I’d like to introduce you to my new favorite cookies. This peanut butter oatmeal cookie recipe yields cookies that are tender on the inside, chewy around the middle, and just barely crisp around the edges.
These cookies are loaded with pure peanut butter flavor. They’re sweet, but not cloyingly so. If you’re a fan of my monster cookie recipe, you’ll enjoy these as well. I can vouch that they’ll be a hit with your family, friends, kids and coworkers.
Oats make these cookies more hearty than most. In fact, oats are the only structure this flourless cookie recipe needs. As long as your oats are certified gluten free, these cookies will be, too.
These cookies are easy to make, too. You don’t need to soften your butter first (just melt it). You don’t need to pull out a heavy stand mixer (your hand mixer or some elbow grease will work great). And, you’ll only need one mixing bowl. Winning!
More than any other merit, though, these peanut butter cookies are delicious. They’re cookies and that’s what cookies should be, right?
Peanut Butter Oatmeal Cookie Ingredients
This recipe is quite versatile. You’ll notice that different amounts are offered for some of the alternative options. That’s because they vary by volume (and make my job more difficult, but who can complain about extra cookies?).
Peanut Butter
As it turns out, creamy or chunky peanut butters work. I generally buy “natural” peanut butters and this recipe has worked with all of them.
Coconut sugar or brown sugar
Coconut sugar is a less refined sugar with a few trace nutrients, and I always try to work with natural sweeteners when possible. Brown sugar works well if that’s what you have on hand.
Coconut oil or butter
Either way, melt it before using. I can’t really taste the coconut oil, but it does make the cookies taste more interesting in a hard-to-put-your-finger-on kind of way. That’s why I chose to list coconut oil first. If you want your cookies to be dairy free, use coconut oil.
Eggs
Eggs act as a binding ingredient and as a leavener, which means that it helps the cookies rise. Eggs are essential if you want your cookies to turn out like mine. That said, I’ve shared some notes from readers about using flax eggs as an alternative in the recipe notes.
Baking soda
Baking soda is another leavener that helps your cookies bake up nice and fluffy. Don’t substitute baking powder; they behave differently. Always, always, always use the leavener specified in the recipe.
Quick-cooking or old-fashioned oats
Quick oats disappear more into the cookies, creating a more uniform texture. I prefer quick-cooking oats, so that’s what you’ll see in the photos. Old-fashioned oats offer a more hearty and discernible texture.
Peanut Butter Oatmeal Cookie Variations
Substitute other nut butters.
I’m in love with how these cookies turn out with peanut butter, but they’ll also work with almond butter or sunflower seed butter.
Stir in some extras.
You can add up to 1 1/2 cups chocolate chips, chopped nuts, raisins or dried fruit.
Make bigger cookies.
This recipe yields around 27 medium cookies (about 3 inches across). If you double the size of each cookie to use 1/4 cup dough each, you’ll end up with 13 to 14 large cookies instead (about 4.5 inches wide). The large cookies will require somewhere between 8 to 11 minutes in the oven.
Please let me know how your cookies turn out in the comments! I love hearing from you and appreciate your feedback.
Craving more cookies? Check these out:
- Monster Cookies
- Amazing Chocolate Chip Cookies
- Spiced Oatmeal Cookies
- Coffee Chocolate Chip Blondies
Peanut Butter Oatmeal Cookies
- Author:
- Prep Time: 15 minutes
- Cook Time: 20 minutes
- Total Time: 35 minutes
- Yield: 27 cookies 1x
- Category: Cookie
- Method: Baked
- Cuisine: American
These peanut butter oatmeal cookies are 100% delicious. Plus, they’re gluten free and easy to make in just one bowl. Meet your new favorite peanut butter cookie recipe! Recipe yields about 27 cookies.
