Salty-Sweet Peanut Butter Sandies Recipe (2024)

Ratings

5

out of 5

2,716

user ratings

Your rating

or to rate this recipe.

Have you cooked this?

or to mark this recipe as cooked.

Private Notes

Leave a Private Note on this recipe and see it here.

Cooking Notes

Roberta

One of my loves is peanut butter and chocolate so I could not resist adding mini-chocolate chips. Oh, my! This is the cookie you create in secret when no one is home and then hide the plastic container in the freezer under containers of frozen butternut squash soup and bags of frozen peas so they are safe and secure from anyone finding them.

Judi

Try using turbinado sugar in this instead of the granulated sugar, and cutting down each sugar by 2T...I did, and it made these even closer to the City Bakery gems I remember. I have made this with Smucker's Natural (which someone left at the house) and with Koeze Cream-Nut (which I order by the case from Zingerman's). There is no wrong peanut butter for this recipe. A keeper.

VON ALLEN

Made this recipe exactly, including the cultured butter and rounded shape. Frankly, I'm a little tired of the flat cross-hatch thing going on. At 12 minutes, the result was not a crispy cookie, but a firm rich shortbread with a buttery, dense center that melts in your mouth. Next day I shared withs friends. One respected taster bit into her cookie mid conversation. Eyes widened, she said "Oh my!" Indeed. Don't know if my waistline can handle another batch anytime soon.

Mer

Fantastic. This recipe transcends all other pb cookies I've made thanks to the sugar, salt crystals on top. Did two things differently: 1) Sprinkled a little sugar and salt, made cross hatches with a fork (per traditional pb cookies) as a way to embed the crystals, sprinkled a little more sugar, salt, and 2) Baked for 11 minutes so they stayed somewhat soft.

Cyssf

My current favorite cookie. I used Skippy extra crunchy peanut butter. My friend loved them as well but when she tried to make them herself using natural peanut butter they were not as crisp. Pressing and cross hatching them results in thinner crispier cookies. To avoid totally overdosing on these addictive cookies I freeze half the batch (after scooping, pressing, salting) and do serial bakings over several weeks. Avoids having all those cookies on hand begging to be eaten.

natalie

These were really delicious and not too sweet. I made one batch in the shape of the scoop from the spoon and another in a more flat shape and used a fork to press in a cris cross shape. I found the cookies in the scoop shape we’re more moist than the others and retained this quality 5 days later when we finished the last one. My daughter and I loved making and eating these together. :)

Meri

Fantastic! I used a 2-tablespoon ice cream scoop and it made 52 cookies. Used Maldon sea salt and turbinado sugar. Good suggestion to flatten the cookies slightly with fork tongs before sprinkling on the sugar-salt mixture.

WHB

Have had my eye on this cookie for many moons. Because of a peanut allergy in the house, decided to sub tahini instead. They did not hold their shape, but they were truly the halvah cookies of my dreams.

Jacques

These cookies were pretty rad! I didn’t have the right size of cookie scoop so I guesstimated on the size and I think mine ended up too large, but that is no fault of the recipe. They were soft, melt in your mouth cookies. I loved the mixture of salty and sweet and would definitely make them again. The steps were quite simple and took very little time. A haiku:I’m struggling ah Nutty butter, salt and sweetI struggle no more

Kate

I used Maldon salt and coarse raw sugar for topping, but I find that half the amount called for in the recipe is sufficient. Typically, I get about 40-44 cookies.
The first bite of these cookies will stop someone mid-conversation. These cookies always garner rave reviews and requests for the recipe!

silke

Fabulous cookie. Perfectly sandy and salty. Followed recipe with two slight mods: reduced sugar to 225 g total, used whole wheat pastry flour. Made two batches, and it came out looking exactly as pictured, except for a few where the dough had gotten a little warm before baking. Used Trader Joe's chunky unblanched PB

Lisa

This will be the new peanut butter cookie in my repertoire. My friends loved them and requested the recipe. Easy and turns out great. I scooped all the cookies in an entire batch and froze them, and placed them in a ziplock freezer bag. When I need fresh cookies I grab a fe and pop them in the oven. (The frozen ones actually had a better crumb/texture. Great recipe.

Definitely Not Karen

Followed the recipe exactly by weight measurements and the cookies came out exactly as pictured. My peanut butter was a mix of fresh ground and creamy. I used a 0.75 oz disher to scoop the dough balls and baked them on parchment lined sheets for 14 minutes at 350° on a convection setting. For the final dozen, I made a depression with a teaspoon on the center of each ball and added a teaspoon of black raspberry jam - thumbprints don't get enough love these days, but this twist will fix that.

Daphne

These cookies are incredibly easy and fast to make. Crumbly, a bit crisp, salty, and sweet, they are a great peanut butter cookie. And I love keeping them a small size - perfect for a small child's palm.

Julie

These are the most delicious peanut butter cookies I've ever had. I used regular butter as I live in a podunk town and finding it is impossible. Using a cookie scoop, these are very fast to make.

Natasha Spencer

For another variation, after lightly rolling in the sugar-salt combo, I sprinkled some smoked paprika on top before baking. Wonderful cookie!

Greg NYC

Add 20-30 g more flour to prevent spreading

Mary

These cookies are absolutely delicious. I have made them twice: the first time with regular butter and the second time with cultured butter (which is twice as expensive). Cookies were fantastic both times, but the ones made with cultured butter didn't taste noticeably different. Next time, back to regular butter.

Katie

I wanted to love these cookies- I suppose because of all the raving reviews. In the end they were a little meh. Perhaps if my expectations had been lower, I would have been pleasantly surprised. Now, what to to with 36 peanut butter cookies???

lucy

So good! Super easy, 5 stars for sure!

schlemaf

Excellent!

