shapes you prefer. Ten to twelve rectangular bars the size of a Quaker Chewy Granola bar is my yield and then I wrap them individually in plasticwrap, put them all together into a gallon-sized Ziplock, and store them in the refrigerator. They are shelf-stable for a week or so, but in the refrigerator they’ll last a month, or can be frozen many months. However, a dozen little granola bars won’t likely be lingering for too long.
Optionally drizzle the bars with melted white chocolate, either individually or just do the whole pan at once. I prefer white chocolate here and find it’s a better complement to the cinnamon-and-sugar flavors than dark chocolate, but it’s chocolate and there really is no wrong kind. I was tempted to dunk half the bar in melted chocolate or dip the bottom surface of the bar into chocolate like many storebought granola bars have that perfectly smooth and luscious chocolate bottom, but I wanted to keep them in the realm of healthy and was judicious about my chocolate usage. Sometimes you can teach an old dog new tricks.
The notes of caramel from the melted butter and brown sugar, combined with the cinnamon and a bit of tang from the cream of tartar, give such richness of flavor. The white chocolate drizzle is a nice touch and adds just a bit of additional sweetness because on their own, the bars aren’t overly sweet.
I love texture and the oats add an incredible amount. They’re fabulously dense and I have to chew-and-chew each bite, which is nice because it prevents me from being able to inhale three bars in three minutes. Interestingly, they don’t really taste like Oatmeal Cookies and are much more like Snickerdoodle Cookies or Sugar-Doodle Cookies, some of my all-time favorites.
They’re satisfying and hearty and make great pre- or post-workout snacks, and I feel satisfied without feeling like I just un-did all the benefits of my workout. I was also pleasantly shocked how well they held up going from ninety degree humidity to x-ray machines to the bottom of my carry-on to overhead bins.
I had to hide these from myself on the plane.
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Snickerdoodle Cookie Granola Bars
Ingredients
- ½ cup butter, or vegan butter or margarine
- ½ cup light corn syrup
- ÂĽ cup light brown sugar, packed
- ÂĽ cup granulated sugar
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 tablespoon ground cinnamon
- ½ teaspoon cream of tartar
- ½ teaspoon salt, optional and to taste
- 3 ½ cups quick cook oats - Quaker], https://www.quakeroats.com/products/hot-cereals/quick-oats.aspx, [Bob's, or similar
- Âľ cup plus up to 4 tablespoon all-purpose flour, or Bob's or similar; protein powder may be used - see below
- ½ cup white chocolate chips melted for drizzling, optional (or vegan white chocolate chips; or semi-sweet chocolate chips)
Instructions
- Line an 8-by-8-inch baking pan with aluminum foil leaving overhang, spray with cooking spray; set aside. In a large microwave-safe bowl combine butter, corn syrup, (or brown rice syrup - I suspect maple syrup or agave are not quite sticky enough to properly bind the ingredients so bars will hold together), brown sugar, granulated sugar and heat on high power for 3 minutes total. After 1 minute, stop and stir; reheat for another minute, stop and stir; reheat for the final minute, stop and stir. In the final minute, keep an eye on the bowl just to make sure the liquid doesn't bubble over because you're essentially making caramel sauce in the microwave.
- Add vanilla, cinnamon, cream of tartar, salt, and stir to combine. Add oats and stir to combine. Add 3/4 cup flour slowly, stirring to incorporate it. Mixture should be thick and although it should be moist, it shouldn't be sloppy. Add up to 4 additional tablespoons flour if your mixture seems very wet; don't over-add and dry out batter too much because it shouldn't be crumbly. Regarding protein powder - substituting some vanilla or plain protein powder could likely replace some or all of the flour, but I have not tested it. Because protein powders vary greatly in how they work and bind ingredients, playing around with a couple tablespoons and working your way up is my recommendation.
- Transfer mixture to prepared pan and spread it into an even flat layer, pressing it down firmly with a spatula and smoothing the surface. Place pan in the refrigerator for at least 2 hours, or in the freezer for at least 1 hour, or until bars have set up. Lift bars out with foil overhang, place on a cutting board, and slice bars into desired size and shape. I prefer 10 to 12 rectangular bars, about 4-inches long by about 3/4-inch wide, similar in size and shape to a Quaker Chewy Granola Bar. Bars will keep at room temperature in an airtight container, wrapped individually in plasticwrap and placed in a gallon-sized Ziplock for up to 1 week (the butter was cooked for 3 minutes so they are shelf-stable); in the refrigerator for up to 1 month, or in the freezer for up to 3 months.
- Take care that all ingredients used are in keeping with your dietary requirements if bars must be kept vegan, gluten-free, or soy-free.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
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Thanks for the Elegant Food Gift Box Giveaway entries
Do you have a favorite granola or granola bar recipe? Fan of snickerdoodles?
