Salted Double Chocolate Peanut Butter Cookies Recipe on Food52 (2024)

Chocolate

by: Food Blogga

October23,2009

4

8 Ratings

  • Serves about 3 1/2 dozen

Jump to Recipe

Author Notes

I created these cookies one day when I was in serious need of chocolate, peanut butter, and salt. (Ladies, you know what I mean.) I definitely recommend using coarse sea salt on the cookies because it looks pretty and provides a punch of saltiness to contrast with the rich chocolate. - Food Blogga —Food Blogga

Test Kitchen Notes

This is the ultimate peanut butter cookie for chocolate lovers. The texture is reminiscent of the peanut butter cookie we all grew up on but with every detail refined -- the base is made with cocoa and you stir unsalted peanuts and semi-sweet chocolate chips (just the right amount of each so it's not overkill) and sprinkle coarse sea salt (we like Maldon) on top. As Food Blogga notes, don't use all-natural peanut butter or you won't get the same crumbly texture. We used Skippy. - A&M —The Editors

  • Test Kitchen-Approved
  • Your Best Chocolate Cookie Contest Finalist

What You'll Need

Ingredients
  • 1 1/4 cupsall-purpose flour
  • 1/2 cupcocoa powder
  • 1/2 teaspoonbaking soda
  • 1 teaspoonbaking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoonsalt
  • 1/2 cupbutter, room temperature
  • 1 cupsugar
  • 2 large eggs
  • 2 teaspoonspure vanilla extract
  • 3/4 cupcreamy peanut butter (not all natural)
  • 1/2 cupunsalted peanuts
  • 1 cupsemi-sweet chocolate chips
  • coarse sea salt for sprinkling cookies
Directions
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Line two large baking sheets with parchment paper.
  2. In a medium bowl, whisk flour, cocoa, baking soda, baking powder, and salt.
  3. In a large bowl, beat butter and sugar with an an electric mixer on medium-high speed. Beat in eggs and vanilla. Beat in peanut butter until just combined. Beat in dry ingredients until just combined. Stir in peanuts and chocolate chips.
  4. Drop 1 heaping tablespoon of cookie dough (I used a cookie scoop, but spoons are just fine) two inches apart (as they will spread). Top each cookie with a few sea salt crystals.
  5. Bake cookies for 12-14 minutes, until the edges are firm. It's OK if the centers are a tad soft. They'll firm up as they cool. Transfer to a wire rack to cool. Cool completely before storing in an air-tight container, for up to 5 days.

Tags:

  • Cookie
  • American
  • Peanut Butter
  • Chocolate
  • Vegetarian
  • Dessert
Contest Entries
  • Your Best Chocolate Cookie

See what other Food52ers are saying.

  • Sara Nguyen

  • Rachel DellaRocco

  • Dr. Smokey

  • sexyLAMBCHOPx

  • Kristen Bitter Jellison

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53 Reviews

Sophia A. February 10, 2021

These cookies are super easy and fantastic, accessible to beginners. I recommend creaming the butter and sugar well for the base. I added flour until it started to come together like a dough, it looked a little more like a batter initially.

If you half the sugar, and keep the rest of the recipe as is, you end up with little peanut chocolate cookie-cake clouds. Highly recommend.

Tyler W. August 23, 2020

Very good! I happened to have all the ingredients (except for the peanuts which I left out) and they were great. Not too sweet, excellent. I did scorch the first batch a bit, 14 minutes was too long. I did 11 minutes on the next batch and they were perfect.

Erika H. May 8, 2019

These cookies are a big disappointment! Followed the recipe to the letter, but the first batch did not spread like they should. The second I pressed down like a normal peanut butter cookies, however, the chocolate overpowers the peanut butter and you can't taste it. Just another chocolate cookie. Will not make again.

Sara N. February 21, 2018

I baked these cookies according to the recipe, but without adding the peanuts or chocolate chips--it came out perfectly light and sweet!