Margaret D

Simply the best peanut butter cookie! Salty finish takes the...cookie!

me

Made half recipe using about 2/3 the sugar. With small cookie scoop I got about 40 small cookies.

Bonnie McCabe

I would half the recipe next time also they taste better the next day

LP

The best cookies I’ve baked in a long while. The sprinkle of flaky salt and crunchy sugar (I use Demerara) on top makes them - don’t skip it.

Easily Dairy Free

I made these with Miyokos Cultured Plant Milk Butter and they tasted great. The bottoms of one pan got a little too well done as they were closest to the heating element, so I would do one pan at a time next time with rack at least middle or higher.

Carol

Delicious as is or rolled in a mixture of finely chopped chocolate and nuts! A keeper.

stefanie

Meh. Maybe it was the kind of peanut butter I used - a creamy natural one. It needed more flavor and interest. I did a sugar salt mix on top and agree it doesn’t need the sugar. Just salt would be great. They’re pretty though, and super easy.

Rich

The other reviews were so strong I thought it couldn’t be quite as good as folk were saying, but happy to be wrong. It is an amazing cookie.I actually used all brown sugar, a light brown sugar and almond butter instead of peanut.

Aly

I followed the ingredients to a "T" and these were fantastic!!!

Private notes are only visible to you.

Salty-Sweet Peanut Butter Sandies Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Why are my peanut butter cookies falling apart? ›

Why are my peanut butter cookies falling apart? For most peanut butter cookies, it could mean you have too much flour in the dough.

Why do you put fork marks 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 are my peanut butter cookies too soft? ›

If the dough seems too soft, chill it for 10 to 15 minutes before baking. Use shortening instead of butter or a combination of the two if you don't want to sacrifice that buttery flavor. The dough was too wet. Using the wrong size egg could also add extra liquid, resulting in too much spreading.

Is peanut butter salty or sweet? ›

It depends on the brand. There are natural peanut butters that are just ground up roasted peanuts, some with a little salt added-those are savory. Commercial peanut butters like Skippy or Jif have sugar added and they are sweet. Peanut butter is both; pure peanut butter ground at the health food store is savory.

Should you refrigerate peanut butter cookie dough before baking? ›

Chill your cookie dough! The dough is extremely soft due to the creamy peanut butter, eggs, and butter and if it's not cold going into the oven, the cookies will spread all over your baking sheet. I chilled this cookie dough for 24 hours and my cookies were soft, thick perfection.

How to fix crumbly peanut butter cookies? ›

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 my peanut butter cookies not taste like peanut butter? ›

The most common mistake with peanut butter cookies is using the wrong type of peanut butter. The BEST peanut butter for today's cookies is a processed creamy peanut butter, preferably Jif or Skippy.

Why do you put oil on top of peanut butter? ›

Peanut butter products are usually added with hydrogenated vegetable oil (HVO) such as mixture of hydrogenated rapeseed, cottonseed oil and soy bean oils as stabilizers, it prevents the oils naturally found in peanuts from separating and rising to the top of the jar.

What happens if you don't flatten peanut butter cookies? ›

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.

What is the secret to soft cookies? ›

Cornstarch helps product soft and thick cookies. Using more brown sugar than white sugar results in a moister, softer cookie. An extra egg yolk increases chewiness. Rolling the cookie dough balls to be tall and lumpy instead of wide and smooth gives the cookies a bakery-style textured thickness.

What is the secret to keeping cookies soft? ›

“To keep cookies soft, store them in an airtight container and not in a cookie jar,” Amanda recommends. “While cookie jars are cute, they usually don't have airtight lids.

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.

What country eats the most peanut butter? ›

By volume, China is the largest peanut butter supplier worldwide and produces 3 times the amount of peanut butter than the second highest producer, which is India. The USA comes third. China is also the largest consumer of peanut butter worldwide by volume, eating twice as much as India and the USA comes in 3rd again.

Can dogs eat peanut butter? ›

Whether speaking to new or seasoned pet parents, veterinarians are often asked 'can dogs eat peanut butter? ' The good news is that regular peanut butter is safe to give your dog as a treat. Just make sure to avoid peanut butter with Xylitol, a sugar substitute found in lower or sugar-free products.

How do you fix peanut butter separation? ›

Turn the unopened jar of separated peanut butter upside down, the idea being that as the oil then flows upwards it will slowly mix itself into the thick peanut butter.

Why do my cookies fall apart so easily? ›

Too Much Flour: One of the most common reasons for crumbly cookies is using too much flour. Excess flour leads to dry, crumbly cookies as it absorbs the moisture. To fix this issue, accurately measure your flour using the spoon and level method or a kitchen scale.

Why did my cookies rise and then fall? ›

Dough that's too airy.

The goal, usually, is to only incorporate the two ingredients without reaching the "light and fluffy" stage. When you mix the butter and sugar together at high speed or for too long, you'll aerate the dough excessively, causing the cookies to rise—and then fall—in the oven.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Chrissy Homenick

Last Updated:

Views: 6192

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (74 voted)

Reviews: 89% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Chrissy Homenick

Birthday: 2001-10-22

Address: 611 Kuhn Oval, Feltonbury, NY 02783-3818

Phone: +96619177651654

Job: Mining Representative

Hobby: amateur radio, Sculling, Knife making, Gardening, Watching movies, Gunsmithing, Video gaming

Introduction: My name is Chrissy Homenick, I am a tender, funny, determined, tender, glorious, fancy, enthusiastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.