Ingredients
- 1 ½ cups creamy or chunky peanut butter (that’s one full 16-ounce jar minus ¼ cup)
- 2 ½ cups packed coconut sugar or 2 cups lightly packed brown sugar
- ⅓ cup melted coconut oil or 5 tablespoons melted butter
- 3 large eggs
- 2 teaspoons baking soda
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 2 ½ cups quick-cooking oats or 2 ¾ cups old-fashioned oats (certified gluten-free if necessary)
- Optional: flaky sea salt, for sprinkling
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Line tw0 large, rimmed baking sheets with parchment paper or silicone mats for easy clean-up.
- In a large mixing bowl, combine the peanut butter with the sugar and coconut oil. Use an electric mixer or a large spoon to mix until well combined. Add the eggs, baking soda and vanilla, and mix well. Add the oats and mix until they’re evenly incorporated.
- Drop 2 tablespoons of dough per cookie onto the prepared baking sheets. These cookies spread while baking, so leave a couple of inches around each one. Gently shape them into a more rounded mound and press down lightly so they’re no taller than 1 inch.
- Bake 8 to 10 minutes, until they’re just starting to turn golden around the edges. Do not overbake. They will flatten more as they cool. Let the cookies cool for 10 minutes before transferring them to a cooling rack. In the meantime, bake your next round of cookies, and so on.
- If desired, sprinkle the cookies lightly with flaky sea salt. Let them cool completely before storing them in an airtight container. Cookies will keep well for several days at room temperature.
Hayley Schiller
Hi, this recipe looks great. I am allergic
to coconut and am on a dairy free diet. Are there any substitutions for the butter or coconut oil?. Would avocado oil work? DThanks
Kate
Hi Hayley, I didn’t try it with avocado oil so I’m not sure. Let me know if you give it a try!
Don Fisher
This is my 4th batch of these super delicious beauties! Made them with flax egg and replaced 1 cup of brown sugar with 1 cup of finely chopped dates to make them even more nutritious. They came out fantastic! Also I was almost out of coconut oil so made up the difference with extra virgin olive oil…. can’t tell any difference.
★★★★★
Cindy Stegle
Don
I like to use dates as a sweetener too. In this case did you soak your dates first?
Thanks
Cindy
Ps I usually make a date paste for my cookies that is why I am asking
Heidi
Hi! Your recipes are always so delicious. I am wondering if there is a way to leave the sugar out of this recipe entirely? I am trying to completely eliminate sugar from my diet and wasn’t sure whether they’d be edible without it?
★★★★★
Bridget
Perhaps try using mashed banana instead of the sugar?
I do this often for a natural sweetener substitute as I don’t like to put lots of sugar into recipes, so will use this method and swap out some or all of the sugar for that instead.
You can do a blend of mashed banana and some apple puree which is pure apples blended, but I would only do a cup worth rather than the amount mentioned above. Good luck! :)
Dee
Also dried dates or prunes
Kate
Unfortunately, baking is a science and you will not get a good result or even much of a result without the sugar.
Anastasia
A while back, someone living on the KETO diet mentioned that he really likes Lakanto’s Monkfruit sweetener blend. So last month, I purchased a large bag at my local Costco, at a good price of course. I recently substituted this blend for 1/2 the sugar called for in an old recipe I like for “Ginger Pear Cake.” It was delicious, and a fun experiment, since I also substituted some Almond Flour for some of the white flour and upped the amount of pears considerably. So I agree with Bridget that adding some sweet fruit might also be a good idea, or maybe a puree of soaked dates! Good luck.
Don Sommers
Can you make these as cookie bars instead?
Kate
I haven’t tried it, sorry!
Layla
I’m sure you could, its only the shape your changing
Erin
Thanks for the recipe! Had everything on hand so I quickly whipped up a half batch. Used the coconut oil and coconut sugar options and added chocolate chips. The inside is soft and chewy and they are lightly crispy on the edges as promised. They were very simple to make and tasted great!
★★★★★
Kate
I’m happy you loved them!
Dee
Can I use sunflower seed butter instead of peanut butter?
Kate
Sure, you can try it! Let me know what you think.
Lisa
I am so excited to try this recipe!! Do these freeze well.
Kate
Hi Lisa! They should!