Rachel D. December 9, 2014

These cookies will change your life. Even after I "veganized" them and made them GF they still came out AMAZING! That is a christmas miracle!

Kristen B. December 3, 2017

how did you veganize these?

ctgal August 14, 2020

What did you use to make it gf?

Mike February 23, 2014

These were great! I followed the recipe as stated and they came out perfectly. They didn't spread as much during baking as I had anticipated, but they were cooked perfectly and tasted delicious.

KarenSue August 3, 2013

Not sure what I did wrong, but I used a cookie scoop, and the shape never changed. Ended up as very mounded cookies, not flat at all. They seem more like brownie bites than cookies. Three teenage boys and a husband aren't devouring them, so that is never a good sign. The flavor is OK, but I don't like the mounded cookie at all. Oh well, worth a try!

Mrs. L. December 20, 2012

Awesome recipe!!!!!! I added a little extra sea salt on top!! Yummy!!!!!!!!!

Greiser August 22, 2012

Made the cookies just as the recipe stated. They were awesome. Made one batch then had to make another to send to my daughter.

Cinnamonbark May 9, 2012

oooh, I wonder why natural peanut butter won't work! Hm...I wonder if it's because it doesn't have palm oil in it, which is great for baking. Maybe it's a peanut butter vs peanut butter 'spread' thing? (spread having palm oil in it and all...hm!) Just a thought!

judy October 28, 2018

Interesting thought about the palm oil. I would have automatically used natural peanut butter. I get mine fresh ground each week. I wonder if adding a couple of tbsp butter would help with the dough being less stiff so they spread when baking. Hmmmm

aepk April 11, 2012

I omitted the peanuts. i would say it turned out okay, but nothing spectacular. i think i'd be more inclined to just add cocoa to my fav peanutbutter cookie recipe and call it a day.

Cals November 29, 2011

All the peanut butter you could want and then some! So yummy!

Dr. S. November 14, 2011

Made these exactly as written, except that I subbed peanut butter chips for peanuts. SO, SO, SO GOOD!!!

j.palimpsest October 23, 2011

We absolutely loved these cookies.

the M. August 30, 2011

These are now known as Irene cookies in our house. Made a batch before we lost power and enjoyed them immensely while power was out for 3 days. Delicious blend of chocolate and peanut butter with delightful sweet salty taste. If you haven't made these yet, don't waste anymore time!!!!!!

19dax72 August 10, 2011

wow! .........yummmmmmmmmmyyyyyyyyyyy!

Ccchocolate July 4, 2011

Yummmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm i made it and it went down in a while!

sexyLAMBCHOPx June 25, 2011

This "lady" understands right now! Love the crunchy salt on top. Nice!

Ccchocolate June 8, 2011

Made them last week and they just VaNIShED!!!!!

chef M. April 6, 2011

i love it..thanks a lot

Salted Double Chocolate Peanut Butter Cookies Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

Why do they put fork marks in peanut butter cookies? ›

The reason is that peanut butter cookie dough is dense, and unpressed, each cookie will not cook evenly. Using a fork to press the dough is a convenience of tool; bakers can also use a cookie shovel (spatula).

Why are my peanut butter cookies always hard? ›

Why did my peanut butter cookies turn out hard? This is most likely to happen from over-baking your cookies. Make sure to take them out of the oven when they're still a bit soft in the middles, that way they can finish cooking on their cookie sheets outside the oven.

Why are my peanut butter cookies crumbling and falling apart? ›

If you overmix the dough, the cookies will be dry and crumbly. The best way to fix this is to add more liquid to the dough. This can be done by adding milk, water, or even melted butter. You may also need to add more flour to the dough if it is too wet.

Why do you put Criss Cross on peanut butter cookies? ›

So it looks like that there are utilitarian reasons for the cross-hatching—to allow for even cooking—but it might have been passed along for nearly a hundred years for primarily aesthetic reasons, where the cross-hatching is more to identify the cookies as peanut butter ones, rather than to cook them well.

