Chocolate Peanut Butter Buckeye Cookies
The best cookie combo ever, these chocolate peanut butter buckeye cookies are insanely good! Chocolate cookie + creamy PB frosting + chocolate ganache. Basically, heaven!
It’s only the second day of official holiday cookie season and I’m totally going to be that blogger. You know, the one who doesn’t even waste a minute to mourn the end of Thanksgiving before I post a cookie recipe and declare it the best. The only cookie recipe you need. The cookie recipe to end all cookie recipes.
Yep, that’s me. Today. And I’m not sorry about it.
These chocolate peanut butter buckeye cookies are insane. I tested them out on family and friends in the month of November, making a few tweaks along the way, and everyone went crazy for them.
If chocolate + peanut butter makes your world go round, do not disregard this amazing cookie.
What the heck is a buckeye
If you’ve never had a piece of buckeye candy, it’s basically a ball of soft peanut butter dough dipped in chocolate (unbaked). My mom used to make tons of them when I was growing up; they appear all over the place in home kitchens everywhere over the holidays.
I took those chocolate/PB flavors and put them on a cookie.
First of all let me tell you that the chocolate cookie itself is ridiculously good. If you only want that part of the recipe, you’ll still end up on the good side of things.
I modeled it after this super soft chocolate drop cookie (didn’t roll it in sugar, changed up the flour amount just a bit, and used brown sugar as well as granulated sugar).
The cookie is reminiscent of a soft chocolate brownie. And it is goooooood. I dare you to eat just one (and that’s even before they are frosted).
The cookie dough isn’t half bad either. Cookie dough most certainly will be my downfall. I can’t resist it.
I use my medium cookie scoop (#40) and portion the dough onto parchment-lined baking sheets. I like to also roll each scoop of dough into a smooth ball shape. When the cookies bake, they flatten a bit and form perfect brownie crackles and crevices around the edges and on top.
Because these cookies are fairly soft, I let them rest on the baking sheet for a few minutes before spatula-ing them off onto a cooling rack.
While they cool, it’s the perfect time to whip up that ethereally fluffy and creamy peanut butter frosting. Holy cow, this stuff is amazingly delicious. It’s almost the same formula as the frosting from these ridiculous fudgy brownie cupcakes.
Spoiler alert: leftover peanut butter frosting is insane in the membrane slathered on graham crackers or Oreos. I don’t know if that’s a declaration or a warning. Take it as you will.
Once the cookies are cooled, they get a slathering of peanut butter frosting and then a swirl of chocolate ganache.
How to make chocolate ganache
I opted for a ganache top layer instead of a chocolate frosting. Why? Because ganache is life. And also, it’s way easier to make than frosting.
For this recipe, I use equal parts heavy cream and chocolate chips (Ghirardelli or Guittard bittersweet chips, always – but you could use semisweet, too). Heat the heavy cream until just below a simmer and pour over the chocolate chips. That mixture will need to sit for just a few minutes so the cream can melt the chocolate chips. Then it gets stirred together until it is shiny and glossy and glorious.
Don’t worry if the chocolate ganache looks grainy and weird as you begin stirring. That’s normal. But if the cream was warm enough and the chocolate melted enough, it will come together after a few stirs.
If you want a thicker ganache, just use less cream or more chocolate chips. The ganache will thicken as it cools so keep that in mind as you decide when to spread it on the cookies.
To chill or not to chill
Once these cookies are frosted, I pop them in the refrigerator. You don’t have to, especially if they’ll be eaten right away, but I prefer them just slightly chilled (and also it helps make the chocolate ganache not so wet and messy since it hardens up a bit in the refrigerator).
I usually take them out 15-20 minutes before serving. Honestly, they aren’t fussy cookies. They are delicious cold or at room temperature.
The combination of the rich chocolate cookie and the fluffy peanut butter frosting with the swirly chocolate ganache is enough to make all of my holiday cookie dreams come true.
This recipe makes 2-3 dozen fairly large cookies. To holiday-ize the cookie recipe, make them smaller! They’d be adorable and just as delicious. Can you even imagine a cookie plate filled with bite-size versions of these chocolate peanut butter buckeye cookies? I just summed up my main Christmas wish in that one sentence.
The best holiday cookie
Even though I came out strong and declared these the best holiday cookie of the year, don’t worry, I won’t leave you hanging with a few more amazing cookie and bar cookie recipes over the next few weeks.