Don Fisher
Made these again. Made them vegan with the flax egg, however this time I baked them 13 minutes. They came out great but I think next time I will try 14 minutes for a little more crispiness around the edges. Also they freeze well.
★★★★★
Jen
Oohhh! It’s 9:42pm andPeanut Butter Oat is calling my name
Kate
I hope you love them!
Richard
Hi. I am a uk follower. Cant wait to try the cookies. Is there any chance yiu can start including metruc weights grams/ml in recipes and also degrees Celsius for oven temp. My measuring devices and ovens dont do cups and Fahrenheit..
Kate
Hi Richard! Thank you for your comment. Unfortunately, I don’t have any plans at this time to provide metric conversions as there just isn’t a simple solution for doing so. However, I do know some other readers have found conversion charts useful. Or, some who cook from my blog often, actual bought US measuring cups to help.
Layla
Hey hun, I’m uk too. Most recipes like this will be on 160 for about 8-10 minutes. Check after 8 mins and use a cocktails stick to check they are done to your liking but most of the time you can tell by looking. Don’t leave the oven open too long while doing so in case you need to put them back in but it should be sufficient. Also the “cups” you can buy them from anywhere. It’s a cooking cup which come in different sizes but it’s all labelled. Hopes this helps
Maggie
Sorry. Too much fat. I could sub applesauce for the eggs, though. Wonder what to sub for the butter/oil?
Kate
Hi Maggie, I haven’t tried this recipe with either of those substitutions. Since this is a dessert, I look at them as a treat. The nut butter is also a contributor so you may just want to avoid this recipe if it doesn’t meet your needs.
Nikki
These are delicious! I did half the brown sugar and added lots of milk chocolate chips. My boys are gobbling them up!
★★★★★
Kristen
Thanks for the tip, Nikki! Did this too, and it was plenty sweet.
Kate
Thank you for sharing, Nikki.
T.C.
I just made these- they’re yummy! I used 1 3/4 cups of brown sugar to cut back a little. I didn’t use parchment paper, greasing the sheets with coconut oil worked fine.
By the way, i’m 50 and have never made cookies before, so if i can make these, anyone can :)
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for sharing, T.C.!
Patrice
The cookies were very good, but not at all crispy on the outside. I left them in for 9 minutes until they looked golden. I love crispy cookies and was excited to try this recipe, but no luck. Still a good cookie and my husband loved them.
Thanks
Patrice
★★★★
Kate
These won’t get too crispy, to still be soft on the inside. Thank you for your review, Patrice!
Patty
Thank you.
BTW, they make great ice cream sandwiches!
★★★★★
Leanne
I don’t often comment but Kate these are truly Amazing, we love them!!! Thanks!
Kate
Thank you, Leanne :)
Velasco
Dooooode!!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for your review!
Janette Mullis
I made these and I followed the direction with coconut oil and coconut sugar. I added a half of a cup of chocolate chips.
These cookies came out great!
Thank you for the recipe!!
★★★★★
Kate
Great to hear! Thank you for sharing, Janette.
Erin
Do you have a preferred peanut butter? I’ve been been using Whole Foods unsweetened creamy for my kids…just saw that it has palm oil in it. Not sure if that would throw things off.
Kate
Hi Erin! I use organic peanut butter, not necessarily brand specific. I try to buy it just with ground peanuts. The whole foods organic should be this way.
KareninStLouis
Try Trader Joe’s organic creamy no salt added peanut butter. Absolutely delicious and a great price. It is a natural peanut butter, so the oil will pool on top. You have to mix it in, and you could also do what I do, which is to pour off the pooled oil on top and then stir the peanut butter.
Natalia
Made these during homebound Spring Break for the family, and they loved them! All steps, temp, and times followed as per the recipe with no problem. Made some with and some without chocolate chips, all slightly crispy, chewy, tasty deliciousness. Thank you!
★★★★★
Beth
I’ve been happily recreating your cookbook recipes all autumn long!
These are the perfect cookies for a relaxing night when you want a treat that’s low in effort. Thanks, Cookie and Kate- we love your recipes and this one is another keeper.