Why do you smash peanut butter cookies? ›

It's been the “mark” of this classic treat for more than eighty years, and for good reason: by flattening this dense cookie dough, it ensures that each cookie bakes evenly. Our kitchen-tested recipe is a classic.

How do you keep peanut butter cookies from flattening? ›

Use a silicone baking mat or parchment paper. Coating your baking sheet with nonstick spray or butter creates an overly greasy foundation, causing the cookies to spread. I always recommend a silicone baking mat because they grip onto the bottom of your cookie dough, preventing the cookies from spreading too much.

Is it better to use butter or shortening in peanut butter cookies? ›

Your other source of fat should be butter, not shortening. Butter will make your cookies taste buttery; shortening will make them taste suspiciously vacant, like Katy Perry's voice post-autotune. Yes, shortening yields chewier cookies than butter does, because butter contains water and shortening doesn't.

What makes homemade cookies get hard? ›

Cookies become hard when the moisture in them evaporates. This can be caused by leaving them out in the air for too long, baking them for too long, or storing them improperly. The lack of moisture makes the cookies hard and dry, which makes them difficult to enjoy.

How do you moisten peanut butter cookie dough? ›

Dry – “Dry” or “Crumbly” dough is a product of over-mixing or using too much of any ingredient during the mixing process. This can be reversed by adding one to two tablespoons of liquid (water, milk or softened butter) to your mix.

How do you know when peanut butter cookies are done? ›

Unlike many other cookies, peanut butter biscuits only fully harden once they've been removed from the oven. Here's how to tell when peanut butter cookies are done: The tops of the cookies are a uniform light brown. They're soft to the touch but not moist or mushy.

Why don't you need flour for peanut butter cookies? ›

As you can see, the peanut butter replaces the flour and butter. Why is this? Peanut butter is basically ground peanut flour mixed with peanut oils.

Should I let peanut butter cookie dough rest? ›

You do not have to chill this peanut butter cookie dough for perfectly thick cookies that are full of peanut buttery flavor. You can chill the dough for up to 72 hours if you prefer. Chilling cookie dough is very similar to marinating meat – things just get so much better if you wait a day or two.

Why do you chill peanut butter cookie dough? ›

For starters, chilling prevents cookies from spreading out too quickly once they're in the oven. If you use a higher fat butter (like Kerrygold), chilling your dough is absolutely essential. Popping your dough in the fridge allows the fats to cool.

How to make peanut butter cookie mix taste better? ›

Peanut Butter Cookie Mix Hacks

Flavor Twist: After creating the dough according to the peanut butter cookie mix instructions, portion the dough into balls then roll in a tasty topping like poppy seeds, sesame seeds or sprinkles, or go for a 4:1 ratio of sugar and dry spice, like ground cinnamon or nutmeg.

Why are there lines on peanut butter cookies? ›

Why Do You Put Fork Lines in Peanut Butter Cookies? Our Test Kitchen experts say the fork lines are there to help peanut butter cookies cook more evenly.

Does the fork trick work for cookies? ›

My trusted method for getting ripply, jagged-topped cookies has been simple–scoop the cookie dough with two forks, or as I like to call it, forking your dough. Take two forks and rough up the dough a little bit. Use the tines of both forks to gather up as much dough as you want in a bundle.

Why do people poke fork holes in sugar cookies? ›

You can use a fork or a dough docker to prick small holes all over the surface of the dough. By venting the steam, docking keeps the dough from billowing or heaving as it bakes. It's an important step for crisp cookies or that are baked all in a single sheet and not cut up until they come out of the oven.

Why do peanut butter cookies have grooves? ›

If you don't flatten the cookies first, then the fork does double duty – it performs both functions. One very subtle result of creating the pattern is that the little tips of dough bake up crisper than the rest of the cookie, giving you both a bit of additional texture and deeper taste where the dough is more baked.

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