I love this time of year! Holiday baking is so fun, and every year, I can’t help but dream up new ideas to make it even more exciting. (Ahem, yes, I need to get new hobbies.)
Also, there is no doubt these will be a year-round cookie for me and mine. Brian declared them next-level and one of his favorite cookies…and they would be perfect for so many occasions, not just holiday baking. I hope you love them!
One Year Ago: Easy Parmesan Breadstick Knots
Two Years Ago: Honey-Vanilla Yogurt Fruit Salad
Three Years Ago: Perfect Vanilla {Bean} Caramels {Step-by-Step}
Four Years Ago: Holiday Fruit Soup
Five Years Ago: White Chocolate Pecan Brownies
Six Years Ago: Homemade Peppermint Patties
Seven Years Ago: White Chocolate Cherry Shortbread Cookies
Eight Years Ago: Sweet Berry Bruschetta
Chocolate Peanut Butter Buckeye Cookies
Ingredients
Cookies:
- 1 cup (212 g) granulated sugar
- 1 cup (212 g) lightly packed light brown sugar
- 1 cup (227 g) salted butter, softened to room temperature
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- ½ teaspoon salt
- 2 large eggs
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 2 ½ cups (355 g) all-purpose flour
- ¾ cup (64 g) natural, unsweetened or Dutch-process cocoa powder (see note)
Peanut Butter Frosting:
- 6 tablespoons (85 g) salted butter, softened to room temperature
- ¾ cup (191 g) creamy peanut butter
- 2 cups (228 g) powdered sugar
- Pinch table salt
- ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
- ¼ cup heavy cream
Ganache:
- 1 cup (170 g) chocolate chips (I use semisweet or bittersweet)
- ½ cup heavy cream (see note)
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Line baking sheets with parchment paper.
- In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment or using a handheld electric mixer, combine the granulated sugar, brown sugar, butter, baking soda and salt, and mix until light and fluffy, 2-3 minutes. Add the eggs and vanilla and mix until well-combined, scraping down the sides of the bowl as needed. Add the flour and cocoa and mix until combined.
- Scoop the soft dough into about 2 tablespoon-sized mounds onto a parchment-lined baking sheet (I use a #40 cookie scoop). Roll into balls (the dough will be soft but should still easily roll into a cookie dough ball).
- Bake for 9-10 minutes (9 minutes is perfect in my oven) until the cookie is set around the edges and has a few crackles on the edges and top. Don’t overbake; the cookies should be soft.
- Let the cookies cool completely.
- For the frosting, in a stand mixer fitted with the paddle or whisk attachment or in a large bowl using a handheld electric mixer, whip together the butter and peanut butter until creamy and smooth, 1-2 minutes. Add the powdered sugar and mix on low speed until it is mostly incorporated. Add the salt, vanilla and heavy cream and mix until light and fluffy, 1-2 minutes, scraping down the sides of the bowl as needed. Add additional heavy cream and whip thoroughly if needed for a softer frosting.
- For the chocolate ganache, place the chocolate chips in a medium bowl. Heat the cream until just below a simmer. Pour over the chocolate chips and let sit for 4-5 minutes. Stir until the mixture is smooth and glossy (it will start out looking grainy, but it will come together as you stir). It will thicken as it cools (and harden in the refrigerator). Let cool until room temperature before using.
- Frost each cooled cookie with peanut butter frosting followed by a dollop of chocolate ganache (spread across the frosting). Refrigerate the cookies or serve at room temperature. The frosting and ganache will harden in the refrigerator; I like to take them out a few minutes before serving so they are chilled but have softened a bit.
Notes
Recipe Source: from Mel’s Kitchen Cafe
I made these for a Christmas cookie exchange and people went crazy for them! They are a little time consuming due to the different elements of the cookie, but well worth it! Rich and yummy!
Can you freeze these?
Yes, they freeze great.
These are absolutely AMAZING cookies. As you mentioned, even just the cookies without the frosting or ganache are terrific. Thank you so much for sharing this recipe.
I made these cookies for my daughter’s birthday party, and I had three people ask for the recipe. They look impressive and taste amazing. Thanks, Mel!
OH MY! These are amazing! We had your white chicken chili for dinner followed by these for dessert. My husband LOVES everything from your blog. The softness of the cookie and that frosting…insane is right! My best friend and I live thousands of miles apart but we always text each other asking what melskitchencafe recipes we are making during the week!
Oh, thanks for making my day, Colleen!! 🙂
Crazy good! The ganache is amazing. Definitely adding these to my cookie rotation!