Going to try it with less sugar next time subbing mashed banana. Good tip with that substitution.
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you, Beth! I’m hesitant it will work with less sugar and banana, but I would be interested in what you think!
Carla
These are the BEST. Sort of thought I failed at first though. They got so big and flat, they seemed almost eggy when coming out of the oven. Then we tried them and OMG. They are soft, chewy and it’s flat and bendy in the coolest way. I want to add small toffee bits next time too. Thank you for this amazing recipe!
★★★★★
John Forster
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Lisa
Can I use fresh ground peanut butter or almond butter instead of from a jar?
Kate
Sure! As long as it is a creamy nut butter, it should still work well.
Holly
I made these cookies this afternoon and they have great flavor!And easy and quick! I used butter and brown sugar. I live in Colorado so because of altitude, I baked them for 15 minutes. 10 minutes was not long enough. Yum!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for sharing, Holly! I’m glad you loved them.
Courtenay Willcox
I just made these for Thanksgiving with flax eggs and chocolate chips. I flattened them as recommended in the recipe (when using flax eggs) and baked them for 8 minutes. Crispy on the outside and just a little chewy on the inside. What a hit they are. I don’t know if they’ll make it to Thursday. Thanks, Kate!!!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for sharing! I’m glad they worked well with flax eggs, Courtney.
Kathleen Hefley
Thank you for this! We are big fans of your monster cookie recipe and love this adaptation!
It’s been a snowy day in Boulder, Colorado and we have stayed warm making these cookies, your healthy pumpkin muffins, and the best ever lentil soup! Thanks for helping me keep my pre-Thanksgiving crowd fed.
★★★★
Donna Wishart
Not sure what I did wrong, but my first sheet of cookies was very flat; they got better with adding more oats and chilling the dough.
I used what I had re peanut butter — just commercial brand and did half and half re sugars.
I always love your recipes but something went wrong, probably on my end…
★★
Nicole
Freezing rain day so we baked. I had to skip your apple muffin recipe because we didn’t have greek yogurt, but we made these cookies. Absolutely fantastic, super quick to mix up and quick to bake, crunchy on the outside and super soft on the inside. Yum! Thank you!
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome! I’m glad you loved them, Nicole
E Staeheli
Where is the recipe?
Kate
The recipe is at the end of the post, before the comments. I hope this helps!
Kam
Sadly, these were disappointing. The texture was great but the peanut butter flavor did not come through and they were overly sweet.
★★
Kate
I’m sorry you didn’t love these. What brand of peanut butter did you use, Kam?
Sarah
Like a hearty nutter butter! Absolutely delicious!!!!
★★★★★
Kate
I’m excited you loved them, Sarah!
April Nowak
Yummy, chewy, great flavor, & texture. I used butter & brown sugar (I mis-read so I added a little too much sugar, tightly, rather than lightly packed brown sugar). A little sweet from that. Next time, I’ll measure properly & perhaps add a teaspoon of salt. They did spread, so really give a lot of space.
★★★★★
Virginia
They’re good, but I think they’d be better if I hadn’t used the oatmeal I did. Will try interpreting the instructions more literally next time, lol!
This makes, of course, a big batch, and there’s only one of me at this house. No way will I get through them in “a couple of days”. Can I refrigerate or freeze the rest?
Also, for folk like me who haven’t baked in a while, let me warm you–swapping out cookie sheets, giving each cookie room to spread, this takes most of an afternoon.
Upside is, my whole house smells WONDERFUL.
★★★★
Kate
Hi! I hope they work better for you next time. What oatmeal did you use? And yes, these should freeze well! Thanks for sharing, Virginia.
Virginia
I’m embarrassed to say I got whole grain. It gives it a nutty flavor and texture, but it feels and tastes like health food, lol! And when I eat a cookie, by gosh I want a COOKIE.
Brenda Dehdar
Best peanut butter cookie recipe ever!!!
Kate
Hooray! Thank you, Brenda.
Kathy
Kate is the nutritional value correct… 203 calories and 21 mg cholesterol for one cookie?