Feel free to link to your favorite recipes. Making granola and granola bars at home is so easy, cost-efficient, and you can control what does or doesn’t go into the bars.
And I’m a huge fan of snickerdoodles and when done right, very little can compete with a perfect snickerdoodle.
Happy New Year!
My husband was just talking about needing some protein bars, so when I read this and saw the possible protein powder substitution, I gave it a whirl. They turned out great and we love the snickerdoodle flavor. I used honey and replaced all the flour with pea protein powder. I only used 3/4 cup total–it’s pretty “absorbent”. It probably sounds gross, but it’s unflavored and more neutral tasting than whey, so I like it best as a flour replacement. It doesn’t get super sticky like whey and can easily go sweet or savory. And…they really did come together in a few minutes–so easy!
Paula I love that you already made these! Another lady *just* wrote to me minutes before you did and she made them, too. Right above your comment and she did the nutritional stats on them. Anyway glad to hear you tried the protein powder sub and it worked. Good to know that honey got sticky/tacky enough, too. And that the pea protein worked. I dont use that one and if I ever use p.p. I use Sun Warrior brown rice p.p. in either vanilla or chocolate and it’s very absorbent. Like a sponge! But I know that some p.p.’s such as whey or soy can vary greatly and can get so gloppy!
If you need other p.p. ideas – try these! They are super good! I used chocolate p.p. but have had people write in making them with vanilla or neutral p.p. but I love the chocolate :)
https://www.loveveggiesandyoga.com/2012/04/peanut-butter-and-jelly-chocolate-protein-fudge.html
Those are almost to pretty to eat. I have never had a snickerdoodle before (don’t tell anyone) I will be making this for sure. Thank You. Happy New Year!
Ok I would GLADLY trade you one of these for one of your buttery breadsticks. Ive been thinking about those things for a week! I go to your site just to stare at the pics..seriously :)
do you have any idea what the nutritional info on these are?
No but feel free to use one of those online calculators and plug in all the data. LMK what they come out to!
averie, update: I just made these and they are so good. I checked online calculator and they are 68 calories if you divide into 12 bars. thanks so much
So glad you made them and only 68 calories – that’s crazy (in a good way!) I would have guessed way more! Wow – seriously they taste so much better than a 100 cal Quaker bar! The math doesn’t even seem right but I’m not going to question it :) And so glad you’re enjoying them and thanks for doing the stats.
Oooh, these look so perfectly chewy! I really grew fond of snickerdoodle flavor this year, and I think the trend will continue in 2013. Happy new year!!
Some of your snickerdoodle creations had me so impressed given that you’re making everything GF, grainfree, etc!
It’s all in the cinnamon!
I’m waiting for you to market these amazing bars you’re making, they’d be a hit!
Yum! I’m so stealing this method, BTW. :) Happy New Year Averie!
You’re a smart cookie! (heh) I too LOVE the snickerdoodle. I haven’t had much success making them gluten-free though. They really need that chewy inside to be considered a snickerdoodle (which I’m sure these bars have a lot of!) Great idea to make these for the trip back home. I still find it so hard to believe how long it takes you to get back to California!
Two five-to-six hour flights plus a layover plus travel time to the airport/home from the airport on the other side, returning rental car on the drop off side, etc. Not quite like going to India but still a long trek!
And these are so easy to keep GF and healthier than true cookies!
Oh my! Such a fabulous recipe!
These granola bars look like the perfect treat for a long day of traveling! Love the chocolate drizzle on top.
Hope you made it back safely Averie! These granola bars are right up my alley. The tablespoon of cinnamon… did you make these for me?!?! I’m convinced you were channeling me in your Aruba kitchen. :) I love the white chocolate drizzle on top as well – white chocolate and snickerdoodles is a fierce combination. Often underrated in my opinion. And you don’t have to twist my arm to make another no bake granola bar. I want one right now! :)
Thanks, Sally. It’s amazing that a tbsp of cinnamon sounds like a lot but as I was tasting the batter I had to keep increasing the amount because the oats were just absorbing it all and nothing worse than an under-flavored goodie!
Happiest New Year to you. It’s going to be great for you I know :)
Granola bars that taste like cookies? I’m in! A 22 hour trip sounds crazy. I bet Aruba is worth it though. Happy New Year, Averie :)
Long schlep but yes, so worth it :)
Happy New Year! I love those bars!
Happy New Year Averie!!! These bars look great :)
The photographic challenges are beyond words some days down there. Things were definitely not going my way with this shoot and with packing looming but you know how that goes. Hope your new year is off to a fab start! xoxo