I missed these somehow when you posted them. They look amazing. I’m all about a buckeyes. Smitten Kitchen has a particularly great recipe with cream cheese and graham cracker crumbs (in addition to the normal buckeye ingredients)- so good! I think this may be our pandabaking treat this week, especially since it’s supposed to be a little cooler tomorrow…
Question: do you think I could store them in the fridge in multiple layers with parchment in between, or do you think the frosting/ganache will stick? I saw your caution about defrosting and it made me think twice. I was hoping I could chill them initially in a single layer, then layer them in a bin to store… They’re just for my family, so a little mess isn’t a dealbreaker. Or even store them in the freezer? Thank you!!!
I think if the ganache and frosting are able to set up (at room temp or refrigerated) after frosting the cookies then yes, you could store them separated between parchment. The ganache may lose it’s shine and stick a bit to the parchment but as long as they aren’t layered when the ganache is wet, it stands a good chance of working.
Thank you, Mel! Reporting back- I chilled before stacking, and they stack beautifully with parchment. This is a killer recipe. Definitely on the decadent treat end of things…. 🙂 I used chunky peanut butter (what I had) and actually love the texture contrast. Thanks again & happy summer!
Thanks for checking back in to let me know, Rebecca! Great news about stacking!
I made these three days ago and they are AMAZING! We will be making these again. My only advice is to follow what Mel when she says the cookies taste better cold. Great recipe!
So yummy! I thought they tasted even better the day after I made them!
I agree!
I love these cookies so much! I was wondering how you think they would do freezing them ahead of time for like a party? Thanks again!
I bet they’ll freeze great! Just take care defrosting them…I’d make sure they are in a single layer so the frosting doesn’t stick as it thaws.
Thank you so much!!
Made these last week for my sister in law’s birthday and also gave some to friends plus kept a plate for ourselves and oh my. These babies are divine! I’ll be putting this on a rotation. Thanks for a great chocolate cookie!
My sister and I doubled this recipe and topped half with the peanut butter and chocolate ganache (I used a 3/4 cup of cream to one cup of chocolate chips, which worked well) and it was great!
I also have a chocolate cookie recipe that melts Andes Mints on the top after the cookies are baked, which is good, but I have never loved the base cookie. So the other half of this cookie dough I set an Andes Mint (or 1 1/2, because they are so good) on each cookie right when it came out of the oven, and after the mint(s) melted swirled it around on the cookie. They were sooooo good – and such a better cookie base than the one I had been using! It is so fudgy in the center, even when cooled.
Now I have two great Christmas cookies for only one cookie dough base! Thanks for another great recipe, Mel! My sister and I almost exclusively use your website for cooking for our families, and area always telling each other about another great recipe of yours we have discovered.
Love the Andes mint idea, Thora! Thank you for sharing!
These are amazing! Santa will love them!
Okay, these are SO GOOD! And even though there are three parts to make they came together quite quickly. Thank you for sharing this gem! I’m making them for my “buckeye” sister (she’s home for Christmas from Ohio State!) today.
So fun!! Glad you loved them (hope your sister does too!)
These were amazing! The chocolate ganache totally makes the cookie.
Thanks, Carrie!
These are fantastic!!!
Yay! Glad you loved them!
I took these to a party and I should have doubled the batch. People were fighting over them. So good! I will also use less cream like your note says when I make them again this weekend.
Love ya, Camille! Glad these were a hit.
Mel, these are some of the best cookies I’ve EVER made and I bake a tremendous amount. I’ve made this recipe twice in 2 days for different parties. Rave reviews. They are quick to make and the dough is so easy to work with. I can’t thank you enough for adding this recipe to my life! Merry Christmas from Amy in Chester, VA
This makes me so happy – thanks, Amy!!
Amazing cookies. Will be on my Christmas cookie list for sure. I did have a problem with the ganache. It would not thicken. I ended up just melting some chips and putting on the cookies. Not as pretty as the ganache. I weighed 6 oz. Ghirardelli bittersweet chips and heating cream to just before simmer. Chips melted but it was way too thin and would not thicken. Any suggestions would be appreciated as I really want to use the ganache.
What brand of cream did you use? I usually use the super thick heavy cream from Costco, but others have had issues with the ganache being thin, too, so I think using less cream (reduce by half, maybe) would help, especially if the heavy cream isn’t super thick in consistency.
I used Kreider Farm’s brand which seemed thick. I have read other recipes that call for less cream with that amount of chips. I will do that next time as these cookies are keepers! Thank you!