Rashi
I can’t believe how perfect these turned out! I’m addicted! Thank you
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Rashi!
Rashi
Hey again! :)
Is there any way to switch the coconut sugar for honey in this recipe?
★★★★★
Linda
These are cooling on the counter now. So good. Made with butter and brown sugar plus the 1 1/2 cups of chocolate chips. I love that I have another good recipe to use for my friends who are truly gluten free.
A friendly reminder to fellow Cookie and Kate enthusiasts- this is a review format for those who have tried the recipe. We all want to try the recipes and think they all sound delicious but we don’t all have the time to scroll through reviews that have no review content. We need that time to be trying what’s new with Cookie and Kate!
★★★★★
Lizzy
I made these!
My friend is intollerant to wheat, soy, gluten, cocoa and dairy so these cookies were the perfect recipe. I’ve just eaten a couple and they are bloody lovely!
I left them in the oven for a bit longer than stated.
They grow to about 8 times the size of the raw batter, so spread them out or you’ll get cookie squares!
Next time I’ll halve the ingredients as this recipe really does yield around 27 massive cookies!
★★★★
Linda
I made this recipe this weekend (half portion – still ended up with 15 pretty big cookies!) and they were a massive hit! Great recipe, and so easy to make, thanks! I would especially recommend not omitting the light sprinkle of sea salt, really uplifted them even more
★★★★★
Kate
Great to hear, Linda! Thanks for sharing.
Mary M
Made it as written, with coconut oil. The cookies are a hit! I knew they would be good as soon as I read the recipe.
★★★★★
Erin
I love these cookies :) Out of habit I made the oats into flour because I make you gluten free waffles so much. They turned out great, but I am also going to try the whole oats that the recipe calls for. Im obesssd with the waffles!!!
Josie
Can’t wait to try this recipe! Just wondering if the receipe can be cut in half to make fewer cookies?
Kate
Hi Josie! I don’t see why not!
Casey
Super delicious! Made them exactly as the recipe says using butter and old fashioned oats. I did reduce the size of the cookie to ~1.5 tablespoons, as 2 seemed to big. Very moist and chewy, my husband and I love them.
★★★★★
Darla Day
Just made these, and they’re fabulous. Was looking for something low-flour, since there’s a shortage right now. These have NO flour, but that makes their flavor even better, in my opinion. Expected them to maybe be crumbly, but they aren’t. They have a great texture and a wonderful flavor – you definitely know it’s a peanut butter cookie. Added bonus is they’re suitable for my gf-eating grandson. You never disappoint, Kate!
★★★★★
Marie
I made these with my 3.5 year old yesterday – we used butter and coconut sugar, plus added 1 cup of chocolate chips. They turned out great, everyone loves them! I just had one for breakfast, ssshhhhh…..
★★★★★
Nicole
So I made this recipe and I dont know what happened but they came out flat as a pancake and falling apart when you pick them up. I followed this recipe exactly. I only added dark chocolate chips to the mix. I used coconut oil in place of butter. What went wrong?? :(
Kate
Oh no! I’m bummed you got that result. I hope they still tasted great! Did you over mix them by chance or I wonder if your oven was too hot?
Nicole
I used your recipe to make the cookies with my home-made granola and added walnuts to it. It’s very yummy. Thanks for your recipe.
Nicole
vittoria
haha, mine didn’t look as gorgeous as yours but they were so delicious and my partner loved them! So Happy about it!!
★★★★★
Laura
I am about to attempt making my own oat milk and was wondering if I could use the leftover pulp plus some additional dry oats to make these… might have to lessen the wet ingredients. What do you think?
Kate
Hi Laura, I’m not sure as I haven’t tried it. I would be interested! Let me know. I don’t have too much experience using pulp from making non-dairy milk.
Monika Stoll
Omg what a delight! Just cooled the cookies and they are fantastic : chewy, tasty, simply good! Thank you for this, sure I will make them again
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Monika!
Annie
Another yummy recipe! I used almond butter and added chocolate chips.
★★★★★
Chanelle
This recipe is FANTASTIC. Very sweet though. I think I might add less sugar next time. Will that influence the recipe in any way? Apart from making it less sweet.
Peanutbutter cookies are my favourite and oats cookies are my husbands favourite. So this is a perfect snack for our house. Thank you
★★★★★
Kate
Hi Chanelle, so glad you like the cookies! You can probably get by with less sugar. Sugar makes baked goods tender, too, so your cookies might be a bit more on the tough side. Please report back!
Luke
I have a problem.i followed the instructions and I got something not quite right.
★
Anna
I’ve made this recipe with peanut butter I bought from Fresh Thyme, they make their own. The cookies tasted great, but in the oven became very runny. I think it could be peanut butter as I did everything else exactly to your directions. Next time I’ve used jar peanut butter (nothing but peanuts) and the mix was way firmer. Nevertheless, worried I might have another disaster, I divided the mix in half, added 2 Tsp cocoa powder to one half, and smushed it in the bottom of a square silica baking dish, then topped with the other half, practically turning the cookies into a kind of a two tone brownie slice. It took about 45 minutes to bake – toothpick test – but came out wonderful, and this is how I am planning on making this recipe forever and ever, we both love it!
★★★★
Kate
Hi Anna! I’m sorry the first time didn’t turn out perfect for you. But, I’m happy to hear you found another way you can love this recipe! Thank you for sharing.
PJ
Made these today for a friend – but obviously couldn’t help trying one myself! They are delicious. Easy and quick to make! I added chocolate chips to half the batter – also delicious. Thanks!
★★★★★
Barbara
I have a bag of Steel Cut Oats can I use this instead of what is listed?
I can’t get out to the store. What is the amount I should use?
Kate
Unfortunately, I don’t believe steel cut will work. Sorry!
Laura
You need a safe storage place if you want these cookies to last. My dear husband has been in heaven since I started making these cookies.
He observed that I’d bought coconut oil and wasn’t using it, so I dug around for a couple of recipes. This was a gem.
We have several batches disappear into thin air. The cookie are delicious.
★★★★★
Marie
I love cookies warm out if the oven 1/2 of them are gone before they cool.
These cookies were even better in the morning!!! I used natural peanut butter, butter and brown sugar and eggs. Nothing fancy.
Sooooo good
★★★★★
Kate
I’m happy you loved them, Marie! Thank you for reporting back.
Daniella
Made these tonight in Cusco, Peru (11,000 ft elevation) and they came out great! Baking at this high is always so difficult, but this recipe held up great. I substituted the sugar for 1/2 honey because I’m trying to watch my sugar intake and it was still very tasty. (I think I would probably use a little more honey next time). I really love this recipe!
★★★★★
Tri N
So good. Didn’t even realize they are flourless and I’m half way done w them. Added some raisins for a sweet kick.
★★★★★
Shannon D
We followed the recipe exactly and loved it!
We are a meat & potatoes family of 9 and I’m working hard to vary their palates with vegetarian and gluten-free items. The batch was gone while still warm. Thank you Kate, we love your recipes and cookbook and I’m remiss in commenting on your amazing talents! Thank you!
★★★★★
Alana
I’ve made them twice with chocolate chips and they taste AMAZING, however they’ve come out very flat both times; even when I don’t press on them before baking. I also have to bake them a few minutes longer (my oven temp is verified by a secondary thermometer inside). Any suggestions?
★★★★★
Kate
Hi Alana! They will flatten some as they cool and you may have over baked them. See step 4 on notes.
Ann
Might just be the peanut butter I used, but they came out way too oily. I would recommend either omitting the coconut oil or heavily reducing it.
Virginia Montiel Chaves
Hi!I have followed the recipe step by step,used all the ingredients in it but my cookies taste sooo salty!I don’t understand what has happened.Any idea?Could it be the baking soda??We cannot eat them…..shame.
★
Kate
Oh no! Did your peanut butter have salt in it and then you added the flaky salt on top? That may have been it.
Patty
These cookies are DELICIOUS!!!
Can they be frozen?