Lots of people are saying that so I’ll change the recipe to note it for others!
Made these for a cookie swap and they were a huge hit! Everyone who had tried them loved them! Not sure if I didn’t let the ganache harden up enough before tearing it but it was too thin. Next time I’ll try waiting another half an hour or using a bit less cream. Thanks so much! This is now on my official yearly Christmas baking list!
Oh man, there are some autocorrect errors in my previous message.
Thanks for the review! I’m glad they were a hit (and yes, you might want to use a bit less cream for a thicker ganache). 🙂
YUM!! Love these a lot.
Yay! Thanks!
Mel! Since you are on holiday cookie wagon you should post the chocolate peppermint crinkle blossom cookies you sent as an exclusive recipe in news letter a few December’s back!! It is one of my all time FAVORITE cookies!!
I actually did! It’s posted here: https://www.melskitchencafe.com/chocolate-peppermint-crinkle-blossom-cookies/
These are insanely delicious! ! I can’t wait to bring them to all my neighbors, but better do it quick before they’re all gone!
Haha, get them out of the house!
I made these yesterday for a cookie reception after a band concert. They are amazing and pretty quick to make. The chocolate cookie itself is SO GOOD! Also I think it could have so many adaptations to the pb flavor, a mint frosting, or orange. So yummy. Will definitely make these again, Mel knocked this one out of the park. Thank you for another amazing recipe!
I agree, Susan – I think there are so many adaptations. I can’t wait to try a mint version!
Can I use cacao powder instead of dutch process?
I haven’t tried that so I’m not sure. Sorry!
Hi! Just curious…is there a reason why you add the salt and baking soda with the wet ingredients instead of with the dry ingredients?
It just mixes them in better than adding them with the dry ingredients (and prevents you from having to whisk together the dry ingredients separately before adding).
Question, I don’t see where the brown sugar is used. I am assuming in with the butter and granulated sugar? Thanks
Sorry about that – I just fixed it in the recipe. But it’s added with the granulated sugar.
I can not wait to make these! These look to die for! I love giving treats at Christmas and these look delicious! Thank you for the time you spent on making this most delicious cookie!
Thank you so much, Linda!
I was going to make buckeyes as I haven’t done that in years but you just changed my plans. Thank you so much I’m positive they will be as awesome as all your recipes.
I hope you love them!
Can’t wait to try these! I’ll be making them for a cookie swap. Thanks.
They’d be perfect for a cookie swap!
These are delicious! My girls and I have made the knock off Cutler’s Bakery cookies like this for years. It’s more of a sugar cookie base with the PB and chocolate frostings. Having chocolate cookies as the base is perfection. I would go lighter on the cream as your note says for the ganache because mine was runny but they did set up in the fridge. I agree that these are the Best Holiday Cookie of the Year!
Love you for making these so fast, Tami!
Also, on the ganache, I wonder if brand of chocolate and cream matters? What type of chocolate did you use? And heavy cream? I always use the heavy cream from Costco which is super thick. That may make a difference. I’ll add another note to the recipe.
I used heavy cream but not the Costco one. That must be it. And the Costco Kirkland chocolate chips in the red (used to be white) bag. My favorite. So glad they are back!
Thanks for this one Mel – it’s on the top of my holiday baking list! You mentioned they chill well & can be stacked after chilling. Given that, have you tried to freeze them? Would you recommend chilling, stacking, then freezing. Since baking time is limited, I’m going to need to make these ahead of time! I’d appreciate the tips.
Thanks!
I haven’t tried freezing them, but I bet they’ll freeze great (frosted and everything)
These look delicious!! Thoughts on baking up the cookie part and freezing so you can thaw and add frosting/ganache later?
Yes! That would work great. (The cookies freeze very well)
Being from Ohio, I’m very familiar with buckeyes, and these look amazing! I’m trying to hold off on making them until I need to take cookies to an event, but………you know.
Haha. I get it. Dig deep for that self-control! I’m guessing you have more than I do. 🙂
Thanks for the great recipe. Cannot wait to try them….I’m guessing these cookies wouldn’t be stackable due to the ganache possibly melting?
Once they are chilled, they are totally stackable. The frosting and ganache soften out of the refrigerator but I stacked a couple layers of chilled cookies between parchment paper and they were fine (but they never got super warm – they just gradually came to cool room temp)
I cannot wait to bake these for Christmas! These will definitely be included in my cookie swap!
I hope you love them, Alicia!