★★★★★
Kate
Hi Patty! I’m glad you love them. Yes, these freeze well!
Rachael
I’m not sure what has gone wrong… followed the recipe to a T except for swapping peanut butter for cashew butter. I’ve ended up with a sloppy paper thin mess that has spread some much it has filled the entire tray. I only spooned out tiny portions too (1 tsp) and left 1-2 inches between each. All we can taste is the bicarb soda (I only used the specified 2 tsp). Any ideas? Every other recipe I’ve made from this blog has been a winner!
★★
Kate
Hi Rachel! That’s interesting. I have never baked with cashew butter, so I can’t say exactly what would be the issue. It could be a reaction with the cashew butter. I have never tasted the baking soda in the other butters I recommended.
Jennie
Kate, this recipe desperately wants me to make it!
I’ve got every ingredient I need… except the flaky sea salt. But that sounds like such a stellar finisher. Don’t suppose kosher salt might sub – too coarse and heavy?
Any potential sub suggestions – or shall I suck it up, wait a while to bake, and get grocery run hubby grab flaky salt later?
Cheers☺️
Kate
I think you should! Flaky salt at the end is the delicious finisher, but you could use kosher salt. Just be careful of not adding too much. But, you should get some flaky salt to have on hand. :)
Jennie
Wow, quick reply – thanks Kate!
Guess I get to ‘lean’ on my thrifty shopper hubby & convince him that flaky sea salt is a “need” not a “want” …justify it as essential culinary therapy for us shut-in’s?!
Cheers ;)
Jennie
Sadly, no luck re finding flaky salt, but made cookies anyway. Turned out well, regardless.
Next time, though, think I’ll try them without the chocolate chips – or with MUCH less than the ! 1/2 cups. I like chocolate, but I can’t really taste the Peanutbutter past it! ;)
“Too much chocolate” in the mix hasn’t seemed to bother my ‘helper chef’ cookie munching teen lad, though. :)
Cheers
Michelle
Wonderful recipe! This is the fourth or fifth time I have made it, I use my husband’s favorite chunky almond butter and sometimes add sliced almonds and raisins. They are delicious and quickly disappear! Thank you
★★★★★
Kate
I’m glad you loved it! Thank you for sharing, Michelle.
Christine T Westdyk
Hi Kate!
I needed to use up some leftover oats and chocolate chips so I decided to take this peanut butter and oat recipe and adapt it to add chocolate chips. I didn’t have all of the brown sugar that was needed so I had to add half regular sugar (didn’t have any molasses) and let me tell you these are so good!
You never disappoint.
Thank you so much!
Christine
Brenda Fetcho
Can you use regular oats instead of Buick oats?
Kate
Hi Brenda! Old fashioned or quick cooking work.
Rebecca
These are exactly as promised! Tender and chewy with a slightly crisp outer layer. The sprinkle of salt makes them extra yum. So many great recipes here…thank you Kate!
★★★★★
Polly
I am not a peanut butter cookie fan (although I live P&J sandwiches) but my niece and husband love them. I just made them this morning while my niece was here doing homework (she is a senior). It was a very simple recipe to make. They came out fabulous. I even had one and enjoyed it. I wrapped up a big batch for her to take home and saved a few for my husband. Great recipe Kate!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you! I’m glad you were able to enjoy these.
Sally
Should the oats have been cooked first?
I used rolled oats and…uggch
★
Kate
Hi Sally, You mix the oats into the mixture and then it bakes in the oven. I’m not sure what you are referring to? Did your recipe not turn out?
M S
Enjoyed these cookies although I could taste the baking soda. Perhaps due to using less sugar?
★★★★
Kate
I’m sorry to hear that. I have never picked up on the flavor of baking soda in these cookies. I believe that the other ingredients should neutralize the bitterness, but I’m not sure what went wrong for you.
Anthea Saunders
I halved the recipe and added chopped peanuts into the mix and it works fantastic. They taste amazing and I will definitely be making them again!
★★★★★
Sarah
You left out the flour
Kate
Hi! No need for this recipe.
Divya
Hi Kate
Does the peanut butter have to be at room temperature or melted ?
Also can we use clarified butter(ghee) or olive oil for the fat ?
Kate
Hi! I’m not sure if gee will work here, sorry. You want your peanut butter so it’s mixable. Mine was room temperature.
Chijo
I made the granola and tweaked it a little and it turned out amazing. The recipe was easy and the granola tasted amazing.
★★★★★
Kate
I’m happy you enjoyed it, Chijo!
Heather E.
I made a mess of these cookies! Everything was my fault, not Kates. I’m sharing this as a cautionary tale. A few commentors stated that the cookies were too sweet and since I only had PB with added sugar I decided to reduce the sugar by a half cup. I bake by weight so I converted everything to grams. At first, everything looked fine. I mixed everything together as instructed (by hand with a sturdy spoon), added the oats, and started to scoop. I noticed then that the oil had started to separate from the dough. First thought: maybe too much PB (396g) and not enough sugar (270g) or Old-Fashioned Oats (220g). I added another 20g oats, mixed and waited to see if the oats would absorb the oil. No. I ground up 20g oats and mixed in and put the bowl in the fridge for 20 minutes. The oil was still separated. I mixed it in and put the bowl back in the fridge for another 20. The oil was STILL separated. I drained off the oil (almost 2 Tablespoons) and pressed the dough onto a parchment lined quarter sheet pan and blotted with paper towels. I put the pan in the freezer while the oven preheated. I placed the quarter sheet pan on a half sheet pan (in case oil spilled out) and baked at 350 for 25 minutes. It puffed up nice and smells good. It tastes okay. Again, this is MY FAULT and I’m only writing this for two reasons; 1. As a warning that changing the recipe might not work here, and 2. If you do mess up, it might be salvageable. I will try these again after I get the correct ingredients!
Kate
Oh no! I’m sorry to hear that, Heather.
Eva
Glad I found this recipe!
I just added 2c coconut sugar, and chocolate pb, instead of regular. Awesome cookies. Didn’t even need a mixer!
★★★★★
Melissa
These are delicious! Mine spread out quite a bit more than your pictures but it didn’t matter because they were devoured either way. Love how simple and easy the recipe was too. Thank you!
★★★★★
Sara Goldman
Love these, just to clarify are you saying to cook one or two sheet pans at a time?
★★★★★
Kate
Hi! Bake on sheet at a time. I hope this helps!
M
These did not work out for us. They did not resemble cookies; more like a chewy granola bar. The taste was fine, but I was expecting to have cookies and unfortunately these did not do it for me. I’ll stick to the amazing choc chip cookies recipe.
★
Kate
Hi M, I’m sorry to hear you didn’t like them.
Sunita
Love this recipe but I need to make this sugar free for my diabetic husband any suggestions. Thanks in advance.
Kate
Hi Sunita, sorry to disappoint but I don’t have a sugar free option as it would require a new recipe. Wish I could help!
Camilla
super delicious!!
★★★★★
Louisa
These are so good! I had to try this recipe as soon as I saw it but didn’t have enough peanut butter on hand. When I got to the store all they had was unsalted. The recipe didn’t specify which to use, so I used salted butter to be on the safe side. I halved the brown sugar and added 1 1/4 cups choc chips, which I still thought was too much. Chocolate and peanut butter is my favorite combo of all time, but these were having a hard time sticking together even after having refrigerated the dough for a bit. These cookies took 9 1/2 mins in my convection oven which was surprising to me, and even after letting them rest on the sheet for 10 mins are still pretty moist and fall apart easily (old-fashioned oats too – maybe next time I’ll give them a whirl in the food processor). But who cares when you have such peanutbuttery-chocolatey goodness?! Thank you, Kate! I’ve made a few of your recipes but hadn’t commented yet. We love your granola around here!
★★★★★
Louise
Hi Kate! I love all your recipes. Is there a way I can save them for future reference? Such as this peanut butter biscuit! X
Kate
Hi! Yes, there is a save option within the recipe card. You will need to create a log-in with Relish. I hope